Campbell v. . Rawdon

18 N.Y. 412
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 18 N.Y. 412 (Campbell v. . Rawdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. . Rawdon, 18 N.Y. 412 (N.Y. 1858).

Opinion

*414 Comstock, J.

The first question is, whether Joseph Bin-, don, George Bindon and Jane McCready took an estate in fee in the premises in question, under the will of Joseph Bindon, Sr. The devise was “ to them and their heirs, for their use, improvement and equal emolument, during their natural lives, and after their decease to the heirs of John Bill, of the city of New York, chairmaker.” In the terms here used there is an irreconcilable repugnancy. “ Heirs” is a word of perpetuity, but it is followed in' this devise by a plain and precise limitation of the estate to the lives of the devisees, and then, on their decease, over to other objects of the testator’s bounty. It is impossible to doubt that the testator intended to give a life estate only to those three persons. We must reject the term which denotes perpetuity so as to give effect to other language which cannot be rejected, because we cannot suppose it to have been inadvertently used. The terms cutting the estate down to one for life, could not have been used by the testator without a definite and exact design. They were inserted with care, and for the purpose which they plainly express. We therefore are not at liberty to disregard them ; and we must hold that the first estate in the premises created by this will was for life only.

It is, in the next place, entirely clear that the three persons named took their life estates as tenants in common, and not in joint tenancy. (1 R. L., 54, '§ 6 ; 2 Jarman on Wills, 117.) On the death, therefore, of any one of the three, the limitation over to the heirs of John Bill took efiect as to an undivided third of the lands in question, and when another died, then as to another third. .Joseph Bindon, Jr., one of the life tenants, is still living, and therefore the plaintiffs can at most recover only two undivided thirds of the premises. So far, we think, the Supreme Court has correctly interpreted this will.

There were four children of John Bill at the time the will was executed in 1819, one of whom died without issue, and *415 three of whom were surviving at the death of the testator, in 1832. Their father had previously died, in 1825, and these three children had become his sole heirs at the time the will took effect. They were entitled as such to take, as soon as the testator died, all the provision, whatever it was, which the will made for “ the heirs of John Bill.” A devise to a class of persons takes effect in favor of those who constitute the class at the death of the testator, unless a contrary intent can be inferred from some particular language of the will, or from such extrinsic facts as may be entitled to consideration in construing its provisions. (1 Jarman on Wills, 286, 287.)

The most important question in the case is, whether the limitation over to “ the heirs of John Bill ” was in fee or of a life estate only. Two of the precedent life estates had terminated before this suit was commenced. One of them had not; Joseph Bindon, Jr., being still alive. If, therefore, the limitation over was in fee, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover two undivided thirds of the premises, because the plaintiffs, altogether, represent the entire interest embraced in the limitation over. If for life only, then none of the plaintiffs can recover at all, except Mrs. Batey, and she can recover only one-third of the two-thirds, equal to two undivided ninth parts of the premises; and this portion is recoverable only for her life. She is the only surviving child of John Bill, the other two who were living at the death of the testator having subsequently died. The plaintiffs, other than Mrs. Batey, are their representatives, but have no interest, unless their ancestors took an estate of inheritance under the will. Mrs. Batey is entitled to one-third of two-thirds, because the three children living at the testator’s death took the entire provision made for the heirs of John Bill. The decision appealed from gives her only one-fourth of two-thirds, and in this respect is inaccurate, even if it be correct in holding that life estates only passed under that provision.

*416 But was the limitation over in favor of “ the heirs of John Bill ” in fee or of a life estate only? The testator, as before observed, died in 1832, but the will was executed in 1819. This question must, therefore, be determined without reference to the Revised Statutes, which, as to wills executed in future, changed the rule of construction, in this respect, as it existed previous to 1830. (1 R. S., 748, § 1.) According to that rule a devise, in order to pass a fee, must contain express words of inheritance, or there must be some other language or provision of the will, expressive of an intention to create more than a life estate. (Harvey v. Olmsted, 1 Comst., 483; Olmstead v. Olmstead, 4 id., 56 ; Edwards v. Bishop, id., 61.) It is probably true that in nearly all the cases of general devise, where the rule has been applied, the actual intent of the testator has been violated. But the rule, nevertheless, has been settled by an unbroken series of adjudications, and it lies at the foundation of many titles. To a question of this character, therefore, the maxim “ stare decisis ” has a forcible and peculiar application. We are of opinion, however, that quite consistently with this rule a fee was intended to pass under the limitation now in question.

The argument in opposition to this conclusion, if I am able to understand it, is based upon three propositions : 1. John Bill, being alive at the execution of the will, could have no heirs, in the strict and technical sense of the term; 2. By;the use of that term, therefore, the testator must have intended the children of John Bill, and hence the devise is tq be construed as though the children were named; 3. It was, therefore, a general devise in favor of designated persons, without words of perpetuity, and consequently created a life estate only, according to the rule of construction which has been mentioned.

As no óne can be the heir of a living person, and as the persons who will be heirs are uncertain while the ancestor lives, a devise to them as heirs, in the proper sense of the *417 term, it is said, cannot take effect, and is therefore void. This is obviously so, if the devise be of a present estate, which must vest, if ever, as soon as created. There being no determinate object of the bounty, or ascertained person to take the devise, the attempt to create the estate, of necessity, fails. It is for this reason that limitations in wills in favor or- the heirs of a living person, and recognized in the will as living, have been construed to mean appointments in favor of the children of the ancestor named, or his descendants, or the particular persons who would be his heirs if he were then dead. There being no heir according to the true meaning of the term, and as the devise could-not otherwise take effect, the testator has been reasonably supposed, in such cases, to refer to a determinate class of individuals living and in his contemplation at the making of his will, or who might be living at the time of his death.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.Y. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-rawdon-ny-1858.