Hoyle v. Whiteside

1 Thomp. & Cook 301
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Thomp. & Cook 301 (Hoyle v. Whiteside) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyle v. Whiteside, 1 Thomp. & Cook 301 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

By the first paragraph of the testator’s will he devised the premises on which he resided to his wife for life. And in addition to that he devised her a life estate in an equal undivided ■third of all the rest of his real estate, excepting seven village lots. These seven village lots were then specifically devised to seven different persons. The devises to his wife and of the seven village lots were made in terms so clear as to leave no room for controversy or misunderstanding as to what his intention was in those respects. After the death of his wife the testator also devised to Mrs. Brinkerhoff an estate for life in one-twelfth part of the remainder of his real estate which he had devised for life to his wife. Then he devised the remainder of the real estate in which the life estate for his wife and Mrs. BrinkerhofF were created in two equal undivided parts — one-half to his niece Helen, the plaintiff, and the other undivided half, subject to the life estate of one-twelfth to Mrs. BrinkerhofF, to his brother Royal, and the heirs of two deceased brothers and two deceased sisters. Those devises effectually disposed of the entire fee of the premises on which he resided, and the undivided third of all the rest of the testator’s real estate, except the village lots. There can be no difficulty in the case as to those parts of the- testator’s property.

The contest relates to the other two undivided-thirds. The plaintiff, claiming an undivided half of it, in addition to the share of one-half devised to her in the third given to the testator’s wife for life; while on the part of the testator’s heirs at law it is claimed that a [305]*305smaller interest in the other two-thirds was devised to her. The uncertainty is created in the case chiefly by an exception, repeated on three different occasions, for the purpose of explaining or qualifying the extent of the devises designed to be made by the testator out of that part of his real estate not affected by the life estate given to his wife. These exceptions are contained in the ninth, tenth and eleventh paragraphs of the will. And with the exception of the description of the interests devised they are the same, and used in connection with the same general terms of reference to his estate in each paragraph. From that circumstance it is reasonably to be inferred that the testator designed and expected to accomplish the same substantial result by means of the exception mentioned by him in each instance where he used it. The object of the exception was to exclude from the terms all his real estate, the village lots already mentioned and the real estate devised for life to his wife, for the purpose of designating that from which the fractional devises were made by him. ¡No difference of opinion can exist as to the effect of the exceptions so far as they relate to the village lots. The confusion arises out of the other portion of the exceptions. The three devises qualified by this exception are made in nearly the same terms, except that -the interest devised to Mrs. Brinkerhoff for her life in the residue not affected by the wife’s life estate, is less than that given to the plaintiff, and also less than that given to the testator’s brother, and the heirs of his deceased brothers and sisters. With that exception and the additional one designating the third given his brothers and the heirs of his deceased brothers and sisters as the other third, the devises are expressed in the same words. So that what appears to have been his intention in making use of the exception in one instance, as a qualification of one devise, would furnish a safe guide in determining what his intention was in the other two instances where he made use of it. The exception being in the same form throughout, must at each time have been used for the same purpose. The terms are clear, apposite and intelligent, and must have been selected on account of their adaptability to the expression of his purpose. And the presumption is that he used them in their ordinary and popular sense, inasmuch as there is nothing in the context disclosing the existence of a different intention. The first devise in which the exception is used is that in which a life estate if given to Mrs. Brinkerhoff, out of the portion of his property not devised to his wife for life. The terms used are [306]*306as follows: “ Also the use for life of an equal undivided one-eighteenth part of all my real estate excepting the village lots or pieces of land devised as above, and the real estate devised as aforesaid, to my wife for life.” In this instance there can be no doubt but that the exception was intended to exclude from the terms “ all my real estate,” that part of the testator’s property in which he had given his wife a life estate. The exception is not of her life estate, but of the real estate in which the life estate was given. That the exception should have just that effect is apparent from the further fact that the whole of the property in which his wife had a'life estate was in the end devised in fee simple to his niece' Helen, his brother Royal, and the heirs of his deceased brothers and sisters. As to the life estate mentioned in this devise, it was one-eighteenth of all the testator’s real estate after excluding the village lots and the third of the rest devised to his wife for life.

The effect of the exception is equally as obvious upon the devises secondly made in the tenth and eleventh paragraphs of the will. By the tenth paragraph the remainder of half the testator’s real estate, in which he devised his wife a life estate, was devised to his niece Helen; and then he made the devise in controversy in her favor. The terms by which that was made areas follows: “Also an equal undivided one-third part of all my real estate, excepting the village lots devised as above, and the real estate devised for life to my wife as aforesaid.” The same reasons are applicable here to the construction of the exception as existed in the case of Mrs. Brinkerhoff; for the same terms are used to express the exception, though not precisely in the same order. In this instance it is the real estate devised to the testator’s wife that is excepted, not the life estate in that real estate. And as he- had before devised one-half the remainder in that real estate to the devisee named in this paragraph, and immediately afterward devised the other half to his brother and the heirs of his deceased brothers and sisters, it is plain he could have had no other intention or design. The office of the exception is to exclude from the real estate, to be disposed of by force of the devise, that part of the real estate in which the testator had given his wife a life estate. Then, after excluding that, he devised an undivided third part of all his real estate to his niece Helen. The necessary effect of the devise was to give her an undivided one-third of all his real estate not within the exception. For the exception excluded the other third as effectually, as though it [307]*307had not been devised by the testator. As to the real estate mentioned in the exception the devise was by its terms to have no effect. Consequently his niece Helen could only take by force of this devise one-third of the testator’s real estate not included in the exception of the one-third, which would be one-third of two-thirds of the real estate he- owned, besides the village lots. This is the clear effect of the language made use of by him; and the general scope and tenor of the will shows that he used the language selected by him understandingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Thomp. & Cook 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyle-v-whiteside-nysupct-1873.