Jones v. Rees

69 A. 785, 22 Del. 504, 6 Penne. 504, 1908 Del. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 20, 1908
DocketAppeal from Chancellor No. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 A. 785 (Jones v. Rees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Rees, 69 A. 785, 22 Del. 504, 6 Penne. 504, 1908 Del. LEXIS 25 (Del. 1908).

Opinion

Lore, C. J.,

delivering the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the Chancellor made October 14, 1905, directing certain trust funds under the will of Abel Jones, deceased, to be paid to the heirs at law of Anne J. Chapman.

So far as it relates to the subject matter of this suit the will of Abel Jones, which was dated December 3, 1844, provides as follows:

“Item Seventh. I give, devise, bequeath, assign, transfer and set over unto my friend Thomas A. Rees of Duck Creek Hundred aforesaid, and to his executors, administrators and assigns, twenty shares of the capital stock of the Bank of Smyrna, standing in my name on the books of said bank, and all the dividends now due or which may become due thereon in my life time; also a note which I hold as hereinbefore stated against my said son James H. Jones, for the sum of two hundred dollars, with all the interest due thereon; also one bedstead, and bed well furnished with all necessary clothing, the bureau which is in the parlor chamber, the washstand and bowl known as my daughter’s Ann Jane’s, and the toilet table and dressing table known as hers, and also a sufficient portion of the residue of my personal estate (the bequests to my son Alexander and to my said wife being first delivered to them) to make up together with the said [506]*506bank stock at the par value thereof, and the dividends now(due and to become due thereon during my lifetime, and the said note due to me from my son James, with the interest thereon at the time hereinbefore appointed for the payment thereof and the amount of the interest paid by me on the debt of my son James, to the Smyrna Bank as aforesaid, and the said above named articles of household furniture, and the said yearly sum of twenty-five dollars, and the said portion of the said residue of my personal property to be held by him, the said Thomas A. Rees, and his executors, administrators and assigns, nevertheless upon trust as to the specific articles of household furniture to permit and suffer my afflicted daughter Ann Jane, who is deaf and dumb, to use the same as her property, and as to the dividends on the said Bank stock which may fall due and become payable after my decease, to himself receive and apply the same to the maintenance and support of my said daughter and as to the dividends on the said bank stock, which may be unpaid at the time of my decease, and as to the said note due from my son James, and the interest thereon, and the amount of interest paid by me on the death of my son James to the Bank of Smyrna, as aforesaid, and the said yearly sum of twenty-five dollars, so, paid as aforesaid by my son Alexander to the said trustee, and the said portion of my said personal estate, mentioned above in this item, to collect and receive the same and invest the same when received as soon as conveniently may be in some good and safe and profitable investment and apply the dividends or interest arising from such investment or investments together with the dividends to become due, as aforesaid, on the said bank stock, after my death, as the same may be received to the maintenance and support of my said daughter, Ann Jane, during her life, and from and.after her decease it is my will and I direct that all the said property, moneys, stock, goods, chattels, rights, credits and effects, shall be held by the said Thomas A. Rees, free and discharged from the aforesaid trust, to and for the use of the heirs and assigns of the said Ann Jane forever ”

[507]*507After the death of Abel Jones, the testator, Thomas A. Rees the trustee named in said item seven assumed and discharged the duties of trustee thereunder, until his death in April, 1847. Then John R. Rees, his administrator, voluntarily discharged the duties of such trustee until he died, October 28, 1884. Upon his death William R. Rees was appointed trustee by the Chan-cellar, and upon his death, which was after the commencement of this action, Maggie H. Rees and John H. Stoops his executors were by suggestion, on the nineteenth day of November, 1903, made parties complainant, and now hold the trust fund in dispute.

Ann Jane, the daughter, after the death of her father, the testator, married one Chapman, and had two children, Robert and Howard, both of whom died during her lifetime, unmarried and without issue., She died in 1903, leaving a will, of which James F. Jones, one of the parties hereto, is the executor.

During her life the income arising from the trust funds named in item seven was duly applied to her maintenance and support by the respective trustees above named.

Upon her death her said Executor, James F. Jones, claimed the corpus of the trust fund as a part of her estate; and the heirs at law of the said Ann J. Chapman claimed the same as their property under the terms of the will of the said Abel Jones.

A bill was filed by the trustee for instruction from the Chancellor as to the rightful disposition of the disputed fund. Upon the interpleading of the parties interested, the Chancellor decreed the funds to the heirs at law of Ann J. Chapman.

From this decree this appeal was taken.

The single question for our determination is, to whom does this trust fund belong.

The executor of Ann J. Chapman contends that under the will of Abel Jones the trust funds belonged absolutely to his said daughter Ann, for the reason;

First, that such is the intention to be drawn from the language of the will;

[508]*508Second, that whether such was the intention of the testator or not, having bequeathed the property to Ann Jane her heirs and assigns, the rule of law, in analogy to the rule in Shelley’s case, vests the property in her absolutely.

The case has been very fully argued upon elaborate briefs prepared by counsel for the respective parties, and has received the most careful consideration of the Court.

The rule in Shelley’s case, unquestionably governs the transmission of real property in this State in cases which come within its terms.

Griffith vs. Derringer, 5 Harr. 284; Wright vs. Gooden, 6 Houst. 397.

Of this rule as applied to real estate generally, Chancellor Kent, in 4 Kent 218, uses this language.

“It has been firmly established as an axiom in the English law of real property for near five hundred years; and yet, it is admitted to interfere in many cases with the presumed, and in many others with the declared intention of the parties to the instrument to which it is applied. The rule as to legal estates has had a prescriptive and uncontroverted authority; but courts of equity have not considered themselves bound to an implicit observance of it.”

This view of the rule was approved by our own Courts in Gross vs. Scheeler, 7 Houst. 286. In that case Chief Justice Comegys says it is “a rule which has done more to produce litigation and (when sustained) thwart the actual purpose of a testator, than all the other arbitrary rules combined. While it remains a rule of law of property this Court must abide by it; but when in the construction of a will it is not clearly and indisputably applicable no countenance should be given to it.”

The rule is an arbitrary one. It is strictly a rule of law, and not of construction or intention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A. 785, 22 Del. 504, 6 Penne. 504, 1908 Del. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-rees-del-1908.