Farmers Bank of Alexandria v. Hooff

8 F. Cas. 1032, 4 D.C. 323, 4 Cranch 323
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedMay 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 1032 (Farmers Bank of Alexandria v. Hooff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Bank of Alexandria v. Hooff, 8 F. Cas. 1032, 4 D.C. 323, 4 Cranch 323 (circtddc 1833).

Opinion

Morsell, J.

The complainants, in this case, seek to have the benefit of a deed from Mary Resler in trust to secure to them the payment of a debt due by her, and on her own account. The property conveyed is a lot of ground, of which her husband died seized, claimed to be held in fee-simple under the will of her husband. Whether she took such an estate, or an estate for life, depends on the true construction of the will, unassisted by any introductory declarations, or by circumstances to be drawn from the context. Nothing is left us but the words of the devising part of the will. The rule, no doubt, is that the intention of the testator ought to prevail, unless inconsistent with the rules of law ; and in case of contending intentions, the one which was most likely to have been the favorite intention of the testator. The objects in the mind of the testator requiring his provision, appearing on the face of the will, were three; the payment of bis just debts and funeral expenses ; a provision for his wife, and an only child, a daughter.

[324]*324In most eases, the child is considered the principal object of the father’s bounty ; the presumptions of law, also, are strong in behalf of the heir.

In this case the presumptions both of nature and law, unite in favor of the daughter; and there is nothing to deprive her of the benefit, unless' from the whole will, taken together, the testator has plainly and clearly so intended himself to be understood. The words “ I give and bequeathe unto my beloved wife Mary Resler, the whole of my estate both real and personal,” if they stood alone, I admit, would, by legal construction, carry a fee; but they may be so explained as to show that they were intended either to describe the property only ; or so qualified and limited in their extent as to give a less estate or interest.

The words “ during her widowhood, or in other words, while she bears my name,” immediately follow; and if the clause had ended with these words, it would be equally clear, I suppose, that no greater interest than a life estate would have passed. In Co. Lit. 234, Lord Coke says: “ this word, (idurante,) is properly a word of limitation ; as durante, viduilaie, or durante virginitate, or durante vitá,” &e.; and I believe all the books agree that an estate to a woman during her widowhood is an estate for life only. What effect ought, then, to be given to the subsequent words; “ but in ease my wife should choose to marry, it is my wish that the whole of my estate, both real and personal, be given to my beloved daughter Eve Resler and her heirs forever ” ?

To say that by taking them in connection they so explain the preceding words as to change their operation from limiting an estate for life, t'o passing an estate in fee with condition subsequent, would be to change them from the peculiar use to which they are always devoted. We read frequently of words of condition being turned into words of limitation, but never e converso, that I remember. Such a construction would also produce the effect of enlarging the original words of limitation from a life-estate into an inheritance; but this is never done, unless indispensably necessary to support and sustain an estate in remainder, and in favor of him in remainder. 1 P. Williams, 149.

As to the argument, founded on the inference that the limitation over to the daughter could only take place upon the contingency of the widow’s marrying again, and not on her death without marrying; and that unless the wife took such a conditional fee, the testator would have died intestate, as to the reversionary interest, which it is not to be supposed he intended to do ; if this were not the case of an heir at law, and it were necessary for the purpose of maintaining a different construction, I think there would be authorities to bear me out; and that in cases of similar [325]*325limitations the law has been settled, that upon the happening of either event, the remainder-naan would take in possession. .

The first case which will be mentioned is that of Brown v. Cutter, T. Raym. Rep. 428. The words of the will were, !t I will that my wife shall have and enjoy all my houses, lands, &c., during her natural life, if she does not marry ; but if she do marry, then I w'ill that my son Humphrey, presently after his mother’s marriage-, enter and enjoy the said premises, to him and the'heirs male of his body, and for default of such issue to my son Robert and the heirs male of his body,” with- remainders to his other sons, and so over to a stranger. The wife died without marrying. In that case it was determined that Humphrey, the son, took a vested remainder, to take effect, in possession, on the marriage or death'of the wife.

Bro. Parl. Ca. 260; I. S. gives all his personal estate to trustees, to pay the interest thereof to his wife, so long as she should continue his widow; but if she married again, then he directed his trustee to pay her an annuity of £ 110, and no more during her life; and in that case he gave the residue of his estate to his son P.; but made no disposition thereof in the event of his wife’s not marrying again. The wife did not marry ; and upon a question to whom this residue belonged, the court held that it belonged to the representatives of the son, who had attained the age of twenty-one, and died in his mother’s lifetime; or in other words, that there was a vested remainder in the son which might take effect in possession in his representatives upon the marriage or death of his mother.

Gordon v. Adolphus and others, Bro. Parl. Ca. 154, where a man bequeathed his estate to his wife so long as she should remain unmarried ; but if she married, then to his daughter; and in case the daughter should die without leaving issue, then to I. S. The daughter died without issue, in the mother’s lifetime, who still remained a widow. Held, that the reversionary interest belonged to I. S. after the death of the daughter, although the wife should die without marrying.

There is one other ease of a devise, in Ambler, 2Ó9, in which the Lord Chancellor thus expresses himself: When an estate is given during widowhood with remainder over ; in that ease she takes an' estate for life determinable on her marrying, and the remainder takes effect on the determination of her estate either by death or marriage.”

In the present case, it is given during widowhood with remainder over on her marrying again within a limited time, that is, in the lifetime of his daughter, and is by way of forfeiture; so that, if it were necessary, for effecting the intention of the testator, I [326]*326should be sustained, I think, in the position, that the remainder might take effect in possession, on the death of the mother. But I do not think it of importance, as the true question is, when did the estate of the wife end ?

The testator might have reflected that he had but one child, she an heir at law. That she would inherit it, whether he gave it to her, or not, expressly; that a limitation over to her, of such an interest, being nothing more than the law would have cast upon her, would have been void. It is no uncommon case, when a father intends to let his children have his property equally, to leave it to legal distribution, as it respects them. As to the wife, it is sometimes desirable to give her something more than her thirds, to which the law limits her, and to provide for it, of course, by will, as in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 1032, 4 D.C. 323, 4 Cranch 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-bank-of-alexandria-v-hooff-circtddc-1833.