Cherbonnier v. Bussey

48 A. 923, 92 Md. 413, 1901 Md. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 A. 923 (Cherbonnier v. Bussey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherbonnier v. Bussey, 48 A. 923, 92 Md. 413, 1901 Md. LEXIS 136 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

By the third article of the last will and testament of Penelope Dye Goodwin, a one-fourth part in value of a farm' lying in Baltimore County, was devised in fee-simple to the late Thomas Donaldson, in trust, to pay over thé rents, issues and profits to Charles E. R. Goodwin, a son of the testatrix, for and during his natural life, and after his death, if the son had px-eviously married and had left children, then in further trust for such of the children and descendants of the son and in such proportions and interests as the son might designate and appoint by last will and testament; and in the event of the son dying without leaving children or descendants living at the time of his death, then in trust for such grandchildren of the testatrix as should be living, to be divided equally among them. By a codicil this special power of appointment was en *418 larged to a general power of appointment. The third article of the will contains a formal cesser clause by which it is declared “that in case of any alienation of the interest or any part of the interest to which the said Charles may be entitled under the terms of this article of the will,- whether such alienation be voluntary or involuntary, by his own act or default or by operation of law, or in case by any other ways or means his rights to the rents, issues and profits aforesaid, or any part thereof, shall become vested in any other person or persons whatsoever, then and thenceforth,” the trust created for the benefit of Charles “shall cease and be void,” and the trustee was directed to hold the land in trust for the children of Charles if any were living at the time of “said forfeiture of his interest,” but "if at the time of said forfeiture” Charles should have no child or descendants living, then the land was required ■to be held in trust for Eliza J. Goodwin, the daughter of the testatrix, in the same manner, on the same conditions and with the same powers provided in the first article of the will in regard to that part of the same farm devised to the same trustee for the benefit of the daughter. The only provision of the first clause to which it is necessary to make allusion is that by which Eliza J. Goodwin was empowered to devise to such persons and in such portions and interests as she might deem proper the real estate given to Mr. Donaldson in trust for her. Charles Goodwin never married and had no children or descendants. During his life about twenty-six acres of the land devised to Mr. Donaldson in trust to pay the rents, issues and •profits to Charles were sold, not by Charles but by the public officials for the non-payment of the taxes due on the land. These sales, it is insisted, caused the cesser clause to become operative and wrought a forfeiture of the interest of Charles and vested that interest in his sister. In virtue of the power •which Eliza J. Goodwin possessed under the will of her mother, she made a last will and testament devising not only the real estate given under the first clause of Penelope Dye Goodwin’s will to Mr. Donaldson in trust for Eliza, but also “all other estate and property” of hers “however derived.” *419 The whole of this was devised to a trustee to pay the rents and profits to her brother Charles during his life, and upon his death the property itself was given absolutely to her nephew Edward C. Cherbonnier. Eliza J. Goodwin died in eighteen hundred and ninety-eight. Under the power contained in the codicil to his mother’s will Charles made a will by which he devised the property described in the third clause of her will to the appellees to be sold. He died in eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. After the appellees had qualified as executors they asked the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, sitting in equity, to take jurisdiction of the trust reposed in them by the will of Charles Goodwin, and subsequently they proceeded to make sale of that part of the land devised to Mr. Donaldson in trust for the benefit of Charles, which remained after the twenty-six acres sold for taxes were deducted. Thereupon, the appellant, Edward C. Cherbonnier, sought by injunction to restrain the appellees from selling the land. He insists that the tax sales referred to caused a forfeiture of the whole interest of Charles and vested that interest in Eliza J. Goodwin ; and he further contends that the interest which thus vested in Eliza passed under her will to him absolutely after the death of Charles, and that, therefore, the appellees took no title to this property under the will of Charles and consequently have no authority to dispose of it. So the ultimate questions are, what interest did Charles take under the will of his mother ; and was that interest and the whole provision made for him forfeited by reason of the tax salgs ? In other words, did these tax sales vest the equitable estate in Eliza J.' Goodwin so that it passed under her will to her nephew, the appellant. There is a secondary question as to whether the will of Charles is a valid exercise of the power of appointment conferred upon him by the codicil to his mother’s will.

It is obvious that the legal title to the property disposed of by the third article of Penelope Dye Goodwin’s will was vested in Mr. Donaldson, the trustee, and it is equally obvious that Charles Goodwin had only an estate in the rents, issues and profits. His right to these was restricted to the duration of *420 his life. Under this provision the trust property passed to the trustee with all its incidents unimpaired. He took the whole legal, title to the property with a power of alienation which, under the codicil could only be exercised with the written consent of Charles, whilst the cestui que trust took the whole legal title to the accruing rents, issues and profits as and when they were paid over to him. Broadway Nat. Bk. v. Adams, 133 Mass. 170. The interest of the cestui que trust under his mother's will, was, therefore, simply an interest in the rents, issues and profits. This being so, what effect did the tax sales have upon that interest?

It will be noted that the cesser clause provides for the extinction of the trust declared for the benefit of Charles upon the happening of either of two contingencies; and these are, first, the alienation of the interest or any part of the interest to which Charles was entitled under the will, whether that alienation was voluntary or involuntary, by his own act or default, or by operation of law; secondly, the event that by any ■ other ways or means, his right to the rents, issues and profits, or any part thereof, became vested in any other person or persons whatsoever. The first contingency presents two alternatives with respect to the alienation of his interest or any part of his interest; and these are, first, a voluntary alienation by his own act or default, and secondly, an involuntary alienation by operation at law; but both alienations relate exclusively to the interest which Charles was entitled to under the will. The second contingency could arise only in the event that the right of Charles to the rents, issues and profits, or any part thereof, had become vested in some other person or persons by any other ways or means than those antecedently indicated. The alienation prohibited does not mean an alienation of the land,

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 923, 92 Md. 413, 1901 Md. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherbonnier-v-bussey-md-1901.