Holmes v. Mitchell

4 Md. 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 4 Md. 532 (Holmes v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Mitchell, 4 Md. 532 (Md. 1853).

Opinion

Tuck, J.,

delivered his opinion as follows:

In the interpretation of wills, the intention of the is to be gathered from the entire instrument, and less it violates some established principle of law there is a general intention, and a particular minor latter must give place. It is immaterial in what p r tention is found. The words are the means to assert?}!: and, however scattered, if they explain it, they are td.bc^cd lecled and put together, that the will may have the effect in[536]*536tended. If would, in many cases, prejudice the désign of the' testator, if courts seized upon one clause, or upon one word only, and looked no further. As subservient to indicate the' intention the law requires us to consider all the words of the' will, wherever they are. It is true that certain terms have received a technical meaning, and a téstator will be presumed to have used them iifthat sense, unless'the- contrary appears' by the will. But at last the intention must govern; and so controlling is this guide, unless it contravene some established rule of law over which it can exert no influence, that the rule in Shelley’s case, though of early origin, and sanctioned by numerous cases, as of binding authority where it is applicable, does not necessarily stamp a legal méani'ng Upon the will in all cases in which térms within the words' of that rule are' employed, but the intent of the testator will have effect. Lyles vs. Digges, 6 H. & J., 364. Ram, on Wills, 64, 109. Chelton vs. Henderson, 9 Gill, 432. Other instances might" be given, in which expressions in wills have received an interpretation different from their legal import, because such technical meaning would have frustrated the design of the testator.

Looking to the whole will in the case before the court, and giving to its terms their ordinary and plain signification, in which they were doubtless employed by Mr. Semines, and in which sense it is our duty to apply them, (1 H. & J., 422; 1 Johns. Ch. Rep., 228,) it appears to me that he intended that all the property devised in trust to the appellee, together with the increase of the animate personalty, should constitute’ a trust estate, until the arrival at age of the youngest of Mrs. Floyd’s children; the income in the meantime to be applied by the trustee as therein directed.

It is said, however, on the part of the appellant, that, conceding this to have been his design, he has used the word “income,” by which the law defeats that intent; and the cases in 1 Har. & McH., 160, 352; 9 Gill and Johns., 77; 10 Gill and Johns., 458, are relied upon to' show that by force of this term the issue of the negro women, born during the lifetime of William Holmes, belong to him and Mrs. Floyd. It' [537]*537is true, that on the authority of these cases, children bom during a life estate, or a term, belong to the tenant of the limited estate; and the same principle was applied where the “úse” or “profits” of female slaves were given or reserved. It is important, however, to consider the difference between the first two and the last two of these decisions. The Court of Appeals,- in the case of Hope vs. Hutchins, 9 Gill and Johns., 77, in which the “use of the property,- and all profits arising therefrom,” were held to pass a usufructuary interest in the corpus, and the profits, for life, said, that the two cases in 1 H. & McH. had nothing to do with the question then before the court, because in them, the property in the female slave, the'mother, was vested in the' tenant for life; whereas, there was nothing more reserved to Mrs. Hope than a limited and temporary right of user, which expired at her death; and that the issue as well as the corpus passed to the donee. The same principle is recognized in Worthington vs. McPherson, 5 Gill, 51, where the judge who delivered the opinion in Sutton vs. Crain, 10 G. & J., 458, said, that the profits of the estate bequeathed to the son of the testator,- belonged to him,- (and not to the remainder man,)' “in virtue of the vested estate that he took in the principal fund by the devise.” In the cases in 9 and 10 G. & J., the property in the mother did not pass to the first taker, but the increase was adjudged to pass, in the one case, as part of the profits, and in the other, as part of the use of the mother. It is manifest that this effect was not the result of any supposed legal meaning of the words employed, which nothing could control, to be applied in all cases' where a party is entitled, for a limited time, to the services of a female slave. For if this' were so the hirer of a negro woman would be entitled to her issue born during the period of service, not only by force of the word used, but because the case would be within' the very reason assigned by Mr. Dulany in Somerville vs. Johnson, 1 H. & McH., 352, “That the issue ought to go to the person to whom the use was limited, otherwise having nó interest worth regarding he might not take care of the issue. And that it [538]*538would only be a reasonable satisfaction for the expenses of maintenance, and for the time lost by the parent.” Indeed the reason of the rule applies much more strongly, in the case of hiring for a short period, because it might happen that nearly all the time of the parent would be lost to the party entitled to her labor, besides the expenses of herself and child. But the principle has never been extended to such cases, because they must be governed by the universal usage and understanding of the country, which forbid the idea that any property in the issue could be acquired under such circumstances ; besides, the contract of hiring carries but the labor and service, and passes no property in the slave hired. 10 Gill and Johns., 478. Here, again, we see that the idea of property in the mother, has much to do in determining who is entitled to the increase.

In the will in Sutton vs. Crain, the word “use” occurs in three clauses. In the first two it was held to pass only a right to the service and labor of the slaves. Why? Because that intent was manifest from the context. In one instance the-increase was bequeathed over, and in the other it is connected! with the word “hire,” which qualified the meaning of the’ word use¿

From- these- cases it appears that the Court of Appeals did not consider this rule of construction as applicable, without qualification or exception, to all eases where the issue or profits of the mother were given by the will. And there is-no warrant by any authority before the court, for saying that these terms, proprio vigore, import an intent in law, that the-increase-shall belong to the person entitled to the use of the corpusand that they cannot receive a different construction, according to the design of the testator as shown by other' parts of the will, or in conformity with the usage of the country, as in 10 G. & J.

In the will under consideration another term is employed, which, it is supposed, is equivalent in law to the words use and profits. Conceding for argument’s sake, that if either of these expressions had been employed by Mr. Semines th®[539]*539issue would pass to the appellant and Mrs. Floyd, it does not follow that the word “income” must have the same effect. It does not appear that any judicial tribunal has held it to be synonymous, in law, with the issue of slaves.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Md. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-mitchell-md-1853.