Dungan v. Tobin

12 S.C. Eq. 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 14, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 12 S.C. Eq. 64 (Dungan v. Tobin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dungan v. Tobin, 12 S.C. Eq. 64 (S.C. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Chancellor J. Johnston

delivered the opinion of the court.

There is no doubt that the intention, to be gathered from the whole face of the will, must govern. And that the leading purposes of the testator should be consulted, rather than those which appear to have been secondary. The difficulty is not about the principles of construction, but the application, of them.

A good index of a testator’s general intention, will be found by' considering a case in which every part of his will would have had full operation ; in which his every wish would have been completely-gratified, and none disappointed. The will (if we view it in reference to such a contingency,) grojipes the legatees together, as [71]*71ilioy stood in the mind of the testator, and informs us of the rela« ti?e degrees of affection with which he regarded them.

I presume we shall learn this testator’s leading purposes, by looking at what he directed, had all things gone so that his favorite scheme of keeping up the planting till 1836, had taken effectj in which case, according to the concessions ©f all parties, every clause and part of his will would have had an unrestricted operation.

If we view this will in this light, the testator’s intention is plain* The estimation in which he held his Kilkenny relations, (a phrase, which, for brevity’s sake, l substitute for his sisters and brother,, Mary, Caty and Michael,) was such, that he was willing to give them nearly the whole income of his estate, until 1838, and to add to this, in 1838, one fourth of the corpus, with two thousand dollars besides; while to his natural son, he gave barely one fourth-of the corpus, in 1888, with a small annuity, until that time, for hies--education ; and to his sons, each, only a fourth, of the corpus, in 1838.

Judging by these bounties, who can hesitate to say, that the sons were less objects of his bounty, than the Kilkenny relations 1 Or' that his leading intention was to give more to the latter, than to the former Í

So much for the general intention. And so much on the construction to be gathered from the whole face of the will*

Now, if there is any thing on the will to shew, that, in any con. tingency which has happe.-ed, the testator would have increased the piovisiou for his sons, or diminished that of his Kilkenny friends, —he must be obeyed. But is there any thing to shew this ?

That part of the will by which he authorises his executors to-break up and sell the plauting establishment, is relied on.

What effect is to follow the execution of a power, may be learned by considering the purpose for u hich the power was conferred. The effect to be allowed must conform to. this purpose ; for here, as in every other part of a will, the testator’s intention must pre. Vail.

Now, if the testator gave this power, with a view to enable the executors to increase the legacies of the sons, and to diminish those of the Kilkenny relations, he has not said so. If the conversion of the property into bonds, at interest, was a circumstance going to abate his affection for the Kilkenny friends, or strengthen that, for the sons, he has not told us so ; nor is there any thing in tb© sature of the thing itself, from which we can reasonably infer, that [72]*72in eonaequenco of it, his affections would have undergone this change.

The testator empowers the executors to sell before 1838, if they deem it advantageous. If his intention was to enable the executors to sell for the purpose of transferring the bulk of income to bis sons — if this was the sense in which he used the word, “ advantageous,” there was no need for anif ” in the case.' He might have saved hims'elf the trouble of conferring the discretion, ary power, and exorcised it himself, by ordering a sale presently, for, without doubt, such a transfer would be advantageous to the sons.

Why did he not order present distribution ? Plainly, because he wished to accumulate income for those to whom he gave it. tic thought that a planting estate, when he made his will, would produce as much income as its value, at interest But he was uucer-' tain whether this would continue to bn the case. Executors tiiight not be able to manage as well as an owner; produce might fail, or seasons ch mge, or lands fail. All this vs ould reduce the income, to the injury of those entitled to it. In such a enuju icture, it would be advantageous t > them to have the capital changed, and put at interest. But it might happen, that at such time, property was laboring under an unusual, though temporary; depression in price. To sell, would injure those entitled to the corpus. To meet all contingencies, the executors were clothed with a discretion. But their povver was a trust. They were trustees for all the legatees ; not for any one in particular; much less for one against another; They must act for the advantage of all, or so as to inflict the least possible injury on any.

The executors have executed this power; and it is not doubted they have executed it in good faith. Bui if it would have been bad faith in them to sell for the avowed purpose of transferring the income — or for the express purpose of revoking the legacies ito the Kilkenny relations ; if the doing these things was not the pur¡pose for which the power was conferred on them ; — is that a sound (construction which would give their act that effect! Can that be a true interpretation, which says that a trust for relieving against a tc >o scanty income, shall, if executed, have the effect of extinguish-in g the income ?

It is said the income intended for the Kilkenny relations, was in come from planting. The testator is supposed to have- given th phi income — so long as it arose from planting, but no longer. N ow, if lie had said so, from the most whimsical motives, or trom at j motive at all — if he bud said so plainly, his discretion must [73]*73have governed. But he has said no such thing. What he has said¿ is, that he gives the income of his estate. He makes no qualification. His words will take in profits from all sources, without regard to the quality of the capital. If an estate, when sold, ceases to produce-income, the argument is good. If this estate, now, has no income, there is no right in the Kilkenny relations to have any-But if there is, their claim is good.

I would not do injustice to the point made. The zeal with ‘which the argument was urged, evinced that it was grounded on a convic» tion of its correctness. I have, therefore, cast about in every direction for any thing to support it: but in vain.

The argument proceeds upon this : — that the testator having, by the second clause, provided for keeping his estate together for planting, has exclusive reference to this state of things, in all the legacies of income which he creates in the four succeeding clauses. That, therefore, the income intended to give, was income from planting. That the power given to the executors, in the se¿* venth clause, to sell the planting establishment, was a power to de-¡ stroy the income given, by destroying that from which alone it could, accrue.

The testator no where says that he gave the income, on the supposition that it was to come exclusively from planting. If this was his meaning, we can come at it only by implication.

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12 S.C. Eq. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dungan-v-tobin-scctapp-1837.