Johnson v. Washington Loan & Trust Co.

224 U.S. 224, 32 S. Ct. 421, 56 L. Ed. 741, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2298
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 1, 1912
Docket40
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 224 U.S. 224 (Johnson v. Washington Loan & Trust Co.) 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
Johnson v. Washington Loan & Trust Co., 224 U.S. 224, 32 S. Ct. 421, 56 L. Ed. 741, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2298 (1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal'from a decree of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, which affirmed a decree in favor of the complainant, The Washington Loan & Trust Company. The suit was brought to quiet title, and the question concerns the construction of the fifth clause of the will of Washington Berry, who died in 1856. This clause relates to the testator’s homestead — the property known as Metropolis View, containing about 410 acres, in the District of Columbia — and is as follows:

‘‘ Item 5th. It is my will and desire that my said homestead shall be kept and continued as the home and residence of my daughters so long as they shall remain single ■ and unmarried. I therefore first after the death of my wife will and devise the said estate to my said daughters being single and unmarried and to the survivor and survivors of them so long as they shall be and remain single and *233 unmarried and on the death or marriage of the last of them then I direct that the said estate shall be sold by my executors and the proceeds thereof be distributed by my said executors among my daughters living at my death and their children and descendants (per stirpes) and I hereby reserve to my heirs the family vault and burial ground embracing half an acre of ground and having the said vault as a centre and on such sale as aforesaid by my executors I earnestly enjoin on my sons or some of these sons to purchase the said homestead that it may be . kept in the family.”

The will was executed in 1852. The testator had three sons and five daughters, all of whom were living at that time; and they, with his wife, survived him. Four of the daughters married and had children; only one of them was married before the testator’s death and her children were born subsequently. One daughter, Eliza Thomas Berry, remained single and survived all her sisters, dying in 1903. The testator appointed his wife and one of his sons executors and trustees; the widow acted as executrix, but the son declined.

Soon after the death of the testator, the widow removed from the homestead and neither she nor any of her unmarried daughters occupied it again. During the war the estate suffered much injury; the vault was destroyed and it was necessary to remove the bodies it had contained; the rent and profits were not sufficient to pay taxes or to provide for repairs and the property fell into a dilapidated condition.

The testator’s widow died in 1864. In the following year a suit was brought by three of the married daughters and their husbands in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia to have the property sold and the proceeds divided among the daughters — save the proceeds of the burial ground and vault, which the bill asked to have distributed among the heirs at law. The other children *234 of the testator, with the spouses of those that were married, were parties defendant. There were, then living, three grandchildren — by the daughters — but they were not parties or represented. All the defendants, save one married daughter — who was a minor and answered by guardian, submitting her rights to the court — consented to the decree. Eliza Thomas Berry, the unmarried daughter, ■ stated in her answer that she relinquished "upon the sale of the estate in. the bill mentioned her right to the possession and enjoyment thereof whilst unmarried,” and consented "to the distribution of the proceeds of sale as prayed.” The case was referred to the auditor t'o take testimony and report whether the sale would be for the advantage of the infant defendant. He reported that the property was an unfit residence for the unmarried daughter; that the land generally was poor and unproductive as a farm; that the testator had used it as a mere place of residence, and it was fit only, as a whole, for a man of fortune; that the burial place had been demolished and the buildings and fences were out of repair; and that it was a fit case for a sale.

In October, 1865, the court entered a decree for sale, appointing for that purpose two trustees, who were authorized to divide the estate and to sell it in parcels if this were found advisable. The division was made accordingly, and certain lots were sold at public auction. Subsequently, upon the petition of two of the daughters and their husbands, stating that they had children to support and were in need of the money that would come from the sale, the court ordered the trustees to sell the residue of the estate, and sales were made at public auction, which were confirmed by the court in October, 1868, and the proceeds were distributed among the five daughters of the testator. In the long period of years since that time the property has been divided into many separate parcels, which have been the subject of convey *235 anees, it being assumed that a valid title passed under the court’s decree.

In 1906, suit was brought in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia by the children of the daughters of the testator against the children of the deceased sons, averring that on the death of the unmarried daughter, Eliza T. Berry, in 1903, the entire equitable interest in the property vested in fee simple in the complainants; that their rights and interests had not been affected by the decree in the former suit or by the sales that had been made under it. It was prayed that' trustees might be appointed in the place of those named in the testator’s will, to whom the legal title should be transferred. Decree was passed and trustees were appointed by the court on February 20, 1907.

Thereupon Henry P. Sanders brought this suit against all the parties in the suit above mentioned — including the trustees — to quiet the title to a portion of the land which he had derived, by mesne conveyances, through the sale made under the decree passed in 1868; and he alleged that he, and those under whom he claimed, had been for thirty-five years in exclusive and continuous possession, relying upon the validity of their title acquired bona fide for a valuable consideration. Mr. Sanders died in 1907, appointing The Washington Loan & Trust Company executor and trustee of his last will and testament by which the real property in question was devised, and an order was made substituting this company as complainant.

It is contended by the appellants that, under the provision of the fifth item of the will, the proceeds of the sale, which the testator directed to be made of the property, should be distributed “among his daughters and their children and descendants as those classes should exist when all of the daughters should be dead or married.” The appellee insists that, at the death of the testator, the *236 daughters took a vested remainder in fee, “to take effect in possession on the marriage of all of them, or the death of the last unmarried daughter.”

On examining the scheme of the will, we find that the testator made separate provision for his three sons on the one hand, and for his five daughters on the other. While he contemplated the marriage of his children, and the birth of issue, he did not seek to tie up his property for the benefit of his children’s descendants.

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Bluebook (online)
224 U.S. 224, 32 S. Ct. 421, 56 L. Ed. 741, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-washington-loan-trust-co-scotus-1912.