Georgia Infirmary for the Relief & Protection of Aged & Afflicted Negroes v. Jones

37 F. 750, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2755
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 22, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 37 F. 750 (Georgia Infirmary for the Relief & Protection of Aged & Afflicted Negroes v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Infirmary for the Relief & Protection of Aged & Afflicted Negroes v. Jones, 37 F. 750, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2755 (circtsdny 1889).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

These actions involve the rights of the complainants, respectively, to legacies of $50,000, bequeathed to them for charitable objects by the will of Gaza way B. Lamar, deceased. The will was executed September 28, 1872, and at that time the testator owned real and personal property in possession, and had besides certain claims for a large amount against the government of the United States for cotton which had been seized and sold by its officers during the war of the Rebellion, which' claims were then being prosecuted for collection. The will, by the first [751]*751clause, directs that all the debts of the testator be paid by the executors. By the second clause the executors are directed to divide into four equal parts “all the rest of my property of which I may die seised or possessed, (or which I may hereafter acquire,) excepting only my cotton claims upon the government of the United States.” The will then provides, by clauses 3, 4, 5, and 6, for the distribution of the four parts by the executors of the property of the second clause, one to each of the four children of the testator, according to specified trusts and conditions. The seventh clause directs the executors “to press my claims upon the government of the United States for payment for cotton, which arc now before the court of claims, or before the committee on claims of the congress of the United States,” and enumerates the particulars of the several claims. By clauses 8 and 9 the will makes provision for the payment to certain persons of specified sums to which they are legally or equitably entitled from the proceeds of the cotton claims. The tenth clause directs the executors to divide the “amount collected” from the said cotton claims into four equal parts, if it he less than $200,000, and distribute it to the four children of the testator pursuant to the provisions of clauses 3, 4, 5, and 6. The eleventh clause bequeaths to the present complainants, “next out of the residue of my cotton claims when collected, $100,000, if so much may remain, and, if not, whatever balance may remain, to be divided equally,” for the charitable objects particularly specified. Clauses 12, 13, and 14 bequeath certain other legacies out of the residue of the proceeds of the cotton claims. The fifteenth clause devises and bequeaths all the rest and residue of the testator’s property, “real, personal, and mixed,” to the four children of the testator. The testator died in October, 1874. The will was probated in New York city, the testator’s place of domicile. After making the will, the testator collected from the government of the United States $342,819 on account of his cotton claims, and invested the proceeds in various securities. The cotton claims not collected during his life-time are of inconsiderable value, and the executors have been unsuccessful in their efforts to collect them.

Applying the familiar rule that a will speaks as of the time of the death of the testator, and not as of the time of its date, the second clause of the present instrument could be interpreted to mean that all the property which might belong to the testator at the time of his death, excepting only such cotton claims as he should ihen have, is to be divided by the executors into four parts, to be distributed for the benefit of his children. Consequently, in the absence of any other language or provision in the will to limit or control the meaning of the clause, according to this canon of interpretation, the provision would require the executors to include in the property to be distributed to the testator’s children all the property and assets belonging to him at the time of his death, excepting such only as might exist in the form of outstanding and uncollected demands against the government of the United States. This view would be fatal to the claims of the complainants; but it does not seem to be the reasonable one. It seems very plain that when by that clause the testator directed his executors to divide for the benefit of his children all the prop[752]*752erty of which he might die possessed, excepting only his cotton claims against the government of the United Stales, he intended to exclude from the property thus to be divided the outstanding demands, which he particularly enumerated in clause 7 of the will. When he used the words, ‘.‘my.cotton claims,” he referred to the uncollected debts, from which he thought enough might be realized to create a. further fund of $200,000 for his children, and $100,000 for the complainants. These particular claims which he enumerated and described, and which he directed his executors to press and collect, were the property which he had in mind, and which he intended to except from the operation of the second clause. In this sense, the will speaks as of the time of its execution, and the seventh clause is to be read as a gift of the cotton claims belonging to the testator at that date for the benefit of the children and the complainants together. According to this interpretation, however, the legacies to the complainants are specific legacies, and the case falls within the rule that, where the subject of the bequest has ceased to exist before the testator’s death, the legacy is adeemed. A specific legacj7 is one which is to be paid only out of a particular source or fund designated by the will. The extinction of the subject of a specific legacy, or such a change in its state as makes it another thing, annuls the bequest, for reasons paramount to ■ considerations of intention. An example of the class, and an illustration of the rule, is found in the recent case of Davis v. Crandall, 101 N. Y. 311, 4 N. E. Rep. 721. The will in that case bequeathed to the legatee “the sum of $243.92, a portion of the debt due me from James Davis, secured by his note.” The court held that this was a specific legacy, aud said: “If that note had been paid during the life-time of the testatrix, or otherwise canceled or destroyed, so that no obligation at her death rested upon James Davis to pay it, the legatee would have taken nothing.” ■ This authority is in harmony with many decisions to the effect that if the bequest be of the sum owing upon a securitypr obligation, :or of, a. sum to be paid; out of a designated and distinct part of the testator’s property, the legacy is specific. Sidebotham v, Watson, 11 Hare, ■ 170; Chaworth v. Beech. 4 Ves 555, Ford v. Fleming, 1 Eq. Cas. Abr. 302; Fryer v. Morris, 9 Ves. 360; Towle v. Swasey, 106 Mass. 100. In Gilbreath v. Winter, 10 Ohio, 64, the bequest was: “All the amount of . moneys and interest that may be recovered of and from K. for the sums due-me on the purchase of the [described] estate, to her and to her assigns.” The bequest was held to be a specific one, and the receipt of the money by the testator to be an ademption of it. Because of the hardship • of the doctrine that a specific legacy is lost if the subject of it is disposed . of-by the testator, or is extinguished in his life-time, notwithstanding the •.¿will nray fjnvVe unmistakably that the testator intended to treat the legatee as an object of his bounty, the courts incline to consider legacies as demonstrative, rather than specific, where the language of the will is reasonably capable of that construction. Accordingly, if the bequest, instead of being for a specified sum “due upon” a security or obligation, is for. the sum “out of the proceeds,” or “contained in” a security or obligation, it will be treated as a demonstrative legacy, to which the rule [753]*753of ademption does not apply.

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Bluebook (online)
37 F. 750, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-infirmary-for-the-relief-protection-of-aged-afflicted-negroes-circtsdny-1889.