Brian v. Tylor

98 A. 532, 129 Md. 145, 1916 Md. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 A. 532 (Brian v. Tylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brian v. Tylor, 98 A. 532, 129 Md. 145, 1916 Md. LEXIS 138 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Thei question presented by this appeal arises on an exception to an auditor’s account filed in the Circuit Court for Talbot County, and involves the construction of one of the clauses of the will of Isaac Davis Clark of that county.

The testator gave his dwelling house and all the lands “thereto attached” to his wife, Jane E. Clark, during her life, and the will provided that at her death “they shall revert to my heirs in direct descent, as a common estate the right of each therein, to be according to existing laws regulating inheritances in this State.” He also gave her all the furniture in his dwelling house, and all farming implements, cattle and crops on the premises, and provided that said “legacies” and the trust thereinafter created for her benefit were in lieu, of her “dower right” in his remaining real estate and “her distributive share” of his personal estate.

He gave to Robert B. Dixon of Talbot County the sum of $80,000 and the further sum of $8,000, in trust to invest the same and to pay the net income from the $80,000 to his wife during her life, and the net income from the $8,000 to his coiisin, Emily S. Maddox, during her life. The next clause of the will and the one with which we are particularly concerned is 'as follows: “These trusts shall cease at the death of my said wife and my said cousin as they shall respectively *147 occur, and -the principal sums of said trust funds together with any and all interest and income which shall not have been paid to them while living shall be paid by said trustee to my heirs in direct descent-, to be distributed and paid to them in the same share® as though it was the balance of an intestate’s personal estate.”

The testator also gave to Robert B. Dixon the sum of $25,000 “in special trust and confidence” to use the whole or any part thereof in defending any suit instituted to set-aside his will or “disputing any of its provisions,” and provided that said trust should continue until his estate was finally closed and distributed by his executor therein named, and that “then all of said fund in case of no suit or any balance in case of a suit with any interest that said fund may have earned shall be duo and payable to my heirs in direct descent to be distributed to them as though it was the balance of an intestate’s personal estate; provided however that if any such heir shall have- been a party to any suit to disturb' this will lie, she or they shall have no share in this fund, and shall be excluded in its distribution.”

The test and residue of his estate was given to the testator’s “heirs in direct descent the same to be shared according to laws existing in this State regqlating inheritance and distribution.” The will provided how the partition of his real estate anti the distribution of the residue of his personal estate should be made; that his daughter, Sallie S'. Brian, should he charged with $10,000 advanced to her at the time of her marriage, and then appointed Robert B. Dixon executor.

The will was dated .February 5th, 1883, and hv a codicil thereto, executed on the 17th of December, 1887, the testator revoked the bequest of $25,000 to be used in defending his will, and gave “all that portion” of his estate bequeathed and devised to his daughter, Sallie S. Brian, to Robert B. Dixon, in trust to pay the income therefrom to his sa'id daughter during her life; and at her death, leaving a child or children surviving her, to deliver the real estate and to *148 pay the principal sum given him in trust for his said daughter to her child or children. The codicil contained the further provision: “But should my aforesaid daughter die without issue surviving then it is my will that all my estate real and personal by this codicil bequeathed unto'Robert B. Dixon in trust for my daughter Sallie shall revert to my legal heirs then living and shall be distributed among them as by law now provided in the case of a person dying intestate.”

It appears by the “agreed statement of. facts” that the testator died in 1888 leaving surviving him his wife,' Lane F: Clark, who died in 1895, and four children, viz: Sallie S. Brian, May Clark, Nellie B’. Clark and James F. Clark, as his only heirs at law and next of kin. Sallie S. Brian, who is still living, was at the death of the testator thirty-four years of age, and had been married to J ames Brian for more than six years. They had no children and James Brian has since died without leaving any child or descendants'. May Clark, at the death'of the testator, was twenty-four years of age and unmarried. After his death she married J. Edward Tylor and died in 1896 “intestate and without issue.” Nellie B, Clark after1 the death of the testator married Thomas W. Greenley, and she and her husband have since died leaving two children, Lenore C. Greenley, who married J. Rowland Chaffinch, and Alexander 0. Greenley. James F. Clark is still living. Emily S. Maddox, cousin of the testator, died in 3915 at the age of seventv-six years. It. further appears from the agreed statement of facts that the will was drawn by Charles R. Mullikin, Esq., “an ex-register of wills? of Talbot County, and that the codicil thereto is in the handwriting of Colonel James 0. Mullikin, a member of the Talbot bar.

In the account to which the exception was filed the auditor distributed the legacy of $8,000: One-third thereof to S'allie S. Brian, one-third to James F. Clark and the remaining one-third to Lenore O. Chaffinch and Alexander C. Greenley, ■'children of Nellie B. Clark, as the heirs of the testator at *149 tlie death of Emily S. Maddox, and the account was excepted to by J. Edward Tylor, the surviving husband of May Clark, on the ground that he is entitled to the one-fourth his wife would have received if she had survived Emily S. Maddox. The learned Court below sustained the exception, and this appeal is from its order directing the fund to he distributed: One-fourth to Robert B. Dixon, trustee of Sallie R. Brian; one-fourth to James F. Clark; one-fourth to the administrator of Eelliei B. Greenley, and the remaining one-fourth to J. Edward Tylor.

The only objection urged to the order appealed from is to the allowance of one-fourth of the legacy to J. Edward Tylor, the contention of the appellants being that the fund should he distributed to those1 who were the “heirs.” etc., of the testator at the time of the death of Emily S. Maddox, while the appellee contends that it goes to those who were his “heirs,” etc., at the time of his death. In other words, tlie sole question raised hy the respective contentions of the parties is, 'When did the estates in this fund bequeathed to the testator’s, “heirs in direct descent” vest í The answer to that question must depend upon when Isaac Davis Clark intended them to vest. Where the intention of the testator is made clear by tbe terms of the. will his wishes, must prevail unless in conflict with some- settled principle of law. But where the words employed are of doubtful meaning, courts in an effort to arrive at tbe testator’s intention must seek the aid of settled rules of construction. Here there are two periods to which the words “my heirs in direct, descent” might refer, namely, the death of the testator and the death of Emily R.

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 532, 129 Md. 145, 1916 Md. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-v-tylor-md-1916.