Hawes v. Foote

64 Tex. 22
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1885
DocketCase No. 1812
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 64 Tex. 22 (Hawes v. Foote) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawes v. Foote, 64 Tex. 22 (Tex. 1885).

Opinion

Walker, P. J. Com. App.

The clause of the will, the proper construction of which is the paramount question in this case, reads as follows: “I also give to said legatees my cart, all of my cattle (except oxen), and any horses of mine they may have in possession at the time of mj' death.”

The court before whom the cause was tried without a jury, among its conclusions of fact, found that “ there was a partnership existing [26]*26between said Alexander and W. J. Anderson and between the said Alexander and J. W. Eoan in the cattle fattening business, and that said partnership was in existence at the date of said Alexander’s death. I further conclude there were certain other cattle belonging to Alexander at the time of his death and when he made his will.”

The court’s conclusions of law. were as follows: “ That said will by its terms ‘all of my cattle except oxen’ means everything of the neat cattle kind that Alexander owned at the time of his death, including fattening cattle and beeves, oxen excepted; and the plaintiffs, Footes, became the owners thereof by the terms of the will, but that these plaintiffs are bound by such settlements as have been duly and legally made by virtue of the partnership alluded to in the conclusions of fact, by and between the executors and the surviving partners. I do also conclude it to be my duty under the law to certify my judgment to the county court for observance.”

It is assigned as error by the defendants that the court erred in finding as a conclusion of law that Alexander’s will, by its terms “all of my cattle (except oxen),” means everything of the neat cattle kind that Alexander owned at the time of his death, including fattening cattle and beeves, and that plaintiffs became the owners thereof by the terms of the will.”

It is also assigned as error that the court did not, in its decree construing the will, determine that it was Alexander’s intention by the bequest to plaintiffs to give his individual stock of cattle, and not his after-acquired interest in partnership fattening cattle.

In construing a will, the primary object is to arrive at the testator’s intention, and to do this the court will give his language such an interpretation as it is reasonable to presume, from the circumstances in which he was placed, he intended it should receive; and for this purpose parol evidence is admitted in regard to such circumstances, or to put the court in the place of the testator. 1 Redf. on Wills, ch. 10, sec. 37, p. 496.

Whether the testator meant the qualifying words used in the clause of the will in question, “ they may have in possession at the time of my death,” should apply to and limit the broad significance of the words, “ all of my cattle,” contained in the same sentence, will not necessarily be determined by strict grammatical rules, if, indeed, the controversy on this subject can be solved in that way, without leaving a doubt whether the testator’s meaning, according to the form of expression used, is not at last, to some degree, doubtful for want of making more distinct than has been done, whether he meant to refer “ the cattle ” to the same clause of lim[27]*27itation to which the “ horses ” referred to are manifestly and plainly subject. Although the terms of the bequest say “ all of my cattle ” and “ any horses of mine,” still it may well be urged, in making a free and liberal exploration for the testator’s intention, that as the sentence is not divided into parts expressly indicating whether the limitation shall apply to each class of property alike, and appears not to be punctuated, that, according to proper rules of construing such instruments, decisive effect would not be given to the word “all” as conclusively determining that because it was used in respect to cattle, and the word “ any ” as to the horses, that therefore the limitation relating to the possession at the time of his death must include both. Liberal allowance is made in construing wills to mere casualties, or ignorance, or awkwardness in the use of words in their exact sense, and in the structure of sentences, for the purpose of attaining the paramount object — the real intention of the testator. The law will not allow the testator’s intention to be defeated because he has not clothed his ideas in technical language. Bell County v. Alexander, 22 Tex., 350.

“There is no more clearly established rule of construction, as applicable to wills, than that words, or clauses of sentences, or even whole paragraphs, may be transposed to any extent, with a view to show the intention of the testator. Pond v. Bergh, 10 Paige, 140. Words and limitations may be transposed, supplied or rejected. But it must appear, either from the words of the will, or extrinsic proof, admissible in aid of the words, that the transposition does really bring out the true intent of the testator, and thus render what was before obscure, clear.” 1 Redf. on Wills (4th ed.), p. 432.

“ A technical construction of words and phrases, although prima faoie the one which should prevail, will not be carried to the extent of defeating any obvious general intention of the testator.” 1 Redf. on Wills (4th ed.), top p. 436.

The same author says there is no doubt that a particular construction of words, although somewhat variant from their more natural and obvious import, may be strengthened by reference to extraneous circumstances. 1 Redf. on Wills (4th ed.), top p. 431. It is said in Currie v. Murphy, 35 Miss., 473, that “ such facts are always admissible in aid of the construction of wills, to the extent of explaining doubts, or removing uncertainties, when with that aid the intent is clear.” Citing 37 N. H., 525; 28 Ala., 494; 12 La. An., 384; 4 Russ., 532, n.; 12 Price, 213; 3 Murphy, 27.

We see no reason to doubt the meaning of the terms employed in the bequest, when interpreted in connection with the various [28]*28provisions of the entire will, and with all the facts and circumstances surrounding the testator tending to show what was his intention; and that he meant to include all the cattle which he then owned when he made the will, or which he might die possessed of, acquired by increase or purchase in the usual course of cattle raising, or acquisition by other means, whereby, in the usual course of business, additions might be made to his original stock of cattle, oxen excepted.

At the time he made the will his stock of cattle was inconsiderable— about thirty-two head, more or less. His estate was large and valuable, worth, perhaps, $27,000. The defendants were neighbors and friends, and but very distantly related to him. He had assisted them in a small way, to relieve apparently the exigencies of their limited circumstances. The provisions he made in their behalf by his will seemed to look especially to aiding them in securing and enjoying a home, more than to making to them a bountiful bequest of great pecuniary value. The legatees consisted of Mrs. B. II. Foote and her eight children, to all of whom the bequests were made jointly; they lived together as a family, residing on the testator’s land near his plantation by his permission or invitation to do so. The tract on which they resided consisted, it would seem, of eight hundred acres and was appraised at $1,000.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Tex. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawes-v-foote-tex-1885.