In re Estate of Massey

721 A.2d 1033, 317 N.J. Super. 302, 1998 N.J. Super. LEXIS 533
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 13, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 721 A.2d 1033 (In re Estate of Massey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Massey, 721 A.2d 1033, 317 N.J. Super. 302, 1998 N.J. Super. LEXIS 533 (N.J. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

FISHER, P.J.Ch.

The simply stated, yet deeply, perplexing issue raised involves a bequest in a Will which directed that one-third of the residue should pass “to my niece, DIANE HALL and/or Grandniece, CARLY HALL.” Beyond the shadow of any doubt, the use of the phrase “and/or” in that setting is utterly ambiguous and convolutes the ascertainment of the decedent’s intent.

Indeed, the use of “and/or”, notwithstanding its setting, has been roundly criticized — and deservedly so. In Employers’ Mut. Liability Ins. Co. v. Tollefsen, 219 Wis. 434, 263 N.W. 376, 377 (Wis.1935), it was said:

We are confronted with the task of first construing “and/or”, that befuddling, nameless thing, that Janus-faced verbal monstrosity, neither word nor phrase, the child of a brain of someone too lazy or too dull to express his precise meaning, or too dull to know what he did mean ...

“And/or” has been quite rightly defamed on many occasions. The “golden age” of criticism for this phrase appears to be the 1930s, as most of the following citations reveal. See Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. Davis, 68 F.2d 108, 109 (5th Cir.1933) (“linguistic abomination”); Minor v. Thomasson, 236 Ala. 247, 182 So. 16, 18 (Ala.1938) (“the interloping disjunctive -conjunctive-conjunctive-disjunctive conjunction”); Cochrane v. Florida East Coast R. Co., 107 Fla. 431, 145 So. 217, 218 (Fla.1932) (“one of those inexcusable barbarisms which was sired by indolence and dammed by indifference ... senseless jargon”); Tarjan v. National Surety Co., 268 Ill.App. 232 (1932) (a “freakish fad ... not found in the English language”); Albers v. Indemnity Ins. Co., 283 Ill.App. 260 (1935) (“accuracy destroying”); State v. Beacon Pub. Co., 141 Kan. 734, 42 P.2d 960, 965 (Kan.1935) (“certainty-destroying”); Bell v. Wayne United Gas Co., 116 W.Va. 280, 281, 181 S.E. 609, 618 (W.Va.1935) (“a disingenuous, modernistic hybrid, inept and irri[304]*304tating”); State ex rel. Adler v. Douglas, 339 Mo. 187, 95 S.W.2d 1179, 1180 (Mo.1936) (“meaningless symbol”); Ollilo v. Clatskanie People’s Utility Dist., 170 Or. 173, 132 P.2d 416, 419 (Or.1942) (“a sort of verbal monstrosity which courts have quite generally condemned”); Holmes v. Gross, 250 Iowa 238, 93 W.W.2d 714, 722 (Iowa 1958) (“that mongrel expression ... an equivocal connective, being neither positively conjunctive nor positively disjunctive”); Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of the United States v. Hemenover, 100 Colo. 231, 67 P.2d 80, 82 (Colo.1937) (should never be used in jury instructions since “certainly jurors could not be expected to interpret it”); American Gen. Ins. Co. v. Webster, 118 S.W.2d 1082, 1084 (Tex.Civ.App.1938) (“the abominable invention”); Boggs v. Commonwealth, 285 Ky. 558, 148 S.W.2d 703, 704 (Ky.1941) (“grammatical monstrosity”); A.B.A.J., July 1932, at 456, (“[it is] a device for the encouragement of mental laziness”). The most noted appellate advocate of his age, John W. Davis, referred to “and/or” as a “pollution of the English language” and, on another occasion, said: “I assume that there is not a pestilent ‘and/or’ to be found in the brief from cover to cover; or if there is, that the court, jealous of our mother tongue, will stamp upon the base intruder.” And, demonstrating that judges also stoop to use this cryptic short-cut, one reviewing court observed:

The presiding judge murdered the King’s, the Queen’s, and everybody’s English . by using the monstrous linguistic abomination ‘and/or’ in this portion of the order. We are constrained to adjudge, however, that the judge’s law is better than his grammar.
[Brown v. Guaranty Estates Corp., 239 N.C. 595, 80 S.E.2d 645, 653 (1954).]

“And/or” has been found in numerous contexts and dealt with accordingly by our own courts. See Fisher v. Healy’s Special Tours, Inc., 121 N.J.L. 198, 199, 1 A.2d 848 (E. & A.1938) (the complaint alleged that A and/or B “were the owners of a motor bus”; the court admonished the pleader that this unhappy phrase “has never been accredited in this state as good pleading” and, after citing some of the cases referred to above, “concur[red] in the disapproval of the expression by the courts of our sister states, and take this opportunity of registering that concurrence for the benefit of the bar.”): Howell v. Ohio Casualty Ins. Co., 130 [305]*305N.J.Super. 350, 355, 327 A.2d 240 (App.Div.1974) (an insurance policy describing the insured as the husband and/or wife was found to be equivocal); The National State Bank of Newark v. Morrison, 7 N.J.Super. 333, 339, 70 A.2d 888 (Ch.Div.1949) (the power of appointment of a trust was given to the settlor’s “widow and/or nephews and nieces”); Ward v. Jersey Central Power & Light Co., 136 N.J.Eq. 181, 182, 41 A.2d 22 (Ch.1945) (plaintiff requested that a stock certificate be reformed so as to run to A and/or B; the Vice-Chancellor observed that “and/or” is “often employed for no better reason than that the draftsman has failed to think out his problem.”); Morris Plan. Indus. Bank of N.Y. v. Kemeny, 123 N.J.L. 389, 390, 8 A.2d 769 (Sup.Ct.1939) (a motion which requested an order “vacating and/or arresting judgment”, was duly criticized by the court); State v. Jefferson, 19 N.J.Misc. 678, 679, 23 A.2d 406 (Co.Ct.1941) (a criminal complaint accusing the defendant of “being a criminal and/or having a bad reputation” could not support a conviction).

Our courts have endeavored to divine the actual or probable intention behind such poor grammar. In Manufacturers Trust Co. v. Earle, 32 N.J.Super. 262, 266, 108 A.2d 115 (Ch.Div.1954), then Judge (later Justice) Sullivan sought to ascertain the meaning of a Will’s direction that estate assets be invested in securities legal “under the laws of the State of New Jersey and/or the State of New York”. Judge Sullivan concluded that “and/or” in that context must be translated to “or” for the clause to have the meaning intended by the testator.

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721 A.2d 1033, 317 N.J. Super. 302, 1998 N.J. Super. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-massey-njsuperctappdiv-1998.