Faul v. Hulick

18 App. D.C. 9, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 5034
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1901
DocketNo. 1010
StatusPublished

This text of 18 App. D.C. 9 (Faul v. Hulick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faul v. Hulick, 18 App. D.C. 9, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 5034 (D.C. Cir. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

1. All that is certainly shown in the evidence agreed upon by the parties is, that the testatrix, Sophia Bhodes, and her son, Eugene, perished in the same disaster. There is no evidence upon which to base a judicial opinion that either survived the other; and in adjudicating the rights of those claiming under either of them the order of their deaths must be considered as judicially unascertainable.

Unlike the Boman law, and the modern laws of some •countries and States derived or adopted therefrom, the common law indulges no presumption of survivorship, whatever may have been the age, sex, or physical condition of the [22]*22respective persons proved to have lost their lives in a common disaster. It requires evidence as the basis of its action.

It would prove a useless consumption of time to review the older cases in England involving this question; for whatever doubt may have existed by reason of certain expressions used in some of them, has been finally set at rest by the decisions in two noted cases — one by the Lord Chancellor with the aid of two common-law judges, and the other by the House of Lords. Underwood v. Wing, 4 DeG. M. & G. 633; Wing v. Angrave, 8 H. L. Cases, 183.

The American courts before which the question has come have enounced the same doctrine substantially. Coye v. Leach, 8 Metc. 371; Newell v. Nichols, 75 N. Y. 78; Cowman v. Rodgers, 73 Md. 403; Russell v. Hallett, 23 Kan. 194; Johnson v. Merithew, 80 Me. 111; Estate of Ehle, 73 Wis. 445; Smith v. Armistead, 7 Fla. 81; Paden v. Briscoe, 81 Tex. 563.

2. Admitting the rule of the common law as stated, and assuming that the order of death of mother and son in this case is unascertainable from the evidence, it has been contended that the property rights of those who claim under each decedent must be determined as if death occurred to each at the same instant. This view seems to have support in the language used in its opinions delivered in some of the American cases above cited, but we cannot accept it as logical and sound. It seems to us nothing less, in reality, than the substitution of one presumption for another — the, if anything, more unreasonable presumption of simultaneous death, for the rejected presumption of survivorship. Presumptions failing, the law requires evidence as a foundation for action upon either hypothesis. On application to the courts, there is always a burden of proof, slight though it-may often be, upon him who has the affirmative, and if he fails to discharge it with evidence reasonably sufficient for the purpose, he must suffer the consequences of failure. His opponent succeeds, not upon proof of his own case or defense, but by reason of the absence of evidence on the necessary point.

[23]*23In our opinion, therefore, the distribution of the personal estate of which Mrs. Sophia Rhodes was possessed at the time of her death must depend upon the ascertainment of the party whose position in the case is such that he must succeed because of the failure of evidence to establish the essential fact of survivorship.

3. The claim of the Young Women’s Christian Home will first be considered.

If the will is to be construed as making the death of Eugene Rhodes, in the lifetime of his mother, a condition precedent to the taking effect of the bequest over, then it is quite clear that the burden of proving that fact is thrown upon the legatee and has not been discharged.

The question now occurs, and it is to it that the weight of the argument has been directed: Whether the will is to be so construed?

The contention on behalf of the legatee is, substantially, that the obvious intention of the testatrix was to avoid intestacy absolutely, and that the Home should take her estate not only upon the event expressly provided for, but also in case, as here shown, where her son, who was the first object of her bounty, could not possibly survive to take any practical benefit.

The argument in support of this contention prevailed with the learned justice who presided at the hearing and determined the decree rendered. It was conceded by him, as his opinion in the record shows, that, giving the words of the fourth item their literal meaning, it must be held that the contingency therein named has not been shown to have happened.” But he was of the opinion that the general intention of the testatrix that the Home should have the benefit of her estate, if her husband and son were not able to take beneficially, was so apparent, the will must be construed as if either of the following clauses had been inserted therein by the testatrix:— “ Or in the event that my husband and son die at the same time with me,” —• or in the event that my husband and son do not survive me.”

We are constrained to differ from this conclusion. It is [24]*24undoubtedly true, that “ the intent of the testator is the cardinal rule in the construction of wills; ” but this intention must be found in the language of the will itself. Where such general intention is found, considerable latitude has been permitted in the way of rejecting the literal meaning of some words when irreconcilable with the contest, and even in supplying words to give effect to this general intention, where it is plain that the testator has incompletely espressed his apparent meaning, and it is also plain what those words are .which he must have meant to use, and yet, through negligence or ignorance, omitted. In such cases the construction is founded on the apparent condition of a contingency, or state of circumstances, present in the mind of the testator at the time, and which he has imperfectly described or provided for. But when the testator has evidently overlooked, or failed to apprehend, a particular contingency which might occur and change the course which his estate would otherwise take, the courts are not at liberty to read into- the will a clause providing for that contingency, although they might believe generally that the testator would have inserted it had attention been called to it when the will was written and executed.

This very question was involved in the case of Wing v. Underwood; 4 DeG. M. & G. 638, 654, and after careful consideration the decision was against the construction contended for. The condition upon which the bequest to Wing depended was: “ And in case my wife shall die in my lifetime, then,” etc. Husband and wife perished in the same shipwreck, and there was no proof of survivorship. Lord Chancellor Oranworth, in disposing of.the question, said:

The gift to Mr. Wing is in terms made dependent, and was evidently meant to be dependent, on the single event, setting aside the children, of the testator surviving his wife: If she should survive, he gives everything to her, if she dies in his lifetime he gives everything to Mr. Wing; it is impossible to say that there is any third case, or class of cases, to which the language of the will could possibly be appli[25]*25•cable. It may be that, if the extremely improbable -event which did occur had presented itself to the testator’s mind as a possible contingency, he would have wished Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
18 App. D.C. 9, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 5034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faul-v-hulick-cadc-1901.