Goodwin v. Colby
This text of 13 A. 866 (Goodwin v. Colby) 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.
Opinion
At common law, when the legatee dies before the testator the legacy lapses and falls into the residuum. 2 Will. Ex. 1084; 1 Jar. Wills *338; 2 Redf. Wills 484. But by statute *402 “ The heirs in the descending line of any legatee or devisee deceased before the testator, shall take the estate devised or bequeathed in the same manner the legatee or devisee would have taken the same if he had survived.” G. L., c. 193, s. 12.
The legatee, Area Sanborn, died in the lifetime of her husband, the testator, leaving one son, the defendant, Daniel G. Davis, an illegitimate child. He is her heir in the descending line, and by the statute will take the legacies which she would have taken had she survived the testator. The fact of his illegitimacy does not make him any less her heir in the descending line. G. L., c. 203, ss. 4, 5.
The bequests of the furniture, “ except the great arm-chair,” and of one thousand dollars, being absolute and unqualified legacies to Area Sanborn, do not lapse by her predeceasing the testator, but fall to her son and heir in the descending line, Daniel G. Davis. He also takes the legacy of two hundred dollars given to him directly.
The legacy of one hundred dollars to Sarah Burns, who died before the testator leaving no heirs in the descending line, lapses into the residuum, and is taken by the defendant, John S. Colby, the residuary legatee.
Decree accordingly.
All concurred.
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13 A. 866, 64 N.H. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-colby-nh-1887.