Dickinson v. Overton

41 A. 949, 57 N.J. Eq. 26, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 16, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 A. 949 (Dickinson v. Overton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. Overton, 41 A. 949, 57 N.J. Eq. 26, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Mary W. Clymer died on the 22d of July, 1893, at Trenton, leaving a will with five codicils thereto. The will and codicils [27]*27were admitted to probate by the surrogate of Mercer county on the 9th of August in the same year. The will bears date on the 18th of October, 1872, and the codicils are respectively dated October 18th, 1872; October 23d, 1872; May 24th, 1882; June 29th, 1882, and May 10th, 1893. By the last codicil the complainant is substituted and appointed the executor of the will.

The will bequeaths a number of legacies, specific and general, and some by way of annuity. The several codicils, covering the succeeding twenty-one years, deal with these legacies, revoking or modifying them and creating others of similar chara'cter. The disposition of the residuary estate is effected by the tenth paragraph of the will, by which the residue is given to the executors in trust, to divide the same into three equal parts and to assign and convey one of the parts to George Clymer, a brother of the testatrix, one to her brother William Bingham Clymer, and one to such of the children of her late sister Eliza Overton, as should survive her, and to the descendants then living of any child of the sister who then might be dead, each set of descendants taking only such share as their parent would have taken if living. In case she should survive her brother George, the one-third share intended for him was to be divided equally amongst his children then living and the descendants of children then dead, such descendants taking together,- however, such share only as their parent would have taken if living. And in case she should survive her brother William, the one-third share intended for him was to be divided equally amongst his children then living and the descendants of children then dead, as in case of the brother George, in like contingency.

The two brothers of the testatrix predeceased her, each leaving two children who survived the testatrix. Five children of Eliza Overton survive the testatrix, and two have predeceased her. One of those two who predeceased her died without issue, and the other, Mary O. Macfarlane, died leaving six children, all of whom survive.

By the last codicil to her will, the testatrix gave $5,000 each to seven of these nine surviving nephews and nieces, and $10,000 [28]*28each to two of them. She had previously, by the codicil of May 24th, 1882, given $1,000 to her niece, Rose De Bryas, daughter of her brother William, who, as one of the seven nephews and nieces, is given, as stated, $5,000 by the last codicil. The testatrix did not give anything to the children of her deceased niece, Mary Macfarlane, as an equivalent for a similar legacy of $5,000 to their deceased mother. By the same last codicil, by several clauses thereof, the testatrix gave $1,000 each to twenty-eight children of her nephews and nieces, including the children of Mary Macfarlane, and $500 each to twenty-three of her great-grandnephews and nieces. By the eleventh clause of the last codicil she gave $10,000 each, as above indicated, to her nephew, G. Bleasdale Overton, and her niece, Louisa Ward. By the fourteenth clause of the same instrument she gave $1,000 each to the children of that nephew and niece, and again, by the seventeenth paragraph of the same codicil, gave $1,000 each to the five children of the same niece, naming them. By previous codicils she had given two of her great-nephews, James R. Macfarlane and Edward Overton Ward, $500 each, and two of her great-nieces, Eliza Ward Lynch and Eugenia H. Macfarlane, $1,000 each. It is perceived in this statement of legacies bequeathed that $9,000 was given in legacies outside the apparent scheme of the last codicil, that by that codicil seven of the living nephews and nieces should each have $5,000 and two double that sum, and that each living grandnephew and niece should have $1,000, and that certain great-grandnephews and nieces should each have $500, and that if the legacies under that scheme should be held to be substitutes for the prior legacies the $9,000 would go to the residuary estate and be divided so that each of the children of the deceased brothers, George and William, will take $1,500 of it, and each of the five living children of the deceased sister, Eliza Overton, will take $500 of it, and the six children of Mary Macfarlane, the deceased daughter of Eliza Overton, will each take $83.33|-. This situation has led to the question that has actuated the complainant to bring this suit, to have it determined whether the legacies are all payable, the later being cumulative upon the earlier, or whether a later legacy [29]*29in any case shall be regarded as a substitute for an earlier legacy to the same person.

It is perceived that eight legatees were given more than one legacy each, and that six of those eight were given legacies prior to the making of the codicil of May 10th, 1893, and that three of those six and the remaining two legatees were given duplicate legacies of $1,000 each by the same instrument — the codicil of May 10th, 1893. These eight legatees are all kin of the testatrix. By the will, one of them, the niece, Rose M. Clymer, now Mrs. De Buyas, was given a watch and also $200 as a token of her aunt’s affection, and, by the third codicil, specific legacies and the bequest of $1,000 here in question. Another, Eugenia Macfarlane, a great-niece, was so considered by the testatrix that the fourth codicil was made solely for the purpose of giving her $1,000. By the third codicil also two grandnephews, James R. Macfarlane and Edward Overton Ward, were bequeathed $500 each, and two great-nieces, Louisa W. Milliken and Eliza Ward Lynch, were bequeathed $1,000 each.

When the testatrix came to make the fifth codicil these six bequests, with eight others to other persons, stood unrevoked. By the fifth codicil the eight other pecuniary legacies were revoked, but the six were suffered to remain. After such revocation, by the same codicil the testatrix proceeded to make special bequests of nearly $100,000 to about sixty of her kin, among whom she included the six of her kin above mentioned, who then had unrevoked legacies. It appears to me that the scheme of the fifth codicil was merely a general recognition of kin and that the failure to revoke the legacies to the six favored by previous codicils, in view of the fact that eight other similar legacies to previously-favored kin were by that very instrument revoked, emphasizes an intention that the special bounty to the six, for undisclosed reasons satisfactory to the testatrix, evidenced by their unrevoked legacies, was to remain unaffected by the general distribution to kin contemplated, and in which they, merely as kin, participated.

The last codicil does not profess to prescribe equality in the bequests to the several degrees of kin. It expressly gives to a [30]*30nephew and niece double that which is given to others of their degree and fails to make up to the children .of a dead niece the $5,000 their mother probably would have taken had she lived. Hence it is an untenable insistence that, the six legacies, not expressly revoked by the fifth codicil, are impliedly revoked under its language, “ and I hereby ratify and confirm my said will and codicils thereto in every respect save so far as any pari of it is inconsistent with this codicil,” because they are inconsistent with a scheme of equality it is claimed to evince. It does not evince such a scheme. Equality exists in fact only where there is no reason or wish to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 949, 57 N.J. Eq. 26, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-overton-njch-1896.