Courtenay v. Courtenay

113 A. 717, 138 Md. 204, 1921 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 113 A. 717 (Courtenay v. Courtenay) 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
Courtenay v. Courtenay, 113 A. 717, 138 Md. 204, 1921 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

After making certain pecuniary bequests, the will of Isabella Courtenay provides as follows: ,

“I give, devise and bequeath all the remainder of my property of every kind, real, personal or mixed, whether in possession or expectation, or to which I may hereafter become entitled in any way, including all sums due to mo by others, to my sister, Elizabeth Courtenay, should she survive me, absolutely, and entirely in her own right, and to heirs and assigns forever. But in the event that I should survive my said sister Elizabeth, I direct that the whole of my estate at my death (except the two bequests first mentioned) be divided equally between my brother, William Courtenay, at present, and for some time past, residing in the City of Brooklyn, County, State of New York, and the three sons of my deceased brother, David Courtenay, late of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, namely: Charles Dana Courtenay, David Kirby Courtenay, Francis Chappelle Courtenay, and their mother, Francis Caroline (Ohappelle) Courtenay, all now residing in the City and County of Milwaukee and State of Wisconsin, or their respective heirs and assigns, share and share alike.”

The will was executed on January 31, 1908, and the testatrix, who was a resident of the City of Baltimore, died on August 20, 1918. She survived her sister Elizabeth and also her brother William. By operation of law the share of the latter in the residuary estate passing under the will has be1come vested in his widow, Julia Lawrence Courtenay, and his only child, George Lawrence Courtenay (Code, Art. 93, *206 Sgc. 326). The widow and children of the deceased brother David, named in the will, are all living. At the time of her death the testatrix held two promissory notes, aggregating $5,540.74, made by her brother William many years previously, upon which no interest had been paid since 1908, and which are now uncollectable. The record in this Court does not show the amount of the estate, but. it was stated in the argument to be about $19,000.

Two questions are presented -for decision. Eirst, whether the share intended by the will for William Courtenay is chargeable with the amount of the promissory notes to which we have referred,. and second, whether there should be a per capita or a per stirpes division among those entitled to share in the residuary estate. The lower court' decided the first of these questions in the negative, and held, as to the second, that there should be a p>er capita distribution. Erom the decree giving effect to those conclusions, separate appeals have been taken -by the respective parties interested ,in securing a different result as to one or the other of the questions thus determined.

The inquiry as to whether the share bequeathed to William Courtenay is subject to deductions on account of his indebtedness to the testatrix is entirely free of difficulty. In consequence of his death in her lifetime, and by virtue of the code provision already cited, the share designed for him passed directly to his next of kin, and is, therefore, not chargeable with his debts to the testatrix or any other creditors. Hemsley v. Hollingsworth, 119 Md. 444; Wallace v. Dubois, 65 Md. 161; Glenn v. Belt, 7 G. & J. 367.

The question as to the proper method of distribution among those entitled to the residuary estate depends, of course, upon the true meaning of the language which the testatrix has employed to express her intention on that subject. There are no other provisions of the will which reflect in any way upon the interpretation of the residuary clause, and its language *207 alone must control our decision. In the event, which occurred, that the testatrix survived her sister Elizabeth, she desired the estate to “he divided equally between” her brother William and the three sons and widow of her deceased brother David. According to the .per stirpes theory contended for, the share of William, to which his widow and son arc now entitled, would be one-half, while a per capita division would give them one-fifth. The provision to be construed, witb the allusion to preceding bequests and the designations of residences omitted as immaterial, may he re-quoted as follows: “I direct that the whole of my estate at my death * * * he divided equally between my brother, William Courtenay * * * and the three sons of my deceased brother, David Courtenay, * * * namely, Charles Dana Courtenay, David Kirby Courtenay, Erancis Chappelle Courtenay, and their mother, Francis Caroline (Chappells) Courtenay * * * or their respective heirs and assigns, share and share alike.”

The quotation we have made shows the names of the legatees in the relative positions iu which they appear in the will. The arrangement of the names in the way indicated affords no appreciable support to either of the opposing' theories of construction, as the motive of the testatrix in thus giving special prominence to the names of some of the objects of her bounty is wholly conjectural. They were sufficiently identified as “the three sons” of the deceased brother David, “and their mother,” and their subsequent designation by name was superfluous. If the provision is simplified by the omission of their names, the clause will read: . “I direct that the whole of my estate at my death * * * be divided equally between my brother, William Courtenay, * * * and the three sons of my deceased brother, David Courtenay, * -x- an([ thelp mother, * * * or their respective heirs and assigns, share and share alike.” This language plainly contemplates a distribution per capita. The1 clause begins and ends with a direction for an equal division. The estate is *208 bequeathed, “equally” and “share and share alike” to the. five persons mentioned, “or their -respective heirs and assigns.” The word “between” is said to indicate a division into two parts, but this term is often used as the equivalent of “among,” and it could not be given the suggested effect consistently with" the intent expressed by the provisions as a whole.

In the case of Brittain v. Carson, 16 Md. 186, the testamentary words construed were as follows: “It is my will that the rest, residue and remainder of my estate * * * shall be equally divided between my said daughter, Amelia J. Brittain, and the children of Virginia Carson.” Upon the question whether the division should be per capita or per stirpes, this Court said: “A long series of uniform decisions have given a settled construction to provisions in a will similar to this, all holding that the legatees, by force of the language used, take equally, and that the distribution is to be per capita. The cases which have been referred to by the appellant, as establishing a different doctrine, all affirm and recognize this rule of construction, but are put as exceptions to it, because of something in the will which indicated a different intention on the part of the testator. Such is not the case here.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 717, 138 Md. 204, 1921 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtenay-v-courtenay-md-1921.