Demill v. Reid

1 Balt. C. Rep. 21
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 21 (Demill v. Reid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demill v. Reid, 1 Balt. C. Rep. 21 (Md. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

WRIGHT, J.

The first inquiry that it seems necessary to make is, what is the character of the interest which by the will of John Willett was devised to the children of Henry J. Willett?

[22]*22It was earnestly contended by Mr. Mackubin, first, that it was a vested remainder, and he states the case thus: “Here the estate is given in trust for Belt’s life; then to the children of Henry, unless Belt, then childless, leave a descendant, &c. The remainder vested in the children of Henry, living at testator’s death, subject to be divested pro tanto, to let in any children that might afterwards be born to him, and, in toto, to let in any descendants of Belt that might be born and reach twenty-one years.” And the cases he cites are cases which he assumes sustain his construction of the clause of the will as he has thus rewritten it for the testator.

He cites Tayloe vs. Mosher, 29 Md. 449; Stump vs. Jordan, 54 Md. 626; Engle vs. State, 55 Md. 540, and Kemp vs. Bradford, 61 Md. 320. All of these cases have been examined by the Court, and in the opinion of the Court all of them were decisions on very different provisions from those in the clause here submitted for construction, and were all cases of undoubted vested remainders. And further, the Court cannot agree with the counsel that the clause as rewritten above in any manner correctly states the same as it appears in the will of John Willett.

In the said clause of the two contingencies of John Willett Belt leaving children, and of those children reaching lawful age and leaving children, &e., are provided for before one word is said concerning any interest being limited to the children of Henry J. Willett.

Second. It was contended by Mr. Mackubin that if this interest did not present the case of a vested remainder, it was an executory devise, and he cites the cases of Hilleary vs. Hilleary, 26 Md. 288, and Snively vs. Beavan, 1 Md. 223, in support of this view. The provisions of the several wills under construction in these two cases undoubtedly created executory devises, a fee being limited on a fee, and the first fee having vested, the subsequent limitation could only be effective as an executory devise. I think the authorities fully dispose of the proposition of Mr. Mackubin that the clause of the will here under construction creates an executory devise.

In Doe d. Herbert vs. Selby, 2 Barn-well & Creswell, 926, the provisions of the will under construction were almost identical with those presented in this case, so much so that the learned counsel for Reid were justified in saying that it seemed as if the attorney who drew John Willett’s will had before him, at the time of drawing it, the case of Doe vs. Selby. In that ease there was a “devise to testator’s son, G., for life, and from and after his decease unto all and every the child and children of G., lawfully to be begotten, and their heirs forever, to hold as tenants in common and not as joint tenants; but if my son G. should die without issue or leaving issue, and such child or children should die before obtaining the age of twenty-one years, or without lawful issue, then I give the same estates to my son T., my daughter A. S., and my son-in-law W. D., and to their heirs forever, as tenants in common and not as joint tenants.” After the testator’s death his son G. suffered a recovery, and died unmarried and without issue. Held, that in that event the devise over must take effect as a contingent remainder, and was therefore defeated by the destruction of the particular estate.

In that case, as in the ease now before the Court, it was contended that the ultimate devisees took either by way of executory devise or vested remainder; “but,” say the Court, “it is clear that where a devise may operate as a contingent remainder it cannot be considered as an executory devise. If a fee be given by way of vested limitation, but determinable, a remainder after that must be an executory devise ; but if a fee is limited in contingency and upon failure of that estate is given over, that is a contingency with a double aspect and if the estate vests in one it cannot in the other. (Luddington vs. Kime, 3 Lev. 431.) But it may happen that an estate may be devised over in either of two events, and that in one event the devise may operate as a contingent remainder, and in the other as an executory devise. Thus, if George had left a child, a determinable fee would have vested in that child and then the devise over could only have operated as an executory devise. But George having died without having a child, the first fee never vested and the remainder ever continued a contingent remainder.” (And see Crump d. Woolley vs. Norwood, 7 Taunt. 362, cited by the Court). The comment on Doe vs. Selby, in 2 [23]*23Jarman on Wills, p. 876, is instructive in this connection. Says the learned author, “Sometimes a limitation is so framed as to take effect as a contingent remainder in fee in one event, and as an executory limitation en-grafted on an alternative contingent remainder in fee in another event. Thus, in Doe d. Herbert vs. Selby, where the devise was to A. for life, and after his decease to his children in fee as tenants in common; and if A. should die without issue, or leaving such issue and such child or children should die under twenty-one, or (which was read and) without issue, then over to B. in fee. A. suffered a common recovery and died without issue; and it was held that in the event which had happened the limitation to B. would have taken effect as a contingent remainder and consequently was destroyed by the recovery.

It is not quite accurate to say in such a case as Doe vs. Selby that the limitation is a contingent remainder in one event and an executory devise in the other. There were, in fact, two alternative contingent remainders in fee, one of which was subject to an executory limitation in favor of the same person, who would have been the object of the alternative remainder.

Here in Doe vs. Selby we have a case decided by a unanimous Court and cited as law by high authority. No decision has been submitted to the Court where the authority in that case has been doubted, and the Court thinks that the reasoning on which the result was reached cannot be successfully attacked, and therefore is of the opinion that the estate which the children of Henry J. Willett took under the clause before the Court they took by way of contingent remainder. If this is so, when did the estate vest and in whom did it vest? I cannot conceive of its vesting at any other possible time than at the time of the death of the life tenant, John Willett Belt. But, although it may be conceded that the estate did then vest, still it may be contended that there was prior to that time an interest or a possibility in the children of Henry J. Willett that was “transmissible by descent and was devisable or assignable.” In 4th Kent’s Com. 261 and 262 (13th edition), it is stated: “It is settled that all contingent estates of inheritance, as well as springing and executory uses and possibilities, coupled with an interest, where the person to take is certain, are transmissible by descent and are devisable and assignable.” And in note C. p. 262, Buck vs. Launtz, 49 Md. 439, is cited as one of the authorities for the proposition, “If,” however, continues the text “the person be not ascertained, they are not then possibilities coupled with an interest, and they cannot be either devised, or descend, at common law.”

Now, in Buck vs. Launtz and in Snively vs. Beavan (1 Md.

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Related

Proprietary v. Pearce
1 Md. 223 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1764)
Hilleary v. Lessee
26 Md. 274 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1867)
Buck v. Lantz
49 Md. 439 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1878)
Stump v. Jordan
54 Md. 619 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1880)
McCullough v. Pierce
55 Md. 540 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1881)
Luckemeyer v. Seltz
61 Md. 313 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demill-v-reid-mdcirctctbalt-1889.