In Re Johnson's Estate

228 P. 748, 64 Utah 114, 1924 Utah LEXIS 18
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1924
DocketNo. 4102.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 228 P. 748 (In Re Johnson's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Johnson's Estate, 228 P. 748, 64 Utah 114, 1924 Utah LEXIS 18 (Utah 1924).

Opinion

CHERRY, J.

This appeal is from the judgment of the district court of Salt Lake county, Utah, distributing the estate of deceased under his will which was duly proved and admitted to probate.

The controversy arises over the construction of the will with relation to the description or identity of the property intended as the subject of a particular devise. The facts are not disputed.

The deceased had two wives, by one of whom he had six children and by the other four. After the death of both of his wives, the deceased made a will bequeathing and devising all of his property to his children. The provisions of the will relating to this controversy are as follows:

“2. I direct that my executor shall cause to be measured out eleven acres of my land, to begin at the 44.2 rods north of the s. e. corner of the s. e. quarter of See. 24, Tp. 2 S., of range 1 W., S. L. M., and then go north, west, south and east, to make it eleven acres, and the said eleven acres of land to be equally divided between the following of mine children: To Olaf Johnson, Thorvald Johnson, Samuel J. Johnson, Charles A. Johnson, Anne M. Carlson, and Clara S. Boggess. If the said land cannot be divided satisfactory between my said children, that the executor may sell the same and divide the money equally between them.
“3. I will my other children hereinafter named shall understand that my reason for giving the said eleven acres to the above-named children is because I gave eleven acres of land to my wife Pauline, which was divided between the other children of Pauline, their mother.
. “4. All the residue outside the said eleven acres above mentioned of my farm land, I hereby instruct my executor to sell to the highest bidder for cash, and divide the proceeds therefrom, after all expenses connected with my last illness, funeral charges and expenses of administration shall have been fully paid, the balance *116 of cash, as aforesaid, to he divided equally between my children as follows: To Olaf Johnson, Thorvald Johnson, Samuel J. Johnson, Charles A. Johnson, Anne M. Carlson, Clara S. Boggess, Henry Johnson, Caroline Pedersen, Mariane Sharp and Hilda Middleton, to share and share alike between all of my children.”

Appellants are tbe devisees mentioned in clause 2 of tbe will, and respondents are tbe other children of tbe testator.

Tbe testator died seized and possessed of two, contiguous tracts of land, designated as tract A, which contains 10.994 acres, and tract B, which contains 3.65 acres. Tract A is situated west of tract B. Under an order of court tract B was sold by the executor to pay necessary costs of administration, etc., and at the time of distribution tract A was the only real estate remaining.

The particular point of beginning of the eleven acres of land directed to be measured off, as described in clause 2 of the will, is not upon any land owned by the testator at the time he made the will or since, but is situated about 12.5 rods east and 11.2 rods south of the nearest corner of tract A, which is the nearest land to the point mentioned owned by the testator. It was therefore impossible to begin at the point described in the will and describe eleven acres of the testator’s land.

The executor having measured it off, appellants petitioned the trial court to distribute tract A’ to them pursuant to the devise contained in the clause of the will above quoted. Respondents, claiming the devise to be void for uncertainty of description, opposed the petition of appellants, and prayed for distribution under the residuary clause of the will to all of the children of testator. The trial court concluded that it was bound by the particular starting point described in the will, and, projecting a line from that point north, west, south, and east, described eleven acres of land, which included five acres of land not owned by the testator and six acres of tract A left by the testator. An order was made distributing the six acres thus included of tract A to appellants in satisfaction of the devise in question, and the remaining five acres of tract A were distributed to the residuary legatees named in the will. ¡

*117 To reverse the judgment of distribution and to obtain a decree distributing the whole of tract A to them, the appellants have appealed to this court.

“A will is to he construed according to the intention of the testator.” Comp, Laws Utah 1917, § 6347.
“In case of uncertainty arising upon the face of a will as to the application of any of its provisions, the testator’s intention is to be ascertained from the words of the will, taking in view the circumstances under which it was made exclusive of his oral declarations.” Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 6348.

The intention of the testator “is the ultimate object to be kept in mind and to which all rules must yield” (In re Poppleton’s Estate, 34 Utah, 285, 97 Pac. 138, 131 Am. St. Rep. 842), and “is the polar star which should guide the court in its decision” (In re Campbell, 27 Utah, 361, 75 Pac. 851; Rumel v. Solomon, 54 Utah, 25, 180 Pac. 419).

That it was the intention of the testator to devise to appellants eleven acres of the land owned by him at the time of the making of the will there can be no possible doubt. The positive words of the will, “I direct that my executor shall cause to be measured out eleven acres of my land * * * to be divided between the following of mine children,” and the reason for making the devise as expressed in the succeeding clause, leave no uncertainty of what was intended.

The question is, Shall the plain intention of the testator be defeated and the devise fail because of the erroneous or false description contained in the will?

Comp. Laws Utah, 1917, § 6370, provides:

“When applying a will, if it is found tbat there is an imperfect description, or that no person or property exactly answers the description, mistakes and omissions must he corrected, if the error appears from the context of the will or from extrinsic evidence; but evidence of the declarations of the testator as to his intentions cannot be received.”

By extrinsic evidence of the boundaries of the testator’s land, the error or misdescription contained in the will was made to appear. It is clear that eleven acres of testator’s land cannot be measured out by commencing at the par *118 ticular point described in the will. In the light of the extrinsic evidence the testator’s description of the initial point is a plain error, and presents, we think, a situation contemplated by the statute last above quoted, requiring the error to be corrected. But, independent of the statute quoted, the devise in question cannot be defeated or diminished on account of the error in the description of the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 748, 64 Utah 114, 1924 Utah LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-johnsons-estate-utah-1924.