Cleveland v. Carson

37 N.J. Eq. 377
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 N.J. Eq. 377 (Cleveland v. Carson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland v. Carson, 37 N.J. Eq. 377 (N.J. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Charity Wilmot, of the city of Orange, died December 5th, 1882, leaving a will dated September 15th, 1881. By it, after ordering payment of her debts and funeral expenses, including in the latter the cost of the erection of a plain headstone over her grave, she ordered that $300 be expended in the erection of headstones or a monument over the graves of her deceased sister, Sarah Bodwell, and the husband of the latter, Philander J. Bod-[378]*378well. She then gave $350 to John Freeman, and $1,000 to her sister, Jane Judd. She then (by the fifth clause) gave to Henry A. and Philander B. Carson, her great nephews, and to the survivor of them, l< the two certain mortgages which she then held upon their real estate in Orange, together with all interest due and to grow due upon the same.” By the next, the sixth section, she gave to each of those two legatees $1,200. By the seventh, she gave the use of two-thirds of all the residue to her sister, Caroline Bodwell, for life, with remainder to Philander and Granville W. Bodwell, children of the latter. By the [379]*379eighth, she gave the use of the other third to Edward L. Hub-bell for life, with remainder to his heirs-at-law. When the will was made, and at her death, she had three mortgages which had been given to her on the real property of the Carsons in Orange: one for $320, given by Philander J. Bodwell, July 1st, Í859; another for $2,200, given by the same person, May 8th, 1871, and the other for $1,404, given by- Caroline A. Carson, July 1st, 1872, and the question presented is, whether any, and if so, what mortgages are given to the Carsons by the fifth clause of the will. They insist that all the mortgages are thereby given [380]*380to them. The Bod wells, on the contrary, not only deny that claim, but insist that the gift is void for uncertainty. The court will not hold a devise or bequest to be void for uncertainty unless it is wholly unable to discover the testator’s meaning. That the testatrix intended to give to the Carsons at least two of the mortgages which she held on their property in Orange, will admit of no dispute whatever. She gives to them “ the two mortgages ” she held on their property. She may have been in error as to the number of mortgages, or, what is far more probable, the will may fail to express her meaning. It may be that [381]*381through some misunderstanding of the draftsman and inattention on her part, an error has crept into the bequest in the statement of the number of the mortgages. But however that may be, she clearly meant to give at least two of the mortgages, and she has not designated which, if she intended to give only two. If the gift is to be confined to two, the legatees would themselves have the right of selection. “Where the gift,” says Mr. Jar-man, “ comprises a definite portion of a larger quantity, it is not rendered nugatory by the omission of the testator to point out [382]*382the specific part which is to form such portion; the devisee or legatee being in such case entitled to select.” 1 Jarm. on Wills 320. This rule was applied in Love v. Stiles, 10 C. E. Gr. 381, and Youmans v. Youmans, 11 C. E. Gr. 149. But the testatrix did not intend to limit the gift to two only of the mortgages. This is clearly indicated by her language. It is “ the two certain mortgages which I now hold upon their real estate in Orange aforesaid, together with all interest due and to grow due upon the same.” She evidently meant to give them all her mortgage debt upon the property, and made a mistake in stating the number of the mortgages. Had she intended not to give all, but only to give two of the three, she would have designated the two which she meant to give, for the mortgages are of very different [383]*383amounts—$320, $2,200 and $1,404. A mere mistake in the subject of a gift will not invalidate it. Shep. Touch. 432; Ward on Leg. 202, 203.

Note.—In Tomkins v. Tomkins, cited in Sleeck v. Thornigton, 2 Ves. Sr. 564} 19 Ves. 126, note, a testator gave £50 to his sister, and to her three children £50 each, when, in fact, she had four children, and all of them were held to take_ In Sleeck v. Thornigton, 2 Ves. Sr. 660, a gift “ unto the two servants that shall live with me at the time of my death, to be' equally divided between them,” the testatrix having but two when she made her will, but afterwards having taken another, who lived with her to the time of her death, was equally divided among all three of them. In Stebbing v. Walkey, 2 Bro. C. O. 86, 1 Cox 260, a bequest was made for the two daughters of S., and if either should die before a specified time, the whole was to go to the survivor, but if both died, it was to fall into the residue. S. had three daughters, and all of them were held entitled. In Scott v. Penoulhett, 1 Cox 79, the gift was to each of the daughters of C. if both or either of them should survive D. C. had three daughters, all of whom survived D., and were held equally entitled. In Caney v. Hibbert, 19 Ves. 126, M. gave to the three children of D. £600 each. D. had four children, all born before the date of the will, who took equally. In Lee v. Pain, 4 Hare 249, a legacy was given to the three sisters of A., who had four sisters, and all of them were let in. In Morrison v. Martin, 6 Hare 507, the bequest was of £100 each to the two children of testator’s nephews, A and B. A had three children and B two, and each of the five children took £100. In Berkeley v. Palling, 1 Buss. 496, a residue was to be divided into eight equal shares”, and disposed of as follows among the children of A: Two shares to each of the two daughters, and one share to each of the three sons of A, making together only seven shares.—Held, that the whole was divisible among the children of A in seven parts, each daughter taking two-sevenths and each son one. In Lane v. Oreen, 4 Be Q. & Sm. 289, a testator bequeathed £100 apiece to the four sons of A. H. by her former husband. She had four children by such former husband, but one of them was a daughter.—Held, that the daughter took a legacy of £100. In Bassett’s Estate, L. R. {14 Eq.) 54, the bequest was to W. and E. B.’s three children, £10 each, and of certain furniture, equally to be divided among them. W. and E. B. had four children.—Held, that each of the four was entitled to a legacy of £10, and to a share of the furniture. In Edclels v. Johnson, 1 Oiff. 22, a testator having given to each of his six children a freehold estate, made a second devise to two of them, and then gave all his residuary estate unto his said four children, naming three only.—Held, that all the four (other than the two) were entitled. . In Spencer v. Word, L. R. {9 Eq.) 507, the gift was of £250 to each of the two children of S., who, in fact, had three children, and each of the three was held entitled to £250. In Lee v. Lee, 10 Jur. {N. S.) 1041,

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.J. Eq. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-v-carson-njch-1883.