Frost v. Wingate

64 A. 19, 73 N.H. 535, 1906 N.H. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 1, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 A. 19 (Frost v. Wingate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. Wingate, 64 A. 19, 73 N.H. 535, 1906 N.H. LEXIS 25 (N.H. 1906).

Opinion

Walker, J.

“The situation of tbe testator, tbe surrounding circumstances, bis family and relatives, tbe devisees and legatees, tbe nature, amount, and situation of bis property, facts tending to place tbe court in tbe position of tbe testator, constitute evidence competent for our consideration upon tbe issue of what be meant by tbe words used.” Stratton v. Stratton, 68 N. H. 582, 586. “ Evidence of intention may include various inherent probabilities and tbe probative force of many circumstances, as well as the literal sense of tbe words used. When tbe meaning is found by giving due weight to everything that legally tends to prove, it, it is not a matter of discretion whether it shall be adopted or rejected.” Opinion of the Justices, 66 N. H. 629, 651. The judicial ascertainment of tbe fact of a testator’s intention in disposing of bis property is not a judicial usurpation of bis power to make a will, or tbe exercise of a revisory power over bis testamentary provisions. Tbe fact of intention, when found from all tbe competent evidence presented, must, as a matter of law, be given effect, if it is not repugnant to other legal principles, however peculiar or unusual it may seem to be. “ Tbe end to be attained in interpreting a will is to effectuate tbe testator’s intention as indicated by tbe weight of competent evidence, which is not required to come from any given source, or to be of any given weight, if it is relevant to tbe issue.” Stevens v. Underhill, 67 N. H. 68, 70.

At tbe time of tbe testator’s death, and when tbe will took effect, tbe condition of bis estate was such' that tbe value of tbe personal property be gave to bis son was less than bis indebtedness ; and upon tbe theory that tbe debts were charged exclusively upon tbe personal property bequeathed to tbe son, the latter has declined to accept tbe same. There can be little doubt that tbe testator intended that this property to tbe extent of its value, if necessary, should be held for tbe payment of his debts. It would be unreasonable to assume that be expected bis son to accept property under the will charged with the payment of debts in excess of its value. Ordinarily a testator is presumed to intend to confer a benefit upon bis legatees. Currier v. Currier, 70 N. H. 145, 147. Hence tbe question arises bow tbe excess of indebtedness beyond tbe value of tbe articles given to tbe son is to be paid, consistently with tbe general purpose of tbe testator; in other words, what was bis intention in reference to tbe payment of tbe indebtedness existing at the time of his death ? He expected bis will would operate upon bis estate in the condition it might be at bis de *537 cease ; and he is presumed to have had knowledge of, or to have anticipated, what that condition would be. “ A will speaks from the death of the testator, and not from its date, unless its language, by fair construction, indicates the contrary intention.” Wears v. Weave, 59 N. H. 293, 296; Campbell v. Clark, 64 N. H. 828, 330.

On the one hand it is claimed that the entire indebtedness is chargeable, not merely upon the personal property given to the son, but upon the life estate in the land devised to him, while upon the other hand it is insisted that the excess of debts should be paid out of the money deposited in the savings bank. If it is conceded that there may be some evidence inferentially supporting each of these contentions, neither seems to be in accord with the general purpose of the testator. In view of the condition of the estate, either construction, if adopted, would practically defeat his intention in a material respect. See Wallace v. Wallace, 23 N. H. 149, 156. To charge the excess of debts upon the life estate would reduce the value of the devise to a sum little more than nominal; and to pay it from the money of the estate would effectually annul the bequests mentioned in the fourth and fifth clauses of the will. It is improbable that the testator contemplated or intended either result. He did not intend to give his son a life estate of no value, or to provide for the cancellation of the money bequests. Such an intention is so peculiar and remarkable that it requires strong and convincing evidence that it existed, unless the condition of the estate is such that no other intention could have been entertained. There is no evidence from which it reasonably follows that he regarded the devise in the first clause to his son and grandchildren as more important than the legacy in the fifth clause to his daughter and granddaughter, or that one should bear the burden of debts otherwise unprovided for, to the exclusion of the other.

Nor is there evidence that he understood the technical difference between specific and general or demonstrative legacies, or that he expected his testamentary intention would be ascertained by artificial rules of construction, of which he had never heard and had no knowledge. Sanborn v. Sanborn, 62 N. H. 631, 641. In the fourth and fifth clauses of his will he undertook to dispose of all his money, with as much particularity as he used in disposing of his stock and tools in the first clause. It probably did not occur to him that there might be a difference in legal effect in disposing of all articles of a class and all his money; and to men in general the simple language of the will would not suggest technical distinctions of that character. The testator had in mind three kinds of property of which he was the owner, viz., real estate, chattels, *538 and money. By giving his real estate to one, his chattels to- another, and his money to a third party, without a general residuary clause, he would furnish little evidence of an intention that, his debts should be paid from ■ one class of property rather than from another. If a testator gives his farm worth $1,000 to A, his-driving team of the same value to B, and all his money amounting to $1,000 to C, — thus disposing of his entire estate, — and he leaves debts amounting to $1,000, how could it be said that he intended to charge his indebtedness upon any one of the beneficiaries exclusively, and to cancel the benefit which his language clearly indicates ? That his debts must be paid from his estate he is presumed to know; he could not have understood that all the objects of his bounty would each receive $1,000; and as there is nothing to show that he entertained any idea of conferring unequal benefits, the only reasonable conclusion is that an equitable apportionment of the debts among the legatees would be in accordance with his general intention to confer equal benefits upon all.

While the bequest of fifty dollars to Nellie Pike Hale, standing alone, might not indicate a purpose to give her anything of a specific character, but merely to authorize the payment .to her of that amount derived from any property of the estate not specifically bequeathed, the fact that in the next clause he disposes of “ all the rest of my money ” is evidence that the legacy of fifty dollars related specifically to the same fund or subject-matter, and not to a general fund remaining upon the final settlement of the estate. It was not his purpose to leave a general fund, either for the payment of his debts or for the payment of his legacies. In connection with the affirmative provisions of.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 19, 73 N.H. 535, 1906 N.H. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-wingate-nh-1906.