Butler v. Flint

101 A. 19, 91 Conn. 630, 1917 Conn. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 A. 19 (Butler v. Flint) 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
Butler v. Flint, 101 A. 19, 91 Conn. 630, 1917 Conn. LEXIS 60 (Colo. 1917).

Opinion

Prentice, C. J.

The property now in the hands of the Trust Company as administrator and trustee, in the form of cash awaiting distribution to its ultimate owners, represents that given to Sarah Y. H. Butler by the ninth and eleventh paragraphs of the will, and confessedly is to be distributed as the property so given would have been if it had not been converted.

*634 The gifts made in these paragraphs in Sarah Butler’s favor are undeniably absolute or in fee, subject to the use of the testator’s widow long since terminated by her death. Were there no codicil, the two funds now involved, standing as they do in the place of the original property bequeathed and devised, would belong to her estate, since she survived him.

By the codicil, provision is made for a .different disposition should Sarah Butler die without leaving a child or issue at the time of her death, to wit, to the children of the testator’s brother Horace and their heirs. By force of this provision, and by reason of the fact that Sarah Butler died without issue, the administrators of Horace’s four children, all of whom survived the testator, claim to be entitled to the two funds, and the Court of Probate, in passing the order appealed from, accepted that view.

The issues presented by the conflicting claims of the parties involve three controlling inquiries: (1) Does the language of the codicil, descriptive of the contingency upon the happening of which the gift to the children of Horace is made to become operative, refer to the death of Sarah Butler at any time, or only to her death before that of the testator? (2) If Sarah Butler’s death at any time is the contingency specified in the codicil, is the subject-matter of the gift over, to the children of Horace, comprehensive of that included in the gifts in favor of Sarah Butler contained in both paragraphs nine and eleven, or only in one of them? (3) If the gift to the children of Horace, as made, was one to- take effect in the contingency of Sarah Butler’s death whenever occurring, was it a valid or void one in view of the statute against perpetuities in force at the time the will was executed?

It is evident that the testator, when he determined to make á codicil to his will, executed only seven days *635 previously, was influenced by some purpose to change his provisions in respect to some matter which he regarded of sufficient importance to justify him in that act. That he intended to make a change in his dispositions previously made in favor of Harriet Keep and Sarah Butler, is clear. The only question is as to the nature and extent of that change. Unfortunately the language used by him to express his purpose is susceptible of two constructions. The question, therefore, like all others where the construction of testamentary provisions is concerned, is one whose answer is to be found in the testator’s intent, to be gathered as best it can from the will and codicil themselves when read together and in the light of the circumstances surrounding him at the time of their execution.

Certain artificial rules are found in the books designed to aid in the search for testamentary intent. One of these has had our repeated approval, to wit, that where there is a devise to A, and in the case of his death to B, the time of death referred to, in the absence of qualifying words or other indication of a contrary intent, is death before the testator’s. Chesebro v. Palmer, 68 Conn. 207, 211, 36 Atl. 42; Webb v. Lines, 57 Conn. 154, 156, 17 Atl. 90; Johnes v. Beers, 57 Conn. 295, 303, 18 Atl. 100. In Lawlor v. Holohan, 70 Conn. 87, 90, 38 Atl. 903, this rule of presumption was extended so as to be inclusive of cases where the devise is to A and in the event of his death without issue to B, and the statement was made that the rule thus broadly expressed is the well-settled one of this jurisdiction. This statement of principle is invoked by the plaintiff. An examination of the eight cases cited in support of the assertion made in Lawlor v. Holohan, shows scant basis for it. Some of them are cases of the first class above referred to, and no broader rule of presumptive construction is either applied or stated than one per *636 tinent to such a situation. Nearly all the others were disposed of upon the strength of the affirmative evidence of intent disclosed by the will, and without appeal to any rule of presumption whatsoever. The last one of the eight is Chesebro v. Palmer, with its strong assertion of a doctrine quite contrary to that of Lawlor v. Holohan. In the former case the general subject involved had a full and exhaustive discussion. The conclusion was reached that cases where the gift over is made in the contingency of the death of the first devisee without issue, are to be distinguished from those where the contingency is the death of the first devisee merely; and that the rule of presumption to be applied in the former class of cases, in the absence of other indication of testamentary intent, is that the death without issue of the first devisee has reference to his death under all circumstances, p. 213. The essential difference between the two classes of cases, pointed out in Chesebro v. Palmer, needs only to be called to one’s attention to be appreciated, and the difference in the pertinent rule of construction applicable to each follows as a logical consequence.

In the present case, however, we are not driven to rely upon a rule of presumption. Such rules are helpful when the intent of the testator is not otherwise disclosed, but shorn of importance when it is. Chesebro v. Palmer, 68 Conn. 207, 213, 36 Atl. 42; Lawlor v. Holohan, 70 Conn. 87, 90, 38 Atl. 903; St. John v. Dann, 66 Conn. 401, 409, 34 Atl. 110.

The present record is not as informing as it might be of facts pertinent to an inquiry as to the testator’s intent, but they are by no means wanting. The will was executed only eleven days before the testator’s death, and the codicil four. Whether or not its execution was in anticipation of the early death which so soon followed, we have no knowledge save as the facts *637 stated may furnish an indication. Both Sarah Butler and Harriet Keep, whose name is associated with hers in the residuary gift and in the codicil provision, were, at the time the will was made, minors, neither of them over seventeen years of age. Sarah Butler was not more than eleven. The latter young woman was not related by blood to the testator, but was a niece of his wife. Harriet Keep was his niece and one of his two heirs-at-law, the other being Horace R. Hotchkiss, whose children were made beneficiaries of the limitation over in the codicil.

It will be noted that under the will and the statute then in force (Title 31, Chap. 1, § 4, Compilation 1838), the gifts to Sarah Butler, in the event of her decease before the testator, would have lapsed, and the property given to her have passed to his next of kin as intestate estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 A. 19, 91 Conn. 630, 1917 Conn. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-flint-conn-1917.