Crawford v. Carlisle

89 So. 565, 206 Ala. 379, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1921
Docket4 Div. 878.
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 89 So. 565 (Crawford v. Carlisle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Carlisle, 89 So. 565, 206 Ala. 379, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 108 (Ala. 1921).

Opinions

THOMAS, J.

The bill is by a minor granddaughter of testator for construction of the will of J. R. Crawford, who died April 9, 1918, and. whose will, executed on September 27, 1917, was admitted to probate on June 10, 1918.

It is averred that some provisions in the will are of doubtful import; that the children and more than three grandchildren of the testator were living at the date of his death, one of whom is complainant; that testator died more than 10 years prior to the end of the year 1928, leaving both real and personal' property sought to be charged, de: vised, and bequeathed by his will, respectively, to the widow for life, to children named for a term of years, and to the. grandchil- • dren not named therein who may be surviving at the respective periods indicated. The prayer of the bill 'was that a court of equity administer the estate, construe the will, require personal representatives to give bond, and for general relief.

Testator left surviving him a widow, Mrs. Mary A. Crawford, and the four children named in the will, who are alleged to be “his sole and only heirs except complainant [a grandchild of the testator], who is a daughter of Ruth Carlisle, a deceased child of testator.” The mother of complainant died on September 8, 1913, and left as heir at law and next of kin the complainant and her husband, the next friend by whom the infant sues. Smith v. Tearwood, 197 Ala. 680, 73 South. 384.

[1] On due application administration of an estate may be removed from the probate court to a court of equity for construction of a will and for administration of the estate in the latter court. Gen. Acts 1915, p. 738: Fowlkes v. Clay, 88 South. 651; 1 Dent v. Foy, 204 Ala. 404, 85 South. 709; Jamison v. Brasher, 202 Ala. 578, 81 South. 80.

Omitting features of the will having no bearing, ’by item 2 thereof executors were nominated without bond or being required to make annual or final settlement of their ex-ecutorship or management and control of the estate in any court. Item 3 provided that should testator die before his wife, Mrs. Mary A. Crawford (which was the fact), his executors should “set aside out of” said “estate or the profit or incomes arising therefrom, a sufficient amount to suitably and properly * * * care for” her “until she dies.” Items 4 and 5 directed that said executors, in the management and control of the estate, after providing for the wife as indicated, should “annually * * * state the profits remaining,”' divide them “share and share alike among my surviving children, to wit, J. L. Crawford, R. D. Crawford, Elina Creel, and Ethel Wilson,” and continue the annual division until “the end of the year one thousand nine hundred and twenty-eight.” The executors were charged with “the management, control, and direction of the affairs of the corpus of” said estate “as in their judgment and sound discretion may be for the best interest of” said estate and for the benefit of the “four surviving children” until the end of the said year 1928, when, it is declared (item 6), “the personal rights, titles and interest of my said four-children * * * shall cease and be determined and end in the corpus of” said estate “and in the profits and incomes accruing thereto, * * * and * * * said executors * * * shall continue to handle, control and direct the affairs of my said estate as * * * said executors, * " * and the profits and incomes accruing and growing *383 out of the corpus of * * * said estate shall be equally divided or distributed share and share alike to my grandchildren then in being per capita and not per stirpes, until the end of the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight, provided, however, that Dorothy Carlisle shall not participate in such distribution and shall in no event receive any portion of my said estate either as to corpus or the profits thereof, * * * it being hereby desired, directed, bequeathed and devised * * * that my entire estate • * * as herein set out shall become the property of my surviving children and my grandchildren to the exclusion of and without right, title or interest in the said Dorothy Carlisle.” Item 7: That “at all times * * * ■said estate as to its corpus shall remain intact * * * until the end of the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight, and at the end of each and every year after the year one thousand nine hundred and twenty-eight, and until the end of the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight, my executors shall * * * ascertain the amount of profits * * * of the corpus of my estate, and the said profits and incomes at the end of each year after the year one thousand nine hundred and twenty-eight and until the end of the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight shall be equally divided, share and share alike, among my grandchildren then in being, except Dorothy Carlisle.” Item 8: “When all the foregoing conditions, stipulations and provisions * * * have been carried out, provided for and met, and at the end of the said year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight, it is my desire and I hereby grant, give, bequeath and devise all my property of every kind and description including my real, personal and mixed property then belonging to my said estate to my grandchildren then in being, except * * * Dorothy Carlisle, share and share alike. * * * ” There is no item 9 of the will exhibited by the pleading. It is further provided, in item 10, that after the foregoing stipulations have been complied with by the executors “at the end of the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty-eight * * * said executors shall then and there become, and they are hereby created, trustees for my said grandchildren, except the said Dorothy Carlisle, and of my said estate; and as such trustees, they shall invest my said estate for my said grandchildren, except Dorothy Carlisle, into such investments and property as may, in their judgment and sound discretion, be proper and right to conserve and carry out the interests of my said grandchildren, except Dorothy Carlisle, and the said trustees .shall make said investment in their own way, and as they may see proper so as to conserve the interests of my said estate and of my said grandchildren, except Dorothy Carlisle, in the same, to such an end that all my grandchildren, except Dorothy Carlisle, shall share equally in said investments, and to the end that each of my said grandchildren, except Dorothy Carlisle, shall take title in fee simple to equal shares of my said estate.” The last item of the will provided for a survivorship in the executorial office.

[2] Appellants insist that Dorothy Carlisle has no interest in the estate of J. R. Crawford, deceased, and may not prosecute the suit for removal of the. estate and for construction of the will. If the averments of the bill show that complainant had no “interest in” or was not an heir or distributee of the estate of said decedent, demurrer challenging its sufficiency for such reason should have been sustained. The jurisdiction of courts of equity in respect to testamentary construction will not be exercised to determine hypothetical or abstract questions. In re Stumpenhousen’s Estate, 108 Iowa, 555, 559, 79 N. W. 376; Pennington’s Case, 70 Md. 418, 17 Atl. 329, 3 L. R. A. 816; Greeley v. Nashua, 62 N. H. 166; Little v. Thorne, 93 N. C. 69; Rothgeb v. Mauck, 35 Ohio St. 503.

[3]

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 565, 206 Ala. 379, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-carlisle-ala-1921.