Jane v. Vick

44 U.S. 464, 11 L. Ed. 681, 3 How. 464, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 1, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 44 U.S. 464 (Jane v. Vick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane v. Vick, 44 U.S. 464, 11 L. Ed. 681, 3 How. 464, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 439 (1845).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Mc-LEAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is brought here by an appeal from the decree of the Circuit. Court for the district of Mississippi.

The complainants- under the will of Newit Vick, late of the state -of Mississippi, deceased, claim certain interests in .a tract of two hundred acres of land, on which the .town of Vicksburg is laid off. In the bill various proeeédings are stated as to the proof of the will, the qualification of one of the executors, named in it, the death of the executrix, and the refusal of one of the executors named to qualify ; that the executor who -qualified ,Was afterwards removed, with his consent, and Lane, the complainant, appointed administrator, with the will annexed; that acting under the will, the administrator laid off the town of Vicksburg, sold lots, and-paid the debts of the deceased; that there yet remains certain parts of the above tract undisposed of; and that his power as administrator to sell the unsold lots is questioned.

The defendants are represented as being interested in the above tract, as devisees and .as purchasers^ and the complainants pray that the court would decree a partition of the lots, commons, and Levee street, to be made between them and the other devisees of Newit Vick; and that said claimants shall be put in possession, &c.; or that said property may be sold, &c., as shall best comport with the intent of the testator.

, The defendants favourable to the object of the bill answered; the others demurred to the bill, which was sustained on the hearing, and the bill was dismissed, from which decree this appeal was taken.

The decision of this case depends upon the construction of the will of Newit Vick.. It was proved the 25th of October, 1819,

*472 Every instrument of. writing should be .so construed as to effectuate, if practicable, tbe intention of tbe parties to it. This principle applies with peculiar force to a will. . Such an instrument is generally drawn in the last days of the testator, and very often under circumstances-unfavourable to a calm consideration of the subject-matter of it. The writer/ top, is frequently unskilful in the use -of language, and is more oí less embarrassed by the importance and solemnity of .the occasion. To expect much system or-precision of language in a writing formed under such'emergencies, would seem to be unreasonable. And it is chiefly owing to these causes that so .many-controversies ai;ise under wills., i

In giving a construction to a will, all the parts of it shbuld.be .'examined and compared; and the intention of the-testator must be . ascertained, not from a part, but the. whole of the instrument. ■

By the second paragraph of the- will under .consideration, the testator bequeaths to his wife one equal share of his personal property, to -be.' divided between her arid her. children. -This .would giver to his wife one-half of-his personal estate. But the succeeding paragraph qualifies this bequest so as to give to his. wife a share of the persona! property, .equal only to the amount received by each of his children. This shows a want of .precision in the language .of tbe will, and that one part of it-'may be explained.and 'qualified by another. . / .

In the second paragraph,, the testator devises to his wife;-.during her natural life, “ the tract of. land at the Open Woods, on which he' then resided, or the tracts near the 'river, as she might, choose, ier, serving two hundred acres, on the upper part of thé .uppefmost'- trac.t. to be laid off in town lots, at the discretion of'his- executrix and executors.” ’ '

This discretion- of his executrix ánd' executors,'- referred 'tcf. the plan of the town, and .not to the propriety .of laying it off. ' ' The testator had determined that a.town should, be established, and reserved for this purpose thcabove tract of two- hundred acres,- “ to be laid off in town lots:”. .-

The testator next disposes of. his personal property to Jiis-wife and children; and he says, “ to my sons one equal part of said personal. estate as they -come, of age, together with all my lands, all:of -which, lands I wish to be appraised,, valued,-.and divided, when my son . Westley arrives at the age of twenty-oné years; the said Westley having-one part, and my Son William having the other part, of the ■ tracts unclaimed by my wife Elizabeth; and I bequeath to my sonNewit, at the death of my said wife, that tract which she may prefer to oécupy. I wish it to be distinctly understood, that that part of my estate .which .rriy son Hartwell has received, shall be valued, considered, as his, and as a part of his portion of my -estate.-3’ •

By these-devises, Newit, on the death of his mother, was to have the tract selected by her for her residence. She died, it is-admitted, *473 in a few minutes after the decease of the testator, so that no selection of a residence was made by her. But this is . not important as regards the intention of the testator. What lands did he devise to his sons'Westley and William? The answer is, the land unclaimed by the wife of the testator. His words are, “ Westley having one part, and my son William having the other part, of the tracts unclaimed by my wife Elizabeth.” But what tracts may be said to come under the designation of “tracts unclaimed by my wife?” The land which, under the election given to her in the will, she might have claimed ás a residence, but did not.

This claim by the widow was expected to be made shortly after the decease of the testator, as by it her future residence was to be established. If she selected the river land, then the Open Woods tract was to go, under the will, to Westley and William; but if the Open Woods tract were' selected by thé widow, then they were to ■have the river land. This devise being of the land unclaimed by the widow, presupposes her right to have claimed' it' in the alternative under the will. It did not include the town tract, for that was expressly reserved by the testator from the choice of his wife. That this is the proper limitation of the devise to Westley and William, seems to be,clear of doubt.

To. Hartwell was devised the tract on which he lived, and which was to be valued.

These are the specific devises of his lands, by the testator, to his four sons'.. The tract of .two hundred acres reserved for the .town ' is not affected by them. Did this tract pass to his -sons under the general devise of his lands to .them, in the third paragraph of the will ? That point will be now examined. The words of the testa- .. tor aré, “ and to my sons one 'equal part of said' personal estate as they come of age,- together with all, of my lands,' all of which lands ' ■.I wish to be appraised, valued, and divided, when my son Westley ' • arrives at the age of twenty-one years.” The words “all of my lands,” unless restricted by words with which they stánd connected, or by some other part of the will, cover the entire real estate of the1 testator. But these words are restricted by the part of the sentence which follows them, and also in other parts of the will. •

“ All of which lands I wish to be appraised, valued, and divided, when my son Westley arrives at the age of twenty-one years,” follow the words “ all of my lands,” and show that the tract' of two hundred acres was not intended to be included in this general devise.

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Bluebook (online)
44 U.S. 464, 11 L. Ed. 681, 3 How. 464, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jane-v-vick-scotus-1845.