Bulkley v. Moss

145 A. 582, 109 Conn. 170, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 A. 582 (Bulkley v. Moss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bulkley v. Moss, 145 A. 582, 109 Conn. 170, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 71 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

Our advice is asked upon a single question arising in the construction of the will of Theodora Bulkley: Whether the wharf lot is included in the gift of the homestead under the provisions of Article Third of the Second Codicil to her will. That article is as follows: “Third:—The Homestead in which I now reside located on the west side of Harbor Road, Southport, Connecticut, consisting of about two acres, I give and devise to my sister, Grace Alice Bulkley Moss, if she survive me, to have and to hold during the term of her natural life, and upon the death of the survivor of myself and my said sister I give and devise the said real property to my nephew, Jonathan *172 Ogden Bulkley, if he be then living; if he be not then living, to his issue then surviving, in equal shares per stirpes and not per capita, or if neither my said nephew nor issue of him be then living, to my nephew, David Tod Bulkley, if he be then living, or if he be not then living, then to his issue then surviving, in equal shares, per stirpes and not per capita.”

The wharf lot was on the east side of the Harbor Road; the homestead is described in this article as on the west side of that road. If the language of Article Third be taken literally it would require the answer that the wharf lot is not included in the gift of the homestead.

The contention of the present and potential legatees under this article is that the circumstances surrounding the testatrix at the making of this codicil clearly indicate that she intended to include in the terms of this gift the wharf lot and that this intention when ascertained controls the construction to be accorded this article of the will. All of the parties beneficially interested in the trust are perfectly willing that the wharf lot should be considered as a part of “The Homestead” and pass to the devisees under Article Third of the Second Codicil, but one of the trustees— the Trust Company—feels that it cannot with safety surrender any valuable interest which might belong to the trust without an adjudication construing the language of this codicil.

To ascertain this intention we must note and consider these circumstances in some detail. Upon the west side of the Harbor Road upon a tract of about one and a half acres of land stood the Bulkley homestead residence containing approximately twenty rooms. On the east side of the. Harbor Road, which is about thirty feet in width, is about a half acre of land known as the wharf lot, its northerly and *173 southerly lines being approximately a continuance easterly of the northerly and southerly lines of the residence tract on the west side of the road. These properties were owned by the testatrix at her decease and were occupied by her as a home for the major part of every year, especially in the summer time, and during her life of upward of sixty years she had lived in this residence. Prior to the testatrix’s ownership her father and grandfather had owned these properties for a century or more. The neighborhood of these premises has been becoming, more and more, an exclusive residential community. The Harbor Road is a winding road following the westerly shore of the harbor and from fifty to one hundred and fifty feet from it. Large and substantial residences lie upon the west side of this road and for two hundred feet south and for a long distance north of the Bulkley homestead there are no dwellings located between the east line of the road and the harbor. The harbor of Southport in the latter part of the eighteenth and the early part of the nineteenth century was used to a considerable extent for commercial purposes, but at the present time and for the past twenty years it has been used exclusively as a yacht anchorage. For seventy years or more no building has existed on the wharf lot and the testatrix and her predecessors in title have kept this lot open and cared for the grass and lawns thereon in the same manner as the grass and lawns on the property on the Bulkley homestead lying west of the road has been cared for. For many years during the summer time the residence has been so shut in by foliage and by other adjoining dwellings that its only open view is toward the east, across the wharf lot. If any building of substantial size should be erected upon the wharf lot it would be a great detriment to this residence and the land on which it stands and seriously affect its *174 value. There is every indication in these facts that the wharf lot had been regarded as a part of “The Homestead” by its owners for over a century. Its north and south boundary lines are approximately an extension of the north and south lines of the residence lot on the west side of the road. The keeping of it open and free from buildings conformed to the custom of this exclusive neighborhood. All of the owners of residences upon the west side of the road in this locality kept the land upon the east side of the road and to the harbor open, manifestly to preserve the view of the harbor and to retain access to it. The only view from the residence was across the wharf lot. Its ownership apart from that of the residence lot, with the liability of having buildings erected thereon, would necessarily seriously diminish the value of this residence. All of these considerations the testatrix, as owner, and her predecessor ancestors, must be presumed to have known. It was ancestral property; her attachment to it is a necessary inference from the facts before us. The disposition by will of the residence lot on the west side of the road and the wharf lot on the opposite side to different legatees, with the consequent liability to injury to the value and desirability of the residence lot and the departure from century old family traditions is something which would be so foreign, not only to the personal feelings of the testatrix but also so detrimental to the interest of either her estate or of the legatee of the residence lot, as to be diametrically opposed to what would be her natural and normal intention. Unless the terms of this article so clearly exclude the wharf lot from the devise to the sister of the testatrix as to overcome her apparent natural and normal intention, we ought not to reach that conclusion. The exclusion of the wharf lot from the devise of “The Homestead” would sever *175 it from the residence lot and take its ownership from those to whom the testatrix in Article Third gave “The Homestead,” first to her sister for life, then to a nephew, Jonathan Ogden Bulkley if living, otherwise to his issue and if neither be living to another nephew and if he be not living to his issue. Here is expressed the manifest purpose of the testatrix to keep the ownership of “The Homestead” where it had been for over a century, in her own family. It is apparent that her purpose was to hand down “The Homestead,” as it had always been treated and used, to the specified legatees of her own blood. The testatrix undoubtedly had in mind the probability that if the wharf lot should become a part of the residue it would in all likelihood be disposed of to some one outside her family. There is nothing in the will except the designation of the location of “The Homestead” as “on the west side of Harbor Road” which tends to indicate the exclusion of the wharf lot on the east side of the road. But the description of “The Homestead” as on the west side of the road may well have specially referred to the main location of “The Homestead,” facing as the residence did the east.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 A. 582, 109 Conn. 170, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bulkley-v-moss-conn-1929.