Dawes v. Swan

4 Mass. 208
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 4 Mass. 208 (Dawes v. Swan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawes v. Swan, 4 Mass. 208 (Mass. 1808).

Opinion

The Chief Justice, observing that the Court were not unanimously agreed, requested his brother Sedgwick to deliver his opinion first, which he did, as follows : —

Sedgwick, J.

The question is, whether the legatee, Samuel Clarke, is entitled to interest on his legacy from the death, or from three months after the death, of the testator ; or whether the interest commenced, in the words of the bequest, on his arriving at the age of twenty-one years.

In this, as in every case of a legacy, we are bound to ascertain, as well as we can, from the whole of the testator’s will, in relation to the subject matter of inquiry, what was his intention.

The bequest is expressed in these words: “ I give to Samuel Clarke, son of Samuel Clarke, late of Boston, deceased, 500Z. ster ling, to be paid him on his arriving to the age of twenty-one years. If he dies before that time, this legacy to be void.”

I do not determine whether this legacy, technically considered, was contingent; or whether it was' vested, as the plaintiff’s counsel contended, and to be divested on the death of the legatee before he attained to.the age of twenty-one years. Whatever the construction in this regard may be, if this bequest is tobe considered by itself, and uninfluenced by any other part of the will, it is impossible to mistake the intention of the testator. If the legatee died before he attained to twenty-one years of age, nothing was to be paid; “ the legacy was to be void.” If he did not, then the legacy was to be paid. A payment, therefore, of 500Z. to him, when he was twenty-one years [ * 210 ] of age, would exactly and fully satisfy the directions * of the testator’s will. As this is the plain and manifest intention of the words, in which the bequest is expressed, and as it is apparent, from them,, the legatee is not entitled to interest, or the legacy, before he was twenty-one years of age, the demand that is made for it must, as I apprehend, be clearly supported by a mani fest intention, to be discovered in some other part of the will.

It is contended that such intention — an intention that the legacy should carry interest from the death, or from three months after the death, of the testator, " till paid ” — is manifest from an after direction in the will, expressed in these words: “ I order all the above mentioned legacies to be paid in silver or gold, and not in paper money at any rate, or by any means whatever, with interest, in three months after my decease till paid.” It is insisted that this clause of the will gives interest on the legacy to Samuel Clarke from three months after the death of the testator.

To determine this, one fact is, in my opinion, necessary to be rec« [189]*189ollected and kept in memory, while we are attempting to ascertain the intention of the testator, by the recited direction, as that intention may be discovered by a consideration of the bequest to Samuel Clarke, and by other parts of the will. The fact I mean is, that Samuel Clarke, at the time of making the will, was not more than four or five years old, and not more than six or seven at the time of the testator's death. Keeping this in our view, let us inquire vvhetli er the testator meant, by directing when and how “ all the above-mentioned legacies ” should be paid, to charge the legacy to Samuel Clarke with interest before he attained to the age of twenty-one years. I believe the true construction of this direction to be, that it shall attach to all the legacies, in every particular, which does not control a manifest intention expressed in the bequests themselves ; but that, in all the particulars where such application would alter or materially vary the bequests themselves, there the direction is not to be applied. So that we are bound, I apprehend, to apply, for the explication of this item of the will, that rule of construction of doubtful or ambiguous words and expressions, by which we are directed to refer them to the subjects, respectively, to which they properly * belong. By means of this rule, we may satisfactorily [*211 | explain and give effect to every part of this will; and without it manifest absurdities and contradictions may be involved.

This direction of the will refers to three subjects. 1. It orders the legacies to be paid in gold or silver; 2. It fixes the time within which they shall be paid; and, 3. It directs that (if not paid within that time, as I apprehend) they shall carry interest. Was the intention that all the legacies should in fact be paid in gold and silver; that they should all be paid in three months; that they should all be paid with interest ? I believe not; but that these directions should be observed in all instances, whereby the manifest intention of the testator, expressed in the bequests themselves, would not be violated. In this view Í will consider the direction of the testator, by which interest is supposed to be due on the legacy to Samuel Clarke, before he attains to twenty-one years of age, in relation to the bequest itself, and to other parts of the will.

In regard to the bequest to Samuel Clarke, was it intended that it should be paid in three months ? This is impossible ; because the testator had expressly declared that it should be paid to him when he attained to twenty-one years of age, which was sixteen or seventeen years after making the will, and fourteen or fifteen years after the testator’s death. No reasonable explanation has been given of these two clauses of tne will — the bequest to Samuel Clarke, and the direction as to the time and manner of paying the legacies, whereby it can be conceived that it was the intention of the testator [190]*190that that legacy should be paid in three months after his decease. It cannot be believed that the testator, when he wrote or assented to the latter clause, had forgotten when and how he had intended his bounty to the legatee should be dispensed. It is difficult to suppose he had altered that intention ; or, if he had, it cannot be conceived that he would have left it to be determined, after his death, by doubtful construction. It is, then, impossible to suppose that, the testator intended that this legacy should be paid in three months after his death. And I should have thought, but for the weight of the authority against me, that, after an attentive perusal and consideration of the will, it would have been equally [*212] impossible to believe * that it was the intention of the testator that the legacy should carry interest before the legatee attained to twenty-one years of age. If the legatee attained to twenty-one years of age, and then 5001. were paid him, the will of the testator was completely fulfilled. On that contingency, that sum, and no more, was due. If the legatee died before that time, the legacy was void. Apply, then, the latter item in the will to this legacy, and it is a direction that it shall be paid in gold or silver, and not that it shall be paid in three months; nor that it shall carry interest during the infancy of the legatee.

The legacy next preceding that to Samuel Clarke is also a legacy to an infant, Nathaniel Norton. It is expressly provided that it shall carry interest, and an appropriation of that interest is made, during his infancy, for his support.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mass. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawes-v-swan-mass-1808.