Hardcastle v. Potter-Matlock Trust Co.
This text of 284 S.W. 1032 (Hardcastle v. Potter-Matlock Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Ewing Hardcastle, an elderly, single and fairly prosperous man, died testate. Not including grandnieces and grandnephew’s, his next'of kin consisted of thirty-six or more nephews find nieces residing in'' different states, some of whom were’apparently unknown to him. In his will he mfide Valuable' specific devises to such of these as he desired'to favor, and in the'seventh clause disposed of his residuary estate.' This' action involves the construction of that clause which is in these words:
“All of iny estate except the one hundred acres of land given to Euclid Hardcastle and wife, shall be *137 converted into money by my executor hereinafter named and disposed of as follows:
“To be divided equally, share and share .alike, between all my nieces and nephews living at the time of my death, or if any one of these nieces or nephews should be dead before this will is probated, their children if there be any»shall have the part of such niece or nephew as may be dead. This item includes the nieces and nephews mentioned above to whom I have given a special bequest as well as any others I may have. ’ ’
The circuit court construed this provision to mean that the children of all nieces and nephews who died prior to the testator’s death are entitled to the share which their parent would have taken if he had been living at that time; that the living nieces and nephews took per capita, but the representatives of those who were dead took per stirpes.
This appeal is prosecuted by a number of nieces and nephews who deny that the children of those nieces and nephews who died before the testator were entitled to participate in the estate. Their contention is that the phrase, “To be equally divided, share and share alike between all my nieces and nephews living at the time of my death,” creates a restricted class among whom there ••should be a per capita division, and that the continuing phrase, “or if any one of these nieces or nephews should be dead before this tuill is probated, their children, if there be any, shall have the part of such nieces or nephews as may be dead,” does not enlarge that class hut merely recognizes the right in the children of the •devisees who died in the interim between testator’s death .and the probate of his will, to take their parents’ share. In other words, that while this phrase recognizes a right •of inheritance in some of the children of deceased nieces •and nephews, such right is restricted to the children of .such as survive the testator and die before the will is probated. It being further argued that the words of the first phrase, “to be divided between all my nieces and nephews living at the time of my death,” control the continuing phrase, “ or if any one of these nieces or nephews should be dead before this will is probated their children , . . shall have the part of such niece or nephew as may be dead,” for the reason that the words “these” and' *138 “such” as used in the phrases, “these nieces and nephews” and “such nieces and nephews,” dearly refer to a particular class of nieces and nephews and can only refer to “all my nieces and nephews living at the time of my death,” as first used; that the testator by this language intended a per capita division among his devisees, and fixed a time and method of ascertaining the members of the class among whom he bestowed his bounty, to-wit: that all of this class who were living at the time of his death should share equally, the share of any one dying subsequently to go to his children.
Taken literally, the language of the will is susceptible of this construction, but it seems to us that it is a refined rather than a practical construction. The testator had made special devises to such of his kindred as he desired to favor. No reason is shown for discrimination between the residuary devisees. It appears that he did not even know a great many of these; he could not tell which of his nieces and nephews would die earliest and it does not.appear that he intended to penalize any particular set of great nieces or nephews. True a will speaks from the death of the testator, but as popularly understood little or no distinction is drawn in this respect between the time of his death and the date of the probate of his will. Most likely he used these interchangeably, and considered in connection with the context every word of which should be given some force and effect, it is evident that he did not regard this short interim.
The first literary paragraph, “to be divided equally share and share alike between all my nieces and nephews living at the time of my death, ’ ’ is complete in itself. If the testator intended to restrict the devise to such beneficiaries as survived him, and to the children of such of these as died subsequently, there was no necessity of going further, and the succeeding* phrases were mere surplusage. Naturally he did not regard them as an idle form, and their use indicates that he intended to include children of deceased nieces and nephews not embraced in the former phrase, This is emphasized by the concluding phrase, “This item includes the nieces and nephews to whom I have given a.special bequest, as well’ as any others I may have.” The words “this item” are evidently used as synonymous with the words “this ¡clause” and the words “any. others’-’ were used.indifferently as applied to all nieces and nephews, and are *139 not restricted to such as may he living at the testator’s ■death, thus indicating that he meant for them'to apply to all nieces and nephews living or dead, regardless of the time of the demise of such as were dead, and considering the will as a whole, we conclude that such was his intention.
Wherefore, perceiving no error, the judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
284 S.W. 1032, 215 Ky. 136, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardcastle-v-potter-matlock-trust-co-kyctapphigh-1926.