Den v. Combs

18 N.J.L. 27
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 N.J.L. 27 (Den v. Combs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Den v. Combs, 18 N.J.L. 27 (N.J. 1840).

Opinion

Hornblower, C. J.

The questions in this case, are, did Thomas Butcher take any: and if any, what estate, under the will of his grandfather William Nutt, in the premises in question ?

Omitting such parts of the will, as have no influence on the point before us, it may be read as follows, viz:

“ I give unto my wife, the one half of the house I now live in, she taking her choice, likewise half the lot, half the garden and half the stables, during her natural life. Item, I give and bequeath unto my daughter Ann Butcher, one half part of the house and lot I now live in, her mother having the other part, during her natural life, then after her decease, to bequeath to her son Thomas Butcher, to him, his heirs and assigns forever ; then after her mother’s decease, Ann Butcher to have the whole of it, during her natural life. Item, I give and bequeath to my grand son William Butcher, (certain lands, describing them,) to him, his heirs and assigns forever; when he arrives to the age of twenty-one years. Item, It is my will, that if my wife should die before her daughter Ann Butcher, that then out of the estate which I have left to William Butcher, he shall pay to his mother [29]*29yearly, ten pounds during her natural life; and further it is my will, that if William or Thomas should die, or either of them, the remainder to enjoy the other’s property; and if both should die, and she have any more children, then they shall enjoy it; ai:d if not, then to be sold and equally divided among my surviving children.”

By a subsequent clause he gave to his wife in fee, all his lands in Nottingham, not otherwise disposed of.

The testator died, leaving his daughter Ann Butcher, and his grandsons William Butcher and Thomas Butcher in life. After the testator’s death, his daughter Ann Butcher had a daughter named Ann, who was born in the year 1808, and who with her husband William Nelson, are the lessors of the plaintiff in this cause. William Butcher and Thomas Butcher both died in the life-time of their mother Ann Butcher: the former in 1832 and the latter in 1836, both of them having attained their full age, leaving lawful issue, and also leaving their sister Ann Nelson, them surviving.

It is contended on the part of the plaintiff, that if Thomas Butcher took anything under this will, he took only that half of the premises, which was devised to his mother Ann Butcher; and that, as he and William Butcher both died in the life-time of their mother, the half so devised to her, wont to their sister Ann Nelson, one of the lessors of the plaintiff, by way of executory devise. On the part of the defendant, who claims by purchase at a sheriff’s sale, under a mortgage given by Thomas Butcher and his mother Ann Butcher; it is insisted, that Thomas Butcher took au estate in fee simple in the whole premises, liable to be defeated upon his dying under age and without issue: subject to a life estate in his grandmother Nutt, in one-half, and to a like estate, in his mother, Ann Butcher, in the other half: and in case she survived her mother, then subject to the life estate of his mother Ann Butcher, in the whole premises: and that Thomas Butcher having left issue, the estate had become absolute in him, in lee simple.

The devise to Thomas, if there is one, is contained in the following clause in the will: “ I give and bequeath unto my daughter Ann Butcher, one half part of the house and lot I now live in, her mother having the other pari during her natural life, then [30]*30after her decease, to bequeath to her son Thomas Butcher, to him, his heirs and assigns forever; then after her mother’s decease, Ann Butcher to have the whole of it during her natural life.” That the testator, intended by the words “to bequeath to” a direct devise to Thomas, is manifest; for in the very next clause, he provides, that “if William or Thomas should die, the remainder,” (manifestly meaning, the one surviving, or remaining;) is “to enjoy the other’s property:” and the testator then proceeds to say, what shall be done with the property, in case both of them should die. Now unless something was directly given or intended to be given to Thomas, by the clause first quoted, there was nothing for this second clause to operate upon, in case William survived Thomas. We must therefore understand the testator to mean by the words, “ to bequeath to Thomas,” to go to Thomas. ■

The question then recurs : what was to go to Thomas? The whole, or only one half the house and lot ? And if only half, then which half? The one given to the grandmother for life; or the one given to Thomas’s mother, Ann Butcher, for life?

It seems to me, that the clause, upon which these questions arise, must be read, in order to be intelligible, as if punctuated, and marked in parentheses, as follows: “I give unto my daughter, Ann Butcher, one half part of the house and lot I now live in, (her mother having the other part,) during her natural life : then after her decease, to bequeath to her son Thomas Butcher, his heirs and assigns forever: then after her mother’s decease, Ann Butcher to have the whole of it during her natural life.” The will, so read, clearly, amounts to this: “Having given one half of the house and lot I now live on, to my wife during her life, I give the other half to my daughter Ann Butcher, during her natural life: and after her: (that is Ann Butcher’s) decease, to her son Thomas Butcher, his heirs and assigns forever : but, (if Ann Butcher survives her mother) then after her mother’s decease, Ann Butcher, is to have the whole house and lot during her natural life.”

Upon this reading of the will, and I do not perceive how it can be otherwise read, the testator devised to his grandson Thomas, only that half of the house and lot, which he had previously devised to his daughter, Ann Butcher, for life. The probability is [31]*31that the testator intended to give him the whole of those premises, subject to the life estate of the grandmother in one half, and the life estate of Ann Butcher in the other half, and in case she survived her mother, then, subject to the life estate of Ann Butcher, in the whole premises; but whatever may have been the testator’s secret intentions, he has not manifested them by any thing apparent on the face of his will. We might indeed, by transposing the different branches of the clause under consideration, make it read, so as to be a devise of the whole to Thomas ; but we are not at liberty to make such transposition, unless it is necessary, to carry out the manifest intention of the testator ; or to render the clause intelligible. But such intention, is not manifest, and the will is intelligible as it now stands. I cannot perceive therefore, how it is possible under this will, for the court to say, that the whole house and lot was devised to Thomas. It seems to me very.plain, that the testator only gave him that half in which his mother Ann Butcher, was to have a life estate.

The next question is, what estate did Thomas Butcher take in the half of the premises devised to his mother for life? In the clause containing the devise, it is given expressly to him, his heirs and assigns forever; but in the next clause there is a limitation, by which if ho dies, the property shall go to his brother William ; and if both die, then to any after born child or children of their mother Ann Butcher.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.J.L. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-v-combs-nj-1840.