Hughes v. Pennington

93 A. 402, 125 Md. 128, 1915 Md. LEXIS 190
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 93 A. 402 (Hughes v. Pennington) 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
Hughes v. Pennington, 93 A. 402, 125 Md. 128, 1915 Md. LEXIS 190 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree construing Item 12 of the last will and testament of Catharine Harper, deceased. That item is as follows:

(a) “In regard to the one undivided third part of the residuum of my estate, alluded to in the 10th item of my will, I give and bequeath the net annual income thereof to my granddaughter, Emily L. Pennington, for her sole and separate use, for the term of her natural life, to be paid over to and received by her as it shall become due, and without any anticipation of income.

(b) “And after the decease of my said granddaughter, if she should leave a child or children then living, or the descendants then living of a child or •children who may have died before her, it is my will *130 that the income of the said third part, as it shall be- ■ come due, shall be applied to the support, maintenance and education of such child, children or descendants, per stirpes, for the term of twenty-one years after the death of my said 'grand-daughter, or until the youngest child of my said granddaughter living at her death (or if she leave no child living at her death, then until the youngest of her grandchildren living at the time of her death) attains the age of eighteen years, if a female, or twenty-one years, if a male, whichever shall first happen; and that the principal of said third be then distributed amongst them per stirpes

(e) “But should my said granddaughter not leave descendants living at her death as aforesaid, or should all of such descendants, if any she leave living at her death, die within twenty-one years after her death, then and in such ease the principal of said third part shall go to and vest in my daughter, Emily L. Harper, if then living, and if my said daughter be not then living, the said third shall go to and vest in such persons as she may by any testamentary paper appoint, and if she does not specifically make such appointment, then her residuary legatees shall be taken and considered as such appointee.”

Eor convenience of reference we have marked the above clauses (a), (b) and (c), although they are not so marked in the will.

The petition asking for the construction of the will was filed by Thomas Hughes, Trustee, R. G. Harper Pennington and his children, and Olapham Pennington and his children. The trustees under the will of Catharine Harper having died, Thomas Hughes was appointed as their successor. Mrs. Pennington died on the Yth day of January, 1908, leaving surviving her two sons, R. G. Harper Pennington and Clapham Pennington, both of whom have long since passed the age of twenty-one years, but leaving no other chil *131 dren or descendants of any deceased child or children. II. G. Harper Pennington executed a deed of trust to Thomas Hughes, Trustee, for the benefit of his children, of one-half of his interest in the estate, until the marriage of said children, and all of them are still unmarried.

The petition states that Thomas Hughes, Trustee, entered into a contract for the sale of what is spoken of as the Stellburg property, and counsel for the purchaser had declined to accept said property, on' the ground that the remainder created by the 12th item of the will of Mrs. Harper, to take effect after the death of Mrs. Pennington, is under the terms cf the will liable to be divested in the event of the death of all the descendants of Mrs. Pennington within twenty-one years after, her death, and that the power conferred by the ■will of Mrs. Harper upon her daughter, Emily Harper, to appoint by her will the persons to take said remainder was not validly executed, or, if validly executed, would not be effective for reasons therein set out, but which are not necessary for us to state by reason of our construction of the will of Mrs. Harper. Mr. Alex. H. Robertson, Auditor and Master, to whom the case was referred, reported that in his opinion R. G. Harper Pennington and Clapham Pennington are entitled to absolute vested interests under this clause of the will, and the Court decreed as follows: “That by the proper construction of the will of Catharine Harper, deceased, the obligation now devolves upon Thomas Hughes, Trustee, in consequence of all the children of Emily L. H. Pennington, deceased, being over twenty-one years of age, to distribute between her two sons, R. G. Harper Pennington and Clapham Pennington, equally, the estate in the hands of said trustee, and he shall so distribute the same accordingly, selling so much as he shall find necessary for such distribution, whereby there shall be distributed to and received by the said R. G. Harper Pennington one-half of said estate, and Clapham Pennington the remaining one-half of said estate, each for his own use, and as his own property absolutely, except,. however, that the said trustee shall retain *132 in his hands, pursuant to the deed of trust to him from the said E. G. Harper Pennington, in favor of his children, one-half of the said E. G. Harper Pennington’s share.” From that decree the trustee, by authority of the lower Court, took this appeal.

In our judgment that decree is clearly right. If clause (h) stood alone, there could he no possible question about it. Mrs. Pennington, the life tenant, died leaving two sons and no descendants of a deceased child, and hence the income of the said third part, as it became due, was applicable to the support, maintenance and education of those two sons for the term of twenty-one years after the death of their mother, or until the youngest of them attained the age of twenty-one years, whichever first happened; and the principal of said third was then to be distributed amongst them. As both of her sons have attained the age of 21 years (which happened before the end of 21 years after her death), the will explicitly directs “that the principal of said third be then distributed amongst them per stirpes ” and they are undoubtedly entitled to now have the principal of the estate, unless clause (c) prevents.

That clause can not prevent the distribution, unless we not only ignore the alternative provision in reference to the youngest child becoming of age, but disregard the express direction that the principal be then distributed (that is to say, when the youngest son became twenty-one years of age). It can not be said that the testatrix intended that, even after the principal is distributed to the two sons, if they died within twenty-one years after their mother’s death, their respective shares would be divested and go to their aunt, if living, or if she be not living, to such persons as she might by will appoint, and thus cut out the children of Mrs. Pennington’s two sons. That would not only be an unnatural provision, but it might have been a useless one, for the child, children, or descendants of Mrs. Pennington, who reached the ages named, might have spent or lost the principal distributed to them, and it is evident from the will *133 that the testatrix was careful to- preserve the estate in the hands of trustees until the time came for its final distribution.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 402, 125 Md. 128, 1915 Md. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-pennington-md-1915.