Busbee v. Haley

142 S.E.2d 786, 220 Ga. 874, 1965 Ga. LEXIS 655
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 6, 1965
Docket22897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 S.E.2d 786 (Busbee v. Haley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Busbee v. Haley, 142 S.E.2d 786, 220 Ga. 874, 1965 Ga. LEXIS 655 (Ga. 1965).

Opinion

Head, Presiding Justice:

Vernon S. Haley and Herbert P. Haley, individually, and as executrix and executor and trustees under the will of W. B. Haley, deceased, brought a petition seeking a construction of the will and direction with reference to the distribution of the estate. It was alleged that the testator died *875 on July 16,1950, leaving surviving him his wife, Vernon S. Haley, and seven named children, all of whom are still in life. The defendants named were the grandchildren and all unborn lineal descendants of the children of the testator.

George D. Busbee was appointed as guardian ad litem for the defendants. Since there was no issue of facts, the trial judge entered an order without the intervention of a jury. The guardian ad litem assigns error on the construction of the will, and on the failure to require the petitioners upon a division of the estate to take security from the life tenant and the holders of the defeasible fees to protect the reversioners and remaindermen.

In the original will executed on July 11, 1931, the testator directed that his estate should remain in trust until his youngest child becomes of age. On December 14, 1948, he executed a codicil in which he recited that all of his children had reached the age of 21 years, and he directed that the division of his estate should not take place until five years after his death. The petitioners desire a construction of the will before making distribution.

The portion of the will requiring construction is as follows: "I will, bequeath and devise all of my property, both real, personal and mixed, and wherever the same may be situated, in this state or elsewhere, to my trustees hereinafter named, in trust, nevertheless, for the sole use and benefit of the following named beneficiaries, to-wit: for the use and benefit share and share alike, of my wife, Mrs. Vernon S. Haley, and all of my children, now bom or to be born, who may be living at my death and shall continue living until the time hereinafter fixed for the division of my estate, but if my said wife should marry again, or either of my said children should at any time, before or after said division of my estate, die without leaving lineal descendants surviving him or her, then and in either of those events, the beneficial interest of my said wife or of such child or children, respectively, shall immediately cease and determine, and the beneficial interest of said wife or of such child or children, respectively, shall thereupon revert to my estate,—to be ultimately divided equally among the remaining devisees and legatees under this will. Said beneficial interest of my said wife, .shall be a life estate only, for and during her life, with remainder *876 to the other devisees and legatees herein mentioned, said life estate being subject to be divested by her marriage; and said beneficial interest of each of my said children, shall be a contingent estate until the division of my estate, and shall thereafter be a defeasible fee, subject to be divested, as to any one or more of them, by the death of such child without leaving lineal descendants surviving him or her. I will and direct that all of my said property . . . shall continue as a part of said trust estate, with the fee simple legal title thereof vested in the trustee, until the youngest of my children shall be of age, [changed in the codicil to five years after the date of the death of the testator] at which time all of the property embraced in my estate shall be divided, share and share alike, as above stated, but if any one or more of my children shall then be dead, leaving lineal descendant then living, such lineal descendant shall take in lieu of his or their parent, an undefeasible fee simple title of what would have otherwise been its parent’s share,—such descendant or descendants taking per stirpes and not per capita.”

It is the contention of the guardian ad litem that the will should have been construed as vesting an interest for widowhood in the wife of the testator with a contingent remainder to the children of the testator then surviving and to the lineal descendants of a deceased child of the testator, with such lineal descendants taking per stirpes; that each of the children of the testator took a defeasible fee in his or her share of the estate subject to be divested if he or 'she dies without leaving lineal descendants, and upon the death of one of them without leaving lineal descendants, the reversionary interest in such estate to go to the children of the testator then surviving’ and to the lineal descendants of a deceased child of the testator with such lineal descendants taking per stirpes; that the future interests of a child dying without leaving lineal descendants would not be subject to transfer by such child during his or her lifetime; and that the interest which the wife and any of the children of the testator might take from a child who dies without leaving lineal descendants surviving would be subject to the same limitations which applied to the portions set off to the wife and the children at the time of the division.

The trial judge held that the term “the remaining devisees and *877 legatees until this will,” designating the beneficiaries of the reversionary estate which might arise on the remarriage of the wife of the testator, or the death without surviving lineal descendants of the children of the testator, and the term “other devisees and legatees herein mentioned,” designating the remaindermen of the life estate of the widow, did not include children of a deceased child of the testator. The judge further construed the will: (1) as “vesting a life interest in the wife of the testator subject to earlier termination by her remarriage with a vested remainder over to the testator’s children; (2) that each of the children took a defeasible fee in his or her share of the estate subject to be divested if he or dhe died without children, and upon the death of one of them without children, the other children of the testator and the wife would take a portion of the property so set off to such deceased child as well as a right to the interest that such deceased child had in the property set off to the other children, any of whom might die without leaving lineal descendants surviving; (3) that the future interests being contingent only as to the event (the death of a child without leaving lineal descendants surviving) and not as to the person, the interests of a child dying with children would be subject to transfer by such child during his or her lifetime or could be disposed of by will and if such child died intestate, it would go to his or her heirs at law; and (4) that the interest which the wife and any of the children might take from a child who dies without leaving lineal descendants surviving would be subject to the same limitations which applied to the portions set off to the wife and the children at the time of the division.”

At the beginning of the item in which the testator named tire beneficiaries of his will all of his property is devised and bequeathed in trust “for the sole use and benefit of the following named beneficiaries, to-wit; for the use and benefit share and share alike, of my wife, Mrs. Vernon S. Haley, and all of my children, now bom or to be born, who may be living at my death and shall continue living until the time hereinafter fixed for the division of my estate, . .

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256 S.E.2d 366 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1979)
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157 S.E.2d 283 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.E.2d 786, 220 Ga. 874, 1965 Ga. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busbee-v-haley-ga-1965.