Corle v. Monkhouse

47 N.J. Eq. 73
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 N.J. Eq. 73 (Corle v. Monkhouse) 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
Corle v. Monkhouse, 47 N.J. Eq. 73 (N.J. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The questions which will be decided now relate exclusively to the rights which the widow of Peter W. Young,' deceased, took under his will. Mr. Young died on the 8th day of March, 1887, and his will was admitted to probate on the 25th of the same month. His widow died on the 26th day of February, 1888, a little short of a year after her husband’s death. She also died, testate, and by her will appointed as her executor the same person whom her husband had appointed. Disputes-have arisen as to whether certain property passed by the will of the husband to his widow, so that it now constitutes part of -her estate, and as such must pass by her will to her beneficiaries, and as the same person is the executor of the two wills under which these adverse-claims are made, and as he is, consequently, in a position which-renders it improper for him to become the champion of either-set of claimants, he has, for that reason, brought this suit,, seeking the direction of the hourt so that he may perform his-duty with safety to himself and with justice to the adverse claimants.

The provisions of the husband’s will, showing what rights were conferred upon his widow, will be quoted in full, and the-other pertinent provisions simply stated in substance. The testator first said:

I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Penelope Young, the full use,, occupation, possession, enjoyments, rents, issues and profits of all my messuages,, lands and tenements, wheresoever situated, together with the use of all my personal property, of every kind and description, that shall remain after paying my debts and funeral expenses, with the interest accruing on my bonds, noles, stocks and all other evidences of debt, during her natural life, and at her death -I give and bequeath the same as follows.”

The testator then gave two persons a legacy of $500 each, payable when they reached the age of twenty-one years ; and to his-surviving executor $1,000 in trust, to be invested and the interest applied to keeping his burial plot in good order. He then said t

[75]*75“I give and bequeath to my nieces, Lydia Y. Johnson” [now Mrs. Monk-house] and Penelope Y. Herder, all my household goods that may be remaining at my wifds death, to be equally divided between them, share and share-alike.”

He then gave three legacies to three different persons — to one $3,000, to another $2,000, and to a third $500. He then devised thirty-five acres of land to Mahala Cray for life, with remainder to Lydia Y. Johnson ; he next devised a farm to Peter Y. Herder, and then devised a farm, called the Huff farm,” to his surviving-executor in trust, for the benefit of 'William P. Johnson. He then said:

I give and bequeath to Lydia Y. Johnson the balance of my personal property that may be remaining at my wife’s death, of every kind and description, after paying all my debts, my wife’s funeral expenses and the legacies herein* bequeathed.”

The testator owned, at the time of his death, considerable-farm-land. He gave, in the language of his will, the use, occupation, possession, enjoyment, rents, issues and profits of all his-lands to his widow for her life. Crops of wheat and rye were-growing on some of the farm-lands when the widow died, which had been sown during the continuance of her life estate. Both the devisee in remainder of the lands and the legatee of the-balance of the personal property claim the winter grain growing-at the widow’s death. As long ago as 1819, Chief-Justice Kirkpatrick, in deciding Van Doren v. Everitt, 2 South. 460, 463, said:.

“ In this state I have always understood it to be the universal custom, and therefore the settled law, that the tenant, after the-expiration of his term, should have liberty to enter, cut and carry away his waygoing crop, as it is called, that is, all the-grain that he has sown, but which was not then ripe. * * * Indeed, the matter appeared to me to be so well settled that I was-surprised to hear it made a question.” The same right inheres in a tenant for life. That has been the rule of the common law from the earliest times. In Coke on Littleton, under title of “Tenant at Will 55b, it is said:

[76]*76•“And this is not only proper to a lessee at will, that when the lessor determines his will that the 'lessee shall have the corn sowne, &c., but to every particular tenant that hath an estate incertaine, for that is the reason which Littleton expresseth in these words, because he hath no certaine, nor sure estate. And therefore if tenant for life soweth the ground, and dieth, his executors shall have the com, for that his estate was uncertaine, and determined by the .act of God. And the same is the law of the lessee for years of the tenant for life.”

And Comyn (2 Com. Dig. tit. “Biens” (G2)p. 272) says:

“ So every one, who has an uncertain estate or interest,' if his estate determines by the act of God before severance of the corn, shall have the emblements, or they go to his executor or administrator; as if tenant for life sow the land and die before severance.”

The rule, as thus stated, is the recognized law of this state. De Bow v. Colfax, 5 Halst. 128; Howell v. Schenk, 4 Zab. 89, 93.

The widow’s executor is entitled to the crop of winter grain. The other claimants are, in my judgment, without the least right.

It is also claimed, that as the widow died in less than a year-after the date of the testator’s death, her executor is not entitled to the interest which accrued on the testator’s securities in the interim. This claim is founded, as it seems to me, on an obvious misapprehension, both of the testator’s intention and the law. As I read his will, the testator has made it very plain that he wanted his widow to have all the interest which should accrue on his securities between the date, of his death and the time when she should die. Stripping the clause, in which the gift of the interest is made, of all extraneous matter, it will read as follows:

I give and bequeath to my beloved wife the interest accruing on my bonds, notes, stocks and all other evidences of debt during her natural life.” His will must be read as speaking from the hour of his death. So reading it, it seems to me to be clear, beyond dispute, that every penny of interest which accrued after his death and before hers, became, hers by the plain words of the will.

[77]*77The general rule undoubtedly is, that where no time is fixed1 by the will for the payment of a legacy, and it is not sooner’ paid, interest will not begin to accrue on it until the end of a year from the testator’s death. But this rule is subject to exceptions, and one of the exceptions to it is, that where a gift is made of the interest or income, either of the whole of the residue, or of a particular part of it, to one person for life, and the principal is given over to others on the death of the life tenant, the life tenant is entitled to interest from the date of the testator’s death. This exception rests on obvious considerations of justice. To-adopt the general rule in such a case would result, as is plain, in-the augmentation of the principal fund, by the addition of one-year’s interest, and the remainderman would thus be given just that much more as principal, than existed as principal at the testator’s- death.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.J. Eq. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corle-v-monkhouse-njch-1890.