In re the Partition of Real Estate of Cochran

85 A. 1070, 10 Del. Ch. 134, 1913 Del. Ch. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 85 A. 1070 (In re the Partition of Real Estate of Cochran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Partition of Real Estate of Cochran, 85 A. 1070, 10 Del. Ch. 134, 1913 Del. Ch. LEXIS 10 (Del. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The first question raised is whether the intervention will be allowed and the claims of the intervenors be adjudicated in this way. There is no statute bearing on the subject. If the intervenors have an interest in the land to be partitioned and are not made parties, they are not affected by the partition. But it is manifestly proper that the question as to their rights be settled promptly in the way adopted, for the question raised is purely a legal one and the facts are [137]*137undisputed; and all parties, interveners as well as the original petitioners, would be bound by the decision of the question, subject, of course, to a review by an appeal. Indeed, there are several cases of record in this court in this county, where such petitions for intervention were considered and allowed.

In the proceeding In re Ebenezer Rothwell, in 1819, a purchaser of the shares of two of the tenants in common was allowed to intervene. In 1856, in the case of Charles Warner v. Hunn Jenkins, the petition was amended by adding certain cestuis que trust as parties. Later, in 1871, In the Matter of Real Estate of John McGranra, one John McGranra, who was not an original party in the partition proceeding, made a petition in the case after the sale, claiming an interest and asking to be made a party and be given a share of the proceeds. Thereupon a rule issued to the other parties, testimony was heard by the Chancellor and an order made declaring the petitioner to be a party entitled to a share of the proceeds of sale.

The main question, however, is whether the interveno rs have any interest in the land. At the time the will and codicil were executed the testator had five children living. One child, John Cochran, was then dead leaving children then living. Provision had been made for these children of John, and it appears affirmatively and definitely in the will that he then knew of the death of John and that John had left children. The intention of the testator, to be gathered from the whole will, is to control. Regard must be had then to the third item of the will in connection with the first codicil, the one under which the intervenors claim. The evident purpose of each of these provisions is to provide a home for his widow for her life. But the language of the gift of the remainder is quite different in the two clauses. It was urged by the solicitor for the children of John Cochran that under the third item of the will they would probably be excluded from participation. But the law is otherwise. If there be a gift to the children of A. living at a given period and the issue of such children of A. as shall have died before that period, and A. had a child who was dead at the date of the will, the issue of that child would be entitled. There is a substantive and original gift to the [138]*138issue, and not a substitutional gift grafted on the prior gift to the parent. Hawkins on Wills, *249. So a gift “to such of my children as may survive me and the issue of such as have died in my lifetime” is an independent gift to the issue; and the children of a son of the testator, dead at the date of the will, would have taken directly and independent of the parent, and not by way of sustitution for the parent, who never could take. The matter is thus stated in Hawkins on Wills, *249:

“Thus under a bequest to the children of A. at a given period, and the issue of such children of A. as shall have died before that period, the issue of a child of A. who may have died in the testator’s lifetime, or who may have been dead at the date of the will, are entitled; the gift to issue involving no condition as to the time of death of the parent or ancestor.”

In support of this the learned author cites Coulthrust v. Carter, 15 Beav. 421; Rust v. Baker, 8 Sim. 443; Loring v. Thomas, 1 Dr. & Sm. 497. See, also, Atwood v. Alford L. R. 2 Eq. 479: Wheeler v. Allen, 54 Me. 232.

Under the third item, then, the five children of the testator, living at his death, would each have taken a vested remainder in one-sixth of the land, and the children of John Cochran would have taken together a vested remainder in one-sixth of the land. The class of devisees in remainder consisted both of children and grandchildren, the latter taking an original and independent gift and not in substitution for their parents.

After revoking that provision in the third item, the testator by codicil made another gift of other property bought for the same purpose, and used in the codicil entirely different language. Beyond doubt the natural and literal meaning of the codicil is such as to exclude the interveners. The word “said” has a direct reference to a class of persons, which the testator had created by the words immediately preceding, viz: “Such of my children as may survive me.” They constitute the original class, and the share of any of that class who died in the life of the life tenant was given to the children of the one so dying, the members of this substituted class to take among them the share or shares which their parent or [139]*139parents would have taken if they survived the testator. This view is further strengthened by the words “shall be dead.” The natural significance of these words is not dead at the date of the codicil, but dead at some future time. Again, they may mean dead at a time other than the date of the codicil, for the testator then knew that his son John was dead. Again, by the use of the word “if,” the testator referred not to his son John, but to some one else, viz: such of his children as were alive when the codicil was made and who might die thereafter in the testator’s lifetime. If he had intended to surely include the children of his deceased son John, he would have again used the language used in the third paragraph of the original will respecting the other land.

There are cases, however, which hold that words such as, “shall die,” or “shall happen to die,” used in such like cases do not necessarily point to a future death, so as to exclude the issue of a child who may have died before the date of the will.

‘ ‘ Though according to strict construction, importing futurity those words might have been understood as speaking of the event at whatever time it may happen.” Hawkins on Wills, *249; Loring v. Thomas, 1 Dr.&Sm. 497; Christopher son v. Naylor, 1 Mer. 320. It may be, therefore, that these words, “shall be dead,” do not control the devise.

In support of the natural and literal meaning above referred to of the words of the codicil there are decisions of weight, and they uphold the proposition that one cannot take by way of substitution when the person for whom he claims to be substituted never could by any possibility have been an original legatee. The case of Christopherson v. Naylor, 1 Mer. 320, is one of the cases most cited to support this. There, there was a bequest “to each and every child and children of my brother and sisters, A., B., C. and D., which shall be living at my decease, * * *. ‘But if any child or children of my said brother 'and sisters, or any of them * * * shall happen to die in my lifetime and leave any issue * * * ’ then the legacy or legacies hereby intended for such child or children so dying shall be upon trust for, and I give and bequeath the same to his, her, or their issue.” It was held [140]

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Clark v. Cushing
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89 A. 595 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
85 A. 1070, 10 Del. Ch. 134, 1913 Del. Ch. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-partition-of-real-estate-of-cochran-delch-1913.