Jackson ex dem. Gatfield v. Strang

1 Hall 1
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedAugust 15, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Hall 1 (Jackson ex dem. Gatfield v. Strang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson ex dem. Gatfield v. Strang, 1 Hall 1 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1828).

Opinion

Jones, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Charles Gatfield, by his will, dated April, 1798, devised as follows: “I give and bequeath to my wife Sarah all my estate real and personal “ during her life. The house and lot No. 37, situate in Mulberry-street, containing in front 20 feet, in rear 15 feet, in depth 95 “ feet, to my heirs Maria and Eliza Gatfield in fee-simple for- ever: if one of them should die, the property to descend on the “ other; in case both should die, the property to descend on my “ wife Sarah, only she is to pay to my brother Archibald Gatfield, on shilling if demanded.” The testator died in 1798.

Maria died in childhood; Eliza attained 21, married, and after-wards died in the lifetime of her mother without leaving or ever having had any lawful issue, and without making any disposition of the property. Her husband also died in the lifetime of the testator’s widow.

[7]*7The widow, in 1798, shortly after her husband’s death, married one Strang, by whom she had issue, five children, who are her heirs at law. She continued in possession of the premises until 1827, when she died. After her death, this suit was brought by Archibald Gatfield, who is the heir at law of the testator and of his surviving daughter Eliza, against the defendant, who is one of the children, and heirs at law of the widow.

The question is whether, by the will of the testator the remainder in fee of the premises, oh the death of his daughter Eliza, descended to the plaintiff as heir at law of the testator, or vested in the widow 1 and the solution of this question depends on the validity and legal effect of the limitations or devises over of the inheritance, in the events contemplated by the will.

The widow and two daughters survived the testator; and on his death the devises to the wife for her life, and to the daughters after her death in fee, subject to the limitations over, took effect. Upon the death of Maria, the daughter who first died, her moiety of the estate either accrued to the sister by the limitation of the will, or descended to her as heir at law. The surviving daughter, Eliza, consequently became vested, on the death of her sister, with the whole. But she died without issue, and in the lifetime of her mother •; and that event brings up the question upon the limitation or devise over to the mother. By the terms of that devise, in case both of the daughters should die, the property was to descend on the testator’s wife. In what sense were the words “in “ case both should die” used by the testator 1 Did he intend to refer to the death of the daughters generally, whenever such death should happen 1 or was it his intention to refer to the .event of death within some given time, or under some special circumstances 1 On the literal, grammatical construction of the terms, they would refer to the death of the devisees, without any qualification whatever; but on that construction, the daughters could in no event take a larger interest under the will than an estate for life; for the event of their death, on which the fee in terms devised to them would in that case be limited over to the wife, was certain to happen. It was absolutely certain that both daughters would die; and the inheritance must go upon [8]*8the detail of the survivor of them to their mother, or her heirs. Could that have been the intention of the testator 1 He in express terms devised the remainder of his estate to his daughters in fee-simple -forever. He could not surely intend to- destroy, by the devise over to the wife, the estate which he had created by the previous devise to the daughters, by cutting down the 'fee expressly given them to an estate for life. Or, if such were his intention, would the. established rules of law allow it to prevail? It is a well-settled, rule, that where a limitation or devise over, so directly conflicts' with the first or principal devise, that both cannot by any rational construction stand together, the limitation, or devise over, must be rejected as Void for repugnancy. Now; the limitations of this will, if the event on which they are to arise is the death of the daughters, without restriction of time, place, or circumstance, must necessarily displace the devise to them of the inheritance, and reduce' their interests to estates for life.. Such a construction would render the words “ in fee-simple forever,” annexed to the devise to the daughters, wholly inoperative. It would disappoint the just expectations of the immediate and most natural object of the testator’s bounty ; and it would-moreover inevitably disinherit all the children and lawful issue of the daughters, and substitute the heirs of the wife of the testator in their place. We should unsettle the best established rules of construction, contravene the express language of the will, and violate all probability, if we imputed such intentions to the testator; and unless the terms used by him are susceptible of some other exposition, we might, perhaps, find it difficult to sustain the devise over to the wife. But in expounding wills, effect is to be given to every disposition and limitation of the testator, if the whole will, taken together, will admit of such a construction. If, therefore, the words employed by the testator to designate the event on which the devise over is to take, effect, can be understood in. any restricted or qualified sense, so as to reconcile the limitation over with the previous devises, a just regard ta.the intention of the testator requires, that they should be so understood. And I assume the position, that the testator, when he referred to the death of one of his daughters as the event upon which the other was to take the whole, and to the [9]*9death of both as the event upon which the estate given to them in fee was to go over to his wife, must have intended to refer to that event in connection with some contingency, which he had in his mind at the time, but has omitted to express. Indeed, besides the incongruity of ideas imputable to him in devising the same estate to the same persons, in fee, and for life, the terms in which he expressed himself import contingency, and require the application of the words to some uncertain event to make them intelligible. The words “in case,’’ and the word “ should,” are inapplicable, and without meaning, if he intended to speak simply of the event of death which was sure to happen; but they were appropriate terms if intended to apply to the death of the daughters without issue, or within any limited period of time, as his own life, for example, or the life of his wife, either of which would be an uncertain and contingent event, and might happen or might fail to happen. A||uming, then, as I do, that the hypothetical phrase, “in case both should die,” must be understood to have some limit or qualification, the question presents itself, what that. limit or qualification ought to be. This is a question of intention, upon which we must exercise our best judgment, from the lights afforded us by the indications appearing on the face of the instrument, and by the circumstances under which the will was made, as disclosed in the case; with these guides we are to discover the probable intention of the testator, and that exposition is to be preferred which, keeping within the rules of law, will best subserve the general intent, and lead to the most satisfactory results, as respects the particular devises.

' This view of the subject seems to be taken by the parties themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Hall 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-ex-dem-gatfield-v-strang-nysuperctnyc-1828.