Byrd v. Wallis

181 So. 727, 182 Miss. 499, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 183
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1938
DocketNo. 33259.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 181 So. 727 (Byrd v. Wallis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrd v. Wallis, 181 So. 727, 182 Miss. 499, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 183 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

From a decree of the chancery court of Coahoma county construing the last will and testament of Martha “Mattie” Moss Johnson, deceased, this appeal is prosecuted by one of the legatees under the will, Emma Moss Byrd, who challenges the correctness of the decree rendered by the court below only in so far as such decree deals with the residuum of the estate after the payment of the specific legacies therein provided for.

In addition to making certain bequests of money to the executor named in the will, and to the Clarksdale Hospital, the Old Ladies’ Home at Jackson, Mississippi, a memorial fund, and gifts to some of her servants, etc., the testatrix devised and bequeathed to a number of individuals, by name, large sums of money as follows:

“To my nieces, Mattie Moss Brown and Gwendolen Brown, . . . Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00)”;
“To D. J. Johnson, the brother of my deceased husband, . . . Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00),” if he be then living, and if not, ‘ ‘ to the heirs of his body, share and share alike”;
‘ ‘ To Laura Johnson Leitch, the daughter of the above named D. H. Johnson, . . . Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)”;
“To my sister, Nannie Moss Brown, . . . Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per month so long as she may live ’ ’;
“To my sister, Emma Moss Byrd, . . . Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00)”, and certain real estate;
“To B. J. Moss and his wife Ellie Haney Moss, . . . Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)”;
“To Virginia Moss Hilterbran . . . Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)”;
*508 “To Heber Jones Moss, . . . Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)”;
“To Floy Nash Moss, . . . Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)”; and to
“H. Gr. Moss, . . . Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00).”

The will then states the reason for making these last mentioned five bequests, and refers to the legatees as ‘ ‘ the foregoing nieces and nephews. ’ ’ Thereafter is contained a bequest of five thousand dollars to Louise Moss Montgomery if she be living, but if not, “to the heirs of her body share and share alike.” Then there follows bequests of five thousand dollars to each of the three children (naming them) of the said Louise Moss Montgomery. The relationship of Louise Moss Montgomery and her children to the testatrix is not stated in the will, but they are shown, by the record, to be her relatives.

Immediately following these several bequests, the will contains the following provision: “If, after all my property shall have been sold and all sums owing to my estate shall have been collected, there shall be more money belonging to my estate than is herein given, devised and bequeathed, it is my desire that any excess of money belonging to my estate, over and above the aggregate of the amounts herein specifically given, devised and bequeathed, be divided equally among my relatives whose names are mentioned in this will.” .

The questions for decision on this appeal are: (1) Whether the gift of the residuum was to the relatives of the testatrix, individually, and not as a class; (2) whether the residuary legacy which was bequeathed Nannie Moss Brown, who pre-dqceased the testatrix, lapsed, so as to descend, as property undisposed of by the will, to the appellant, Mrs. Emma Moss Byrd, as the sole surviving sister of the whole blood and heir at law of the testatrix; or whether such residuary share passed to the other residuary legatees; and (3) whether Ellie TIaney Moss, the wife of a blood nephew of the *509 testatrix, was included among the legatees of the residuum of the estate bequeathed to “my relatives whose names are mentioned in this will,” the said Ellie Haney Moss having been specifically named in connection with a certain legacy of five thousand dollars made “to R. J. Moss and his wife Ellie Haney Moss,” and the said R. J. Moss having predeceased the testatrix.

If the first question above stated be answered in the affirmative, then the solution of the second question in favor of the appellant, Emma Moss Byrd, will necessarily follow, that is to say, if the gift of the residuum was to individuals, and not to a class, the share bequeathed to Nannie Moss Brown lapsed at the time of her death, she having predeceased the testatrix, and her share descended to the appellant as property undisposed of by the will, and not to the residuary legatees by survivorship.

If the gift is made to the beneficiaries by name, the gift is not one to a class, even if the individuals who are named possess some quality or characteristic in common. Page on Wills (2d Ed.), Section 921.

Counsel for the other residuary legatees under this will contend that the gift of the residuum of the estate was a gift to the relatives of the testatrix mentioned in the will as a- class, and not as individuals, and in support of such contention rely strongly on the case of Branton v. Buckley, 99 Miss. 116, 54 So. 850, L. R. A. 1917 C, 527, and Shannon v. Riley, 153 Miss. 815, 121 So. 808, 75 A. L. R. 768. However, we are of the opinion that these cases are distinguishable on their facts from the case at bar. In the case of Branton v. Buckley, supra, a residuum of the property was devised by the testator to his “brothers and sisters” (not naming them), and the court said that the gift “being ... to a number of persons not individually named, but all answering a general description, is a gift to them as a class.” It can be said, however, that the case of Shannon v. Riley, supra, tends somewhat to support the contention of the *510 other residuary legatees, wherein it is said that (page 811) “When there is a gift or grant to a number of persons, although one or all of them may be named, if the naming of them was intended merely as a matter of identification, and these persons are united or connected by some common tie, and it is clear that the donor was looking to the body as a whole or as a group, rather than to! the members constituting the body as individuals, and that he intended that the group might fluctuate in numbers, so that, to preserve the group, if one or more of that body died during the period in question, the survivors should take the gift between them, either in equal or in some other naturally related portions, the gift is to be construed as one given to them as a class.” But it will be noted that the above statement contains the requirement that “these persons are united or connected by some common tie.” In the case at bar, some of the residuary legatees are related to the deceased husband of the testatrix and are not in any manner related by consanguinity or affinity to some of the other residuary legatees; and, as expressed in the case of Strout v. Chesley, 125 Me. 171, 132 A. 211, 212, “The individuals were not connected with the testatrix or with one another by common kinship. Apparently they had nothing in common except the good fortune of being legatees in the same will.”

Moreover, it was held in the case of Marx v. Hale, 131 Miss. 290, 95 So.

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 727, 182 Miss. 499, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-wallis-miss-1938.