Kilgour v. Hey

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81, 1915 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedOctober 9, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81 (Kilgour v. Hey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilgour v. Hey, 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81, 1915 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 86 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Cushing, J.

This action is prosecuted by plaintiff to quiet the title to the land described in the petition, about one hundred and sixty acres in that part of Cincinnati known as Hyde Park, as against any claim of the defendants.

The answering defendants deny that plaintiff has title to the land; that he can not quiet something that does not exist. They say that they are the owners of the property; that they took title from James Hey; that Benjamin Hey was a tenant in tail and that he is now dead; that they acquired the fee to the prop[82]*82erty through Harry Hey, sole devisee under the will of Benjamin Hey.

James Hey, by will dated May 22, 1843, devised the property in fee to his nephew, Benjamin Hey. On April 1, 1845, he executed an “addition and amendment to my will as a codicil.” Items third and fourth of that codicil must now be construed.

“Item Third. It is my will and I hereby direct my said nephew, the said Benjamin Hey, to whom I have already devised my real estate, to preserve for himself and his heirs for las many lives as the laws of Ohio will permit, in the name of my family, that portion of my real estate situated in Hamilton county upon which I have resided, known as the Beauteau Hill Farm and being the same I purchased of "William Jones by deed dated April 1st, 1818, it being my anxious desire that the said farm, where I have resided for twenty-seven years and. expended so much money, shall continue in my family so long as the law will permit.
“Item Fourth. Since I made my last will I have purchased several tracts of land of which I am now seized in fee, and I hereby devise the same, with all the real estate and personal property which I now hold, with the exception of the real estate devised heretofore to my nephew, William Hey, to my [aephew, Benjamin Hey, aforesaid, to have and to hold the same (to himself, his heirs and assigns; it being my intention to make the said Benjamin my sole legatee and devisee with the exceptions aforesaid. ’ ’

The case was exhaustively argued by counsel on both sides. Their theories clearly appear from their briefs and are as follows :

The defendants claim that James Hey entailed the property, “Mly Beauteau Hill Farm”; that Benjamin Hey was a tenant in tail; that all that Benjamin Hey sold to Rukard Hurd was his right of possession and occupancy; that the words “will and direct” used in the codicil are positive and mandatory; that the word “preserve” means to keep; that the phrase “in the name of my family” means-the children of Benjamin Hey; and that the estate in tail ripened into a fee in Harry Hey.

Plaintiff claims that both by the will and the codicil James Hey gave his Beauteau Hill Farm to Benjamin Hey in fee simple; that if James Hey by this codicil intended to entail [83]*83this property, he did not do so by the language he used; that if it was the intention of James Hey to create a trust, precatory or otherwise, in Benjamin Hey, that provision of said codicil is void for uncertainty.

Wills should be construed with great liberality for.the purpose of arriving at the intention of the testator. But it is also the law that the expressed intentiou of the testator can not be regarded in the absence of a disposition of the property. Conjecture is not permitted to supply what the testator has failed to indicate.

I shall now consider the two main propositions of defendants’ counsel, namely, that by the second codicil to James Hey’s will he ingrafted a trust upon the estate in Benjamin Hey in favor of himself and his issue; and, second, that James Hey devised the property to Benjamin Hey and afterwards by this codicil limited the title to an estate tail.

By his will, James Hey gave this property to Benjamin Hey in fee simple, and it is claimed, by the codicil it was reduced or limited to an estate tail.

The rule by which it is to be determined whether or not the estate so given was cut down when considered in connection with the language used by the testator is:

That when property is given absolutely to any person and the same person is, by the giver, who has power to recommend, and has recommended or entreated or wished to dispose of that property in favor of another, the recommendation, entreaty or wish shall be held to create a trust,

First. If the words are so used that upon the whole they ought to be construed as imperative;

Second. If the subject of the recommendation or wish be certain; and,

Third. If the objects or persons intended t-o have the benefit of the recommendation or wish be also certain.

If the words are so used they ought to be construed as imperative. The words “will and direct” are as strong and imperative as any words in the English language, and if standing alone there would be no question as to the meaning. But they are modified, and the rule above stated is, “if upon the [84]*84whole, ’ ’ etc.' By the statement thát, ‘ ‘ to whom I have already devised my real estate,” James Hey recognizes that upon the taking effect of the will his nephew had this .property in fee.

In the next phrase is the direction to preserve it for himself and his heirs, not the heirs of his body nor the male heirs of his body, but to his heirs. This in law is a fee simple, but just following the foregoing are the words, “for as many lives as the law of Ohio will permit. ’ ’ This is intended as a limitation upon the estate to be preserved, and so far as it goes must be construed and held to be a command on the donee of the bounty of James Hey.

There can be no question as to the subject of the recommendation. It was “my'Beauteau Hill Farm,” the property in question. Further comment on this second section of the rule is unnecessary.

It is the third section of the rule above laid down that has caused me much difficulty in arriving at a conclusion.

The third subdivision of the rule is: “If the objects or persons intended to have the benefit of the recommendation or wish be also certain.”

In this will there is no residuary clause.

Counsel for defendants cite a number of cases to show that the word “heirs” means children.

In proper cases that, no doubt, is true, but it is clear to my mind that James Hey did not have the children of Benjamin Hey in mind when he executed this codicil. He further qualified the word “heirs” by the expression “in the name of my family.” James Hey was a bachelor; Benjamin Hey was unmarried at the time of the execution of this will and lived so for thirty years afterwards. “In the name of my family,” therefore, was not intended to mean the children of Benjamin Hey, and by no construction of language or application of rules of law can such a conclusion be reached. “My family” clearly means the family name of James Hey. Benjamin Hey might have married and had a daughter, who would naturally have married, possibly before the death of her father. It could not be said in that instance that James Hey meant the children of Benjamin Hey. It was not the family of Benjamin Hey for [85]*85whom the property was to be preserved. It was to be preserved to the heirs of Benjamin Hey in the name of the family of James Hey. In other words, it was the name Hey that the testator had in mind when he drew this codicil.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81, 1915 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilgour-v-hey-ohctcomplhamilt-1915.