Crumley v. Scales

69 S.E. 531, 135 Ga. 300, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 531 (Crumley v. Scales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crumley v. Scales, 69 S.E. 531, 135 Ga. 300, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 512 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Holden, J.

(After stating the facts.) The plaintiffs in error (who were the plaintiffs in the court below) are the children of three of the daughters referred to in the 12th item of the will. They contend that under this item they are contingent remainder-men, or executory devisees, with respect to the realty and personalty therein devised and bequeathed. The daughters of the testator, who are the defendants in error, and who were the defendants in the court below, claim that, by reason of their having survived the testator, they own the fee-simple title to the property devised in this item of the will. In the order passed by the trial judge, after denying the injunction, he states: “The court being of the opinion that the.daughters of M. R. Berry [the testator’] took fee-simple estate, and the plaintiffs having no interest in the property.” Counsel for the defendants in their brief state “that if the children have any interest in the property, it should be recognized, declared, and protected by an injunction.” The only .question made before and passed on by the trial judge, and the only issue made here, is whether or not the plaintiffs have any interest in the property bequeathed in the 12th item of the will. That item is as follows: “Item 12. I give, devise, and bequeath, absolutely in fee simple, all the balance of my property which I may own at the time of my death, both real and personal, and wherever located, in equal shares to my four daughters, Carrie M. Crumley, Fannie A. Wright, and Maggie S. McBurney. Should any of my said children die leaving child or children, such child or children shall take the share of their deceased parent.” The plaintiffs claim that under this item, if one of the daughters should die at any timo leaving children, such children would take the share of the deceased parent. The defendants contend that this item of the will means that if one of the daughters should die before the death of Iho testator, leaving children, the latter should take the .share of the. deceased parent, but any daughter who survived the testator would take a fee-simple [305]*305estate, and the children of such daughter, by virtue of the will, would take no .interest in the property upon her dying aftér the death of. the testator and leaving children.

There are many decisions holding that where property is devised without limitation, and words are employed that “in case of death,” or “in the event of death,” or similar words importing death of the devisee, the property is to go to other named persons, the death referred to is one occurring prior to the death of the testator; for in such cases, death being certain and not referable to a collateral event, it must be concluded that the testator had in mind only death occurring prior to his own death. There are also many decisions construing items of wills wherein property is devised to one without limitation, followed by a provision that in the event -of such party dying “without issue” it is to go to named persons. Some of these decisions hold that the death referred to is one in connection witli some collateral event, and as such death • without issue may happen at any time, such words are to be interpreted according to their ordinary meaning and as referring to the time of death of the first taker, whether occurring before or after the death of the testator, unless the contrary intention is plainly expressed in the will, or is necessary in order to carry out its undoubted purposes. Numerous other decisions construing provisions of like character hold that the death referred to is one occurring only before the death of the testator. In some of the decisions it is considered important, in determining the intention of the testator,. whether the property passing under the will is realty or personalty; and in others, whether the 'language employed by the testator' denoting a passage of title to the first taker is such as is usually employed to convey a fee-simple estate. Some of the authorities hold that in applying the rule that the contingency of dying “without issue,” upon which happening a new devisee is to take after a previous devise in fee, means so dying in the lifetime of the testator, there is no different rule of construction when a fee is expressly given and when language is used from which one is presumed. For an elaborate collation of cases construing the period to which death is referable in connection with devises where there 'is an expression •importing the contingency of dying without child, or issue, on’ which a gift over is limited, see the extended note to the case of Smith v. Smith, 157 Ala. 79 (47 So. 230, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.) [306]*3061045). We have referred to the divergent views taken by various courts merely to illustrate the difficulty which is experienced in arriving at the real intention of a testator when he emplojrs language with reference to a contingency, and does not leave free from doubt" the time at which he expécted the contingency to operate and the indefeasible estate to become fixed. While the courts have used various arguments and applied sundry rules of law to uphold the conclusion reached by them in construing some particular will, no fixed guide can be followed, and each case must rest on its own peculiar facts in determining what disposition the testator really wished to make of his property. In cases like the one we are deciding, where language susceptible of more than one .construction is used, the environment of the testator at the time the will was executed, all of its provisions and its general testamentary scheme, and every other legitimate fact and circumstance must be carefully considered, in connection with the several rules of law which aro applicable, in an endeavor to. so resolve the doubt as to effectuate the design which the testator desired to accomplish by the language he employed; and but little assistance can be gained from decisions made under the variant facts of other cases.

■ The record shows that the testator himself wrote the will in question, and that one of his daughters, “Mrs. McBurney, had no children, and Mr. Berry [the testator] did not think she would ever have any, as the marriage had been fruitless for a large number of years.” Each of the other three daughters referred to in the 12th item of the will had children, who are the plaintiffs- in this case. The record further shows that personalty as well as realty passed under this item. In the 5th item of the will the testator devised to Mrs. McBurney certain property “to have and to hold' during her life, or, if she should leave no child or children, to go to her sisters, . . or their children, in three equal shares.” In other items of his will he devised to each of the other three daughters certain property during her lifetime, and at her death to go to her children. After 'devising to Mrs. Crumley a certain lot, without stating anything further than that it was devised to her, the following language appears: “to have and to hold said property during her life, and at her death to her children, share and share alike.” This sentence in the will is followed by one wherein the testator gave to Mrs. Crumley another lot “absolutely and.in [307]*307foe simple,” without stating that at her death this property was 'to go to any one else. Another instance of this kind appears in devising property to another daughter in item 4. ' By reference to the items referred to, it will be seen that the testator employed language technically accurate in creating life-estates and in creating estates in fee simple, showing that the testator knew what language was needed in order to create the two different kinds of estates.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 531, 135 Ga. 300, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crumley-v-scales-ga-1910.