Executors of Marshall v. Hadley

50 N.J. Eq. 547
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 50 N.J. Eq. 547 (Executors of Marshall v. Hadley) 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
Executors of Marshall v. Hadley, 50 N.J. Eq. 547 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

Two questions are presented for decision. They grow out of the will of James Marshall, deceased. His executors ask for a construction of his will. They are in doubt as to their duty, and they ask for instruction in order that they may perform it with safety to themselves and justice to the persons whose rights are involved in doubt.

The first question, stated generally, is, Whether or not a devise of land, upon which the testator held a mortgage, passes the mortgage and the debt secured by it to the devisee ? The devise which the executors ask to have construed is in the& words:

“ I give and devise to my sister Bachel Walker my house and lot in Lacón, Illinois, for and during her natural life, and at her death, to her daughter Caroline Buckland, to her and her heirs, forever.”

[549]*549Neither at the time he made his will, nor at the time of his death, did the testator own a house and lot, or any land, in Lacón, Illinois, but he did in 1874. In that year he conveyed a tract of land he owned there to his sister Rachel, and she, to secure the payment of a part of the purchase-money, gave him a mortgage for $210, which he still held at the time of his death. Unless this mortgage operated as a conveyance of the land described in it, so that the testator, by force of the mortgage, became the beneficial owner of the land for all purposes, it is clear, that nothing passed by the devise, for the thing given is land, and not the debt which the land stood pledged to pay. By force of a mortgage the mortgagee does not acquire the land as owner, but simply acquires a right to hold it as security for his debt, and the utmost dominion that he can exercise over it is either to appropriate it or have it appropriated to the .payment of his debt. The respective rights of the mortgagee and mortgagor in the mortgaged land were defined by Chief-Justice Beasley, in Wade v. Miller, 3 Vr. 296, 303, as follows: “ Such an interest,” meaning the interest conveyed by mortgage, “-will not make the mortgagee a freeholder; if he enters and holds the property, he is obliged to account to the mortgagor, as the owner, for the rents and profits; if the money due on his bond is paid to him, his connection with the land is dissolved, for there is no necessity for a reconveyance; and at his death the mortgage interest passes to his representative as personalty. In these, and in all other particulars, the land seems to be a mere pledge in equity for the payment of the debt. It is true he may maintain ejectment and enter upon the possession, but this right springs into existence in a controversy between him and the mortgagor, and even after he enters he is placed in the attitude of bailiff of the mortgagor rather than of owner. Such right, so devoid of all the incidents of property, can scarcely be called an estate in land. But, on the contrary, the interest of the mortgagor carries with it almost all the qualities and concomitants of ownership. The rents and profits of the land are his; he acquires all the privileges incidental to the possession of a freeholder; the land can be sold for his debts under execution; his interest in it will support dower, and upon [550]*550his death intestate it descends to his heirs at law.” This exposition of the law makes it entirely clear that the testator was not the owner of the land which he attempted to devise, and also that he had no such interest or estate in the land as could be made by him the subject of a devise under the name or description of land. According to the plain words of his will, his purpose was to give land and not a debt or a security for a debt. The law divides all property into two kinds, real and personal, and one of its primary objects is to prescribe certain positive rules by which the one class or kind may be distinguished from the other. Without thrusting aside these rules, as without force, it cannot be held that a testator, when he devises a house and lot, means that the devisee shall take a mortgage.

The second question asked by the executors calls for a decision as to who are the testator’s residuary legatees; or, stated in another form, among whom did the testator mean his residuary estate should be divided. Eighteen different persons are named as legatees or devisees, either primarily, secondarily or contingently, before the gift of the residue is made. To fourteen a direct gift is made either of a certain sum of money, or of the income of a certain sum, or of a specific chattel. The gift to each is unconditional and absolute, thus making them primary legatees, with definite and fixed’ rights. The gifts of specific sums range in amount from $20,000 to $250. The fifteenth of the eighteen is Eliza Marshall, and the gift to her is made in this form : $5,000 is directed to be invested and its income paid toiler husband, Garrett Marshall, during his life, and then the will says: “And in case Garrett dies before his wife Eliza, the' said income shall be paid to her by my executors so long as she shall live.” The sixteenth and sevententh are Florence Ball and Belle Ball. They are contingent devisees of a house and lot, which the testator devised to his widow for her life, with remainder in fee to Freddie Ball, provided he survives the widow. But in case he does not survive the widow, the house and lot are then devised to either Florence or Belle in these words r

[551]*551“ Should said Freddie die before my wife, the premises shall go, at my wife’s death, to Florence Ball and her heirs forever; and in the event of the death of both Freddie and Florence before the death of my wife, the said premises shall go, at my wife’s death, to Bell Ball and her heirs forever.”

The last of the eighteen persons is Caroline Buckland, to whom, it will be remembered, the testator, by the devise already considered, attempted to give the remainder in fee of a house and lot in Lacón, Illinois, which, it is evident from the language of the devise, he supposed he owned. The gift of the residue follows the bequests and devises made to the eighteen persons named as legatees or devisees. It is the last provision of the will by which the testator makes any disposition of his estate; and these are its words:

“All the rest and residue of my estate, both real and personal, wheresoever situate, I give, devise and bequeath to the several legatees and devisees hereinbefore named, to be divided between them equally, share and share alike.”

The question is, "Whether, by force of these words, each one of the eighteen persons named in preceding parts of the will is entitled to take a share of the residue, and if not, which of them are, and which are not ? The quantity or amount that each will be entitled to take is unalterably fixed and free from doubt. They take equally, “ share and share alike.” The division must, therefore, be by equal shares, no matter how small or how large the first or primary gift may be.

The question is not what did the testator intend to do, or suppose he had done, aside from the language of his will, but it is, on the contrary, what has he said he wanted done with his property ? To answer this question the whole will must be read and all its provisions must be carefully considered, and then such construction must be adopted as will give effect, if possible, to every word in it. If by the use of plain and unambiguous words he has made his meaning clear and certain, his will expounds itself, and all the court can do or has power to do is to give effect to his purposes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.J. Eq. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/executors-of-marshall-v-hadley-njch-1892.