Cherbonnier v. Goodwin

28 A. 894, 79 Md. 55, 1894 Md. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 28 A. 894 (Cherbonnier v. Goodwin) 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. Goodwin, 28 A. 894, 79 Md. 55, 1894 Md. LEXIS 45 (Md. 1894).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are three appeals in this case, each by different persons, but they are from the same order, and involve the same questions. We shall consider them as one appeal.

The first question arising on the appeal depends for its decision upon a proper construction of the following clause of the will of Milcah Goodwin, Avho died in the year 1829. The testatrix gave unto her son, “ Caleb D. Goodwin, the sum of fifteen hundred dollars in trust, to put. out the same at interest, or invest the same in ground rents or stock, or other funds, as he shall see fit, and the interest and dividends arising therefrom to be by him expended and appropriated towards the maintenance and support of my son, Edward Goodwin, during his natural life; the same to be under the sole direction and control of my son, Caleb D. Goodwin, to be by him expended for the purpose aforesaid, as to him shall seem fit, and to be in no wise subject to any claim, transfer, or assignment of the said Edward Goodwin, or liable for his present debts or any future debts which he may contract; and, from and after the death of the said Edward Goodwin, then I will and direct that the said fifteen hundred dollars be equally divided among- all the children which said Edward Goodwin may hereafter have; and in case the said Edward Goodwin should die without leaving such child or children, [58]*58then the said fifteen hundred dollars shall be equally divided between my grandchildren, William Henry Goodwin, •Charles Edward Goodwin and Prances Colgate Goodwin, and the survivors of them.”

It is admitted that Edward Goodwin had two children born after the execution of his mother’s will, to-wit, the appellee, Eliza J. Goodwin and one other child, Alexander, who died in the lifetime of its father. And it is insisted upon behalf of the appellants, that upon the death of Alexander, his share of the legacy devolved upon his legal representatives and went in course of distribution to his father, in other words, that there was a vested remainder under the will in the after-born children of Edward Goodwin, so that Alexander’s interest was not dependent upon his surviving his father. But in this view we cannot concur. There can be no doubt as to the general rule that the law favors the earliest vesting of estates where-ever it can be done consistently with the intention of the testator.

It is well settled that in the construction of wills “ the intention of the testator is the object of ascertainment in every case,” and if that can be ascertained it is to. be obeyed, unless it contravenes some settled and fixed rule of law or of construction. The testator has the right to fix the period of vesting to suit his wishes. He can postpone the period and make the vesting depend upon a contingency, and if he does, with reasonable certainty, the estate will not vest until the happening of this contingency. And whether the testator intended to give a vested estate or to make it depend upon a future contingency, depends in a great measure upon the language and phraseology of the will itself. This doctrine is fully laid down and applied in the recent cases of Bailey vs. Love, 67 Md., 598, and Larmour vs. Rich et al., 71 Md., 384, and cases there cited. These cases are decisive of the question raised here. The remainder, therefore, never vested in Alexander, [59]*59the son of Edward Goodwin, because he died in the lifetime of his father, before the period fixed by the testatrix for the remainder to vest. The words “from and after” the death of Edward Goodwin in connection with the limitation over to the grandchildren of the testatrix clearly indicate that it was the intention of the testatrix to postpone the vesting of the legacy until after the death of Edward Goodwin. The appellee, then, having been born after the execution of the will, and having survived the life tenant, Edward, is clearly entitled to the whole legacy. We come now to the remaining questions in the case. First, whether Caleb D. Goodwin, executor and trustee under the will, ever received the sum of $1500 in trust, and if he did so receive it, whether the petitioner can now claim it and have it paid to her out of his estate, which is being administered in a Court of equity. At the first hearing of the petition of the appellee, the Circuit Court for Baltimore County dismissed her petition on the ground of the failure of proof to trace the fund into the hands of the present trustee, and to identify it as a part of the trust estate of Caleb D. Goodwin. Subsequently, however, the order dismissing the petition was suspended and a rehearing granted. There can be no question that a suit in chancery can be maintained for a legacy, even in cases where a bond has been given to pay debts and legacies. Code, Art. 16, secs. 81 and 82.

Caleb Goodwin died in 1855, and the claim of the petitioner, the appellee in this case, did not arise until after the death of Edward, the life tenant, in 1864, and as his estate was being administered in a Court of equity, it seems clear to us that her proper remedy was in that Court. Whether then Caleb D. Goodwin received this legacy, as trustee, is a question of fact, and depends for its decision upon the proof in the case.

Additional testimony was offered at the rehearing of the case, consisting of copies of the first, second, third [60]*60and fourth, administration accounts of Milcah Goodwin’s estate; and these accounts, beyond doubt, show that he charged himself, as trustee, with this legacy. But it is contended upon the part of the appellants assuming the correctness of the position of the appellee upon the points which we have passed upon, that the laches of the appellee are fatal to her right to recover.

It appears that Caleb D. Goodwin died in the year 1855, and Edward Goodwin in the year 1864. The first petition claiming the fund was not filed until the year 1872. The trust fund, however, was at that time in the hands of Caleb Goodwin’s trustee, and his estate was large and sufficient to pay all his debts.

The petition was answered by the trustee of Caleb’s estate, but there was no denial of the validity of her claim. The delay, we think, has been sufficiently explained by the following reasons, which we adopt, in the language of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County: “Thereupon followed a succession of losses of papers without the fault of the petitioner. From time to time she applied to the Court for permission to supply the missing papers by substituting others in their places, until some time in 1884, when she filed another petition, alleging that the said substituted papers, petitions and proceedings had disappeared from the files of the Court, and that her counsel, after diligent search and inquiry had been unable to find them, or procure any account of the same, and praying that her petition then filed (in 1884) might be substituted for her former petition. Without alluding to other facts, what we have said is sufficient to show that the petitioner has met very great difficulties in the prosecution of her claim, and that if much time has elapsed the petitioner was not responsible for the delay — certainly not for all of it,- — nor for so much of it as would justify us in saying that under all the circumstances of this case, she has been guilty of laches.”

[61]*61The remaining question brings up for review tbe action of the Circuit Court in granting a rehearing after tbe final order of August 3rd, 1888, dismissing tbe petition.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A. 894, 79 Md. 55, 1894 Md. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherbonnier-v-goodwin-md-1894.