Hubbard v. Selser

44 Miss. 705
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 Miss. 705 (Hubbard v. Selser) 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
Hubbard v. Selser, 44 Miss. 705 (Mich. 1870).

Opinion

Peytoít, C. J.:

It appears from the record in this case, that Sidney H. Hubbard, and Hellen his wife, and LyttletonH. Johnson, and Margaret his wife, filed their petition in the probate court of Hmds county, on the 6th day of May, 1867, for a partition of certain lands in said county among the heirs of Eugene A. Selser, deceased.

The petition alleges that the said Eugene A. Selser died intestate in the year 1862, sole, unmarried and without children, leaving no brother or sister of the whole blood surviving him, nor descendants of any, and leaving the following brothers aud sisters of the half-blood, some on the part of his father, and others on the part of his mother, to-wit: James M. Selser, Letitia A. Rossman, Julietta S. Rossman, Grace A. Collins, wife of William T. Collins, Hellen Hubbard, wife of petitioner S. H. Hubbard, Margaret S. Johnson, wife of petitioner L. H. Johnson, Theresa L. Nailor, wife of H. B. Nailor, and Elizabeth Montgomery, wife of Spencer W. Montgomery.

That the said Eugene A. Selser acquired a fee simple title to an undivided half of certain lands in said, county, described in the petition, under the fourth item or paragraph of the will of his father, Isaac N. Selser, deceased, which was dated February the 11th, 1855, and admitted to probate on the 7th day of March, 1855, which item is in the words and figures following: “I give and devise to my sons, James M. Selser and Eugene A. Selser, and to their lawful children after their decease, jointly, with all the appurtenances thereto belonging, the plantation whereon I now reside, ” setting out a description of the lands. '

[710]*710That if said lands are held in joint tenancy with said James M. Selser, both being minors, unmarried and without children, no survivorship attached to him or his children on the death of the said Eugene A. Selser, but that the latter’s undivided portion, on his death, descended to his said half-brother and sisters, as his heirs at law, in coparcenary.

■ On proof of notice, the petition was taken for confessed as to all the parties defendant thereto, except James M. Selser, who filed an answer, admitting the several allegations of the petition to be true, except such as relate to the construction of the said devise in the will of the said Isaac N. Selser, and denying that Eugene A. Selser acquired by said devise a fee simple title to the undivided one-half of the lands therein specified, and denying that, any of the parties to said petition, except himself, had any interest or estate in any of said lands. That subsequently to the death of the said Isaac N. Selser, the respondent became a married man, and, at the death of the said Eugene A. Selser, had three lawful children. That, according to the intention of the „testator, and the true intent and meaning of the devise, and the laws of this state, upon the death of the said Eugene A. Selser, his half of the land devised, vested in the respondent as survivor of the said Eugene A. Selser, or -that the same vested in him for his life, with remainder over to his children in fee simple. And upon the final hearing of the cause on the petition, pro oonfesso, answer and proof, the court decreed that Eugene A. Selser took an estate for life only in the undivided half of the lands devised, with remainder to James M. Selser and his children, or it reverted to the right heirs of the testator; and because the petitioner, Hellen, was only a step-daughter of the testator, and not one of his heirs at law, and on the ground that none of the petitioners can recover upon the joint petition, which was the foundation of the proceedings, the court dismissed the petition. Hence the cause comes to this court by writ of error on the part of the plaintiffs below, who make the following assignments of error:

[711]*7111st. The court below erred in deciding that Eugene A. Selser, by the fourth paragraph of the will of Isaac N. Selser, took only a life estate in the land in controversy.

2d. The court erred in deciding that the defendant, James. M. Selser, took, either for himself or his children, the estate of Eugene A. Selser.

3d. The court erred in dismissing the petition of the plaintiffs in error.

There is no controversy as to the facts in this case, and the-only question for our consideration involves the construction of the fourth item or paragraph of the will of Isaac N. Selser,' which is as follows: “I give and devise to my sons, James M. Selser and Eugene A. Selser, and to'their lawful children after their decease, jointly, the plantation whereon I now reside.

It is the general rule in the construction of wills, that the intention of the testator is the pole star to guide and govern the court, and this must prevail when ascertained, unless contrary to law. The difficulty of construing wills in any satisfactory manner, renders this one of the most perplexing branches of the law. To lay down any positive and definite rules of universal application in the interpretation of wills, must continue to be, ■ as it has been, a task, if not utterly hopeless, at least of extraordinary difficulty. The unavoidable imperfections of human language, the obscure and often inconsistent expressions of intention, and the utter inability of the human mind to foresee the possible combinations of events, must forever afford an ample field for doubt and discussion, so long as testators are at liberty to frame their wills in their own w^ay, without being tied down to any technical and formal language. It ought not, therefore, to surprise us, that in this branch of the law, the words used should present an infinite variety of combinations, and thus involve an infinite variety of shades of meaning as well as of decision.

The word “ children ” is, in a technical, as well as a general sense, used as a word of purchase; as a description of persons, and not as a word of limitation. If another meaning [712]*712is sought to be enforced upon it in a particular will, deflecting it from its general and appropriate sense, that must be made out by clear and unequivocal evidence. In the case .under consideration, no such unequivocal evidence exists. On the contrary, every part of this clause of the will reads consistently, and full effect is given to every word in it by adhering to the technical and general sense.

It is contended on the part of the plaintiffs in error, that the rule in Wild’s case, 6 Coke, 16, applies to this, and that Eugene A. Selser took an estate tail, which was converted into an estate in fee by our statute abolishing entails. It is true that by the rule in that case, a devise to one and his children, if he have no children at that time, gives him an estate tail. But such construction would defeat the clear intention of the testatox*, for it is very evident from the language of the will that after the decease of James M. Selser and Eugene A. Selser, their children were to take the estate in remaindei’, as purchasers, and this would be wholly defeated by applying the rule in the case above referred to, which by operation of the statute would give the entire estate to the said James aixd Eugene, and thereby defeat the ulterior limitation to their children.

In the case of Jeffeiy et al. v. Honeywood, 4 Madd., 211, 213, top page, the testator gave cei’tain estates to his daughter Mai-y, the wife of T. W.-Jeffery, and to all and every, the child and chidren, whether male or female, of her body lawfully issuing, and unto his, her and their heirs and assigns forever, as tenants.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Miss. 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-selser-miss-1870.