First Nat. Bank v. De Pauw

75 F. 775, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2825
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedJuly 29, 1896
DocketNo. 9,169
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 F. 775 (First Nat. Bank v. De Pauw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank v. De Pauw, 75 F. 775, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2825 (circtdin 1896).

Opinion

BAKER, District Judge.

In every case involving the construction of k will it is alike dictated by justice, common sense, and the rules of law that the first important inquiry shall be, what is the true intent and meaning of the testator? And, if that can be satisfactorily discovered, the next is, can that intent be carried into effect, consistently with the rules of law? If it can, then the true intent and meaning of the testator must prevail.

“Very few classes of questions are more frequent or more perplexing in the courts than the construction of wills. If rules of construction laid down by the courts of the highest character, or the authority of adjudged cases, could meet and solve these difficulties, there would remain no cause of eomplaint on that subject,, for such is the number , and variety of these opinions that every form of expression would seem to be met. Especially is this true of the question whether a vested remainder in interest is created after a particular estate, or whether the first taker has a fee simple or full ownership of the property devised. And, in point of fact, when such a question arises, the number of authorities cited by counsel, supposed to be conclusive of the ease in hand, is very remarkable. Unfortunately, however, these authorities are often conflicting, or arise out of forms of expression so near alike, yet varying in such minute shades of meaning, and are decided on facts or cir[777]*777ouinstanees differing in points, the pertinency of which is so difficult in their application to other cases, that the mind is bewildered, and in dangei of being misled. To these considerations it is to be added that, of all legal instruments, wills are the most inartificial, the least to be governed in their construction by the settled use of technical legal terms; the will iiself being often the production of persons not only ignorant of law, but of the correct use of the language in which it is written. Under this state of the science of the law, as applicable to the construction of wills, it may well be doubled if any source of enlightenment in the construction of a will is of much assistances other than the application of natural reason to the language of the instrument under the light which may be thrown upon the intent of the testator by the extrinsic circumstances surrounding its execution, and connecting the parties and the property devised with the testator and with the instrument itself.” Clarke v. Boorman’s Ex’rs, 18 Wall. 493, 502.

The testator, after having used words in the fifth clause of the will, which, standing by themselves, would have given a fee-simple absolute to his two grandsons, added, in the sixth clause, the following:

“That the property willed by me to the said grandchildren should be held in common, and, if either of them should depart this life without leaving living issue, then and in that case the survivor, or the heirs of his body, shall inherit all the property and esiate devised to both of them.”

This clause cannot be regarded as a devise of cross remainders to the two grandsons, for no remainder, either vested or contingent, can be limited after an estate in fee. It is self-evident that there can he no remainder limited after an absolute fee, and Lord Coke lays it down that no remainder can he limited after a base or determinable fee. 1 Inst. 18a; 10 Eep. 97b. The limitation over to the survivor is, if anything’, an executory devise, and is not too remote, for it must take effect, if at all, within the period of two lives in being. That in this limitation an indefinite failure of issue of the grandsons was not contemplated is manifested by the testator’s use of the words, “depart this life without leaving living issue.” There is a marked difference between a gift over on the first taker dying “without issue” or “without lawful issue,” and a gift over on his dying “without leaving living issue.” The latter, if it means anything, must mean lawful issue living beyond the death of the first taker. It is much more expressive than the phrase “leaving no issue behind him,” which, in Porter v. Bradley, 3 Term R. 143, was held to denote a definite failure of issue. Porter v. Bradley has always been recognized as authority. Eichelberger v. Barnitz, 9 Watts, 447; Nicholson v. Bettle, 57 Pa. St. 384. The whole question, then, is whether the words, “if either of them should depart this life without leaving living issue,” refer to the event of death before that of the testator, or to a death at any time, whether before or after the testator's death. If the former is the true meaning, the gift over to the survivor is substitutionary merely, depending on the contingency of the death of either of the primary devisees in the lifetime of the testator, and designed to prevent a lapse; and upon that construction, both of the grandsons having survived the testator, the contingency upon which the survivor was to take has gone, and each took an absolute estate in fee. If, on the other hand, the words refer to a death at any time, under [778]*778the circumstances mentioned, then, on the death of the testator, the grandsons took a base or determinable fee, coupled with a contingent interest in favor of each in the estate devised to the other, by way of executory devise, which, on the death of either “without leaving living issue,” would be converted into an absolute fee in the survivor.

It is said by Jarman (3 Jarm. Wills, 5th Am. Ed. by Randolph & Talcott, 605 et seq.) to be an established rule that where a bequest is simply to one person, and, in case of his death, to another, the primary devisee surviving the testator takes absolutely. This rule applies both to real and personal property, and, so far as I can discover, the authorities in this country, and especially in this state, uniformly sustain the construction that in a devise or bequest simpliciter to one person, and, in case of his death, to another, the words refer to a death in the lifetime of the testator. It is said in support of this construction that as death, the most certain of all things, is not a contingent event, but the time only, the words of contingency in a devise of the character mentioned can be satisfied only by referring them to a death before a particular period; and, as no other period is mentioned, it is necessarily presumed that the time referred to is the testator’s death. This construction, although supported by somewhat refined and artificial reasoning, is doubtless, in most cases, conformable to the true intention of the testator. It prevents the disinheritance of a testator’s posterity, which would sometimes occur if the death of the primary devisee at any time was held to be within the meaning of such a devise. This rule of construction is inapplicable to the present will for the reason that the death referred to is coupled with another contingent event which may or may not happen, namely, a death “without leaving living issue.”

There is another class of cases in which an alternative limitation depending on the death of a primary devisee is also held to refer to a death in the lifetime of the testator, although this class of cases is not within the reason upon which the class of cases above referred to is supported. A case of the second class is where a devise is made to one person, and, in case of his death without issue, or without children, or without having a lawful heir, to another.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vaubel v. Lang
140 N.E. 69 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 F. 775, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-de-pauw-circtdin-1896.