Hoover v. Brem

43 Miss. 603
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 Miss. 603 (Hoover v. Brem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover v. Brem, 43 Miss. 603 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Tarbell, J.:

This is an appeal from the probate court of Madison county. The questions for adjudication involve the construction and legality of the fifteenth item or clause of the will of Thomas B. Hoover, deceased, and the jurisdiction of the probate court. In February, 1869, Asa Hoover filed with the probate court of Madison county, his petition setting forth that Thos. [607]*607B. Hoover died in 1825, having first made his will, wherein he bequeathed to the petitioner, the sum of $1,000; that letters testamentary were granted to Thomas Brem and Henry E. Coulter; that more than twelve months have elapsed since the grant of letters testamentary on said estate; yet the executors have not paid said legacy, or any part thereof; that the estate is solvent; that the debts of the testator, and his funeral expenses have been paid ; and prays for an order or rule requiring the payment of the legacy and interest. The petitioner tends a refunding bond, but insists that upon the facts, it ought not to be required.

The answer of Thomas H. Brem, the surviving executor, is made a cross-bill, and states that Henry E. Coulter qualified as executor, and entered upon the execution of the trust; that Coulter died subsequently, when the respondent qualified and has since been in charge of the estate.

The answer alleges that the petitioner was a slave of African descent at the time of the bequest, and the property of the testator, and after his death the property of the estate, subject to be taken and administered as assets, and so remained and continued until he was liberated as the result of the war. The respondent avers that the bequest was void under the laws of this State. He admits that the debts and funeral expenses of the testator have been paid, and prays that the petitioner be required to answer the new matter set up in the cross-bill. The answer to the cross-bill admits that letters were first granted to Henry E. Coulter alone, as executor of said will, and not to Coulter and Brem jointly, and that after Coulter’s death, they were granted to Brem. Also, that the petitioner was the slave of the deceased, and of African blood, but that he is now a free man and entitled by law to take said legacy. A copy of the will is given in the record.

At the March term of the court below, upon the pleadings, exhibits and proofs, and after argument of counsel, that court dismissed the petition for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that the bill created a trust, and that Thomas H. Brem was a mere trustee. From this decree and judgment the case [608]*608comes to this court; the refusal of the prayer of the petitioner, and the dismissal of the petition being assigned for error.

The counsel for the petitioner submits that it was not illegal to emancipate slaves by will, for meritorious services, but that it was “competent” so to do under the laws of 1842, by which this will is to be tested, referring the matter at the same time to the legislature for approval, which, counsel insists, the testator did, and which it is urged should b e the construction of the will, and not that he directed, at all events, the removal of the slaves from the State for the purpose of emancipation in fraud of the laws of Mississippi; that it is competent for the courts by construction, to transpose, supply, or change words in a will, when it is necessary to effectuate the intention of the testator, or to render a will'rational, sensible, or consistent; that the ordinance of freedom by the convention of 1865, rendered legislative action with reference to this will, unnecessary, and of itself sanctioned this provision ; that if the will is void as to emancipation, it is not as to the pecuniary bequest, and that when Asa became free the bequest vested in him ; that the ordinance of 1865 abol'ishing slavery, validated the trust, even if before it had been invalid ; and that the probate court had jurisdiction of this case.

The counsel for the respondent contends : 1st, That the fifteenth clause of the will is void, because against the then public policy of the state. 2d. That it is void for uncertainty. And 8d. That the probate court was without jurisdiction, because the will creates a trust.

The will of the deceased was executed in May, 1855, and probated in June of that year. The first item therein declares that the testator was free from debt, and directs his funeral expenses to be paid with all convenient speed, after Iris decease.

Upwards of $150,000 are distributed to next of kin, the testator having no family.

The fifteenth item is as follows:

[609]*609“ It is my will and desire, and I do so direct my executors, hereinafter to be named, if it can be done in accordance with the laws of the state of Mississippi, or if not, to have a special act of the legislature of said state passed for that purpose ; if that cannot be done in either of said Avays, and if he should choose to do so, beyond the limits of said state, and then and there to give unto my faithful manservant, Asa, and his daughter Yiolet, their freedom, if he should be alive when I die; and I do further give and devise unto my executors, hereinafter to be named, in trust, the sum of $1,000 to be paid to said Asa, at the time of his freedom, should that event take place. Should that event not take place, said item as to the $1,000 to be void and of no effect.”

The sixteenth item directs that the real estate of the testator be not sold under ten years, unless his executors should, in their judgment, think it best for the interest of the estate to sell sooner, when it is directed to be done “ under the direction of the probate court, and in accordance with the Irav in such cases.”

So much of the particular clause of this will under review as relates to the emancipation of Asa and Yiolet, is confused and wanting in precision of expression, yet the will, as a AA-hole, presents, as a prevailing sentiment in the mind of the testator, a desire to conform to the laws of the state. In directing the emancipation of these servants, he precedes the declaration of freedom by the proviso, “ if it can be done in accordance with the laws of the state of Mississippi.”

That portion of this item, relating to the bequest to Asa, however, is not subject to the charge of obscurity. It reads as follows: “And I further give and devise unto my executors, hereinafter to be named, in trust, the sum of $1,000, to be paid, to said Asa, at the time of his freedom, should that event take place; should that event not take place, said item as to the $1,000, to be void and of no éffect.”

This is clear and explicit; the sum is definite. The devise is to the executors, in their official capacity, and not to them [610]*610as individuals. The bequest is to be paid “ at the time of his freedom.” No limit is fixed as to the time of emancipation, nor mode of securing that result. The bequest is not in aid of freedom, nor dependent upon the manner of its accomplishment. In Lewis v. Lusk, 35 Miss., the pecuniary bequest was expressly dependent upon the vesting of the bequest of the slaves, and in aid of their emancipation, by its own terms and language. The testator directed the emancipation of Asa and Yiolet. The pecuniary bequest is to Asa. These provisions are distinct, and we shall, therefore, disregard that as to emancipation, and consider only that as to the legacy-The peculiar equity of the claim of petitioner will be readily conceded. The desire of the deceased is no less certain.

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46 Miss. 435 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1872)

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43 Miss. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-brem-miss-1871.