Browning v. Sacrison

518 P.2d 656, 267 Or. 645, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 511
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 518 P.2d 656 (Browning v. Sacrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. Sacrison, 518 P.2d 656, 267 Or. 645, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 511 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, C. J.

This is a suit in winch plaintiff seeks to have a provision in the will ¡of Kate Webb construed. The question presented is. whether the remainder devised to plaintiff’s husband, Franklin Browning, now' deceased, and his brother, Robert Sacrison, the defendant, was vested or contingent at the time, of Mrs. Webb’s death. The trial court found the remainder to be contingent. Plaintiff appeals. - ...

Kate Webb was the maternal grandmother of Franklin Browning and Robert Sacrison. Her will, executed in 1943 when Franklin was 20 and Robert 13, contained the following provision (paragraph III):

“I give and devise to my daughter, Ada W. Sacrison, a life estate for the term of her natural life in and-to áll real property belonging to me at the time of my death, excepting only the residence property at Pilot Rock described in paragraph II-of this will, with remainder over.at the'death.of the said Ada W. Sacrison, share and share aiike, 'to my grandsons, Francis Marion Browning

Kate Webb died in 1954. She was survived by her daughter, Ada, and grandchildren Franklin and Bobert. At the time of her death, Mrs. Webb owned 960 acres of farmland in Umatilla County. This is the land devised by paragraph III >of the will. Franklin died in 1972 without issue. He did not survive the life tenant Ada, who is still alive.

• Plaintiff takes the position that the language in paragraph III of the will, creating an interest in the two grandsons “or, if either of them be dead, then all to the other” refers to thé death of the testatrix not the death of their mother Ada, the life tenant. Thus, she argues the estate vested at the time of Mrs. Webb’s death.

' Conversely, defendant contends that the grandsons each took a remainder contingent upon surviving the life tenant.

Plaintiff relies upon the constructional preference favoring the early vesting of estates. It cannot be denied that there is considerable case support, including our own cases, for the view that the law favors the early vesting of estates. And it is clear that at an [648]*648earlier day the. rule was' widely, if not universally accepted. The policy reason for this .preference is that it “quickens commerce in the ownership of property by facilitating alienability to a considerable degree.” But with the passage of time the ride was eroded by exceptions and by a closer analysis of the rationale for the early vesting preference, until today that constructional preference probably no longer represents the prevailing view. The most severe criticism of the constructional preference for vesting is found in V American Law of Property, § 21.3 at 130 (Casner ed. 1952), where it is said:

• “The preference for vested interests undoubtedly originated in connection with conveyances of interests in land and at a time in feudal England when contingent interests in land had not attained a dignified statute. Under such conditions, it may be reasonable to attribute to a transferor the intention to give the transferee an estate of recognized quality. Today, however, unfortunate tax consequences may follow a determination that an interest ‘ is vested and most transferors who consider all the consequences which attach to a vested interest are inclined to postpone vesting until! the time set for enjoyment of the interest in possession. Thus con-[649]*649tinned adherence to this preference in modem times is at least of doubtful validity in many situations.”

The foregoing critique has in turn been criticized for being a “harsh, unbalanced assessment of the rule, * * * as unfortunate as the more common tendency to accept the rule uncritically.” Thus a middle position has evolved which urges that “what is needed is a more discriminating evaluation rather than outright rejection of the rule.”

We adopt this latter approach. It is true that the reasons which prompted the creation of the rule favoring early vesting no longer obtain. Nevertheless, early vesting still may be desirable for other reasons which have application today. On the other hand, the factors supporting early vesting must compete against other factors favoring the postponement of vesting. All of the factors “must be given their respective weights in the [650]*650ultimate determination of the judicially ascertained intent of the conveyor.”

In the present case, competing with the constructional preference for early vesting is the preference for that construction which conforms more closely to the intent commonly prevalent among conveyors similarly situated than does any other possible construction. In modern law it is felt that when a devise is made to a life tenant with a remainder conditioned upon an ambiguous form of survivorship, the intent “commonly prevalent ámong conveyors similarly situated” is deemed to require that the remainderman survive the life tenant rather than the testator. The application of this constructional preference would make Franklin’s interest subject to the condition that he survive his mother Ada, as the trial court held.

The trial court based its decision in part upon a comparison of the language in other parts of the will with the language in paragraph III. For example, paragraph II provided as follows:

“I give and devise to my grandsons, Francis Marion Browning and Bobert Stanley Browning, share and share alike, the real property owned by me in the Town of Pilot Bock, in Umatilla County, Oregon, subject to the condition that no portion of said property or the proceeds thereof shall ever go to or be used for the benefit of their father, Clyde Browning, and if either of said grandchildren be not living at the time of my death, then the other [651]*651shall .take all of such property, subject to said condition.”

In this paragraph the testatrix expressly designates that the time for vesting of the Pilot Eoek property in the survivor shall be “at the time of my death.” The trial court reasoned that “it must be assumed that when these specific words were not used [in paragraph TIT] after the estate of Ada Saerison, but the words, ‘or, if either of them be dead, then to the other,’ the testatrix intended that the interest became vested at the time of the death of the life tenant, and not at the date of her death.”

The principle employed by the trial court is well recognized as one of the canons of construction.

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Related

Jones v. Department of Revenue
9 Or. Tax 335 (Oregon Tax Court, 1983)
Estate of McGee v. Department of Revenue
7 Or. Tax 288 (Oregon Tax Court, 1977)
Taylor v. Sims
544 P.2d 1063 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
518 P.2d 656, 267 Or. 645, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-sacrison-or-1974.