Lamb v. . Lamb

30 N.E. 133, 131 N.Y. 227, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 112, 86 Sickels 227, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1018
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 30 N.E. 133 (Lamb v. . Lamb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb v. . Lamb, 30 N.E. 133, 131 N.Y. 227, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 112, 86 Sickels 227, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1018 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

Anthony Lamb, a resident of the city of New . Yoxlc, died in May, 1855, leaving a widow axxd five childi’en surviving him, and the issue of four daughters who had died before him. He left a lax-ge real and personal estate. By his will he devised specifically each pax’cel of his real estate, and bequeathed various legacies and annuities. By the second clause of his will he gave to his wife a life estate in certain lots in the city of New Yoxlc, and following the gift of the life estate are the words: “And the remainder in fee I give and devise to certain of my descendants, as hereinafter mentioned.” By the sixteenth clause he disposed of the lairds wherein a life estate was given to his wife, to four of his children, as follows: Two of the lots to his son John in fee simple, two to his daughter Agnes Bichard s for life, and at her death to her descendants then living, and two to his daughter .Sarah (then about forty years of age and unmarried) for life, and the remainder as follows : “And should she marry and have children, I give and devise said lots at her decease to her descendants then living, if more tiran one, to be divided among them in the same manner as if she had died seized of the same intestate, but if only one, then the whole to such only descendant.” The daughter Sarah married after the death of the testator and died September 3,1886, childless. The widow of the testator died in October, 1889.

This controversy relates to tire lands devised to Sarah in the 16th clause of the will. It is claimed on the part of the appellants that upon her death without issue the lots descended to the heirs at law of the testator as in case of intestacy, subject to the life estate of the testator’s widow. It is claimed on the *233 part of the respondents that on the death of Sarah the fee of the lands passed under the twenty-third clause of the will to the testator’s sons John, George and Anthony, and his daughter Agnes, as a part of his residuary estate. The construction of this clause is the only point in controversy, that is to say, whether the residuary clause relates to personalty only, or includes, as well, lapsed devises and any interests in realty not effectually disposed of in other pai’ts of the will.

The specific devises and legacies are contained in the clauses of the will preceding the twenty-second. In some cases the devises to his children and grandchildren are in fee. But the general scheme of the testator was to create a life estate in the first taker, with remainder to his descendants living at his death. The devise to his son John of a lot on Pearl street, in the third clause; to his son George of lots on Third and Fourth streets, in the fourth clause ; the devise in trust for the benefit of his son Anthony, in the seventh clause; to the children of his deceased daughter Matilda, in the eighth clause ; and the devises in the sixteenth clause to his daughters Agnes and Sarah, already mentioned, were framed on this principle. All the living children were married and had issue at the death of the testator, excepting the daughter Sarah and the son Anthony. In all devises of the character referred to, the final vesting of the fee under the will depended upon the contingency of the life tenant, leaving^ descendants surviving him at his death. In the event of the death of any life tenant without leaving issue or descendants, the fee was undisposed of unless it ])assed under the residuary clause. The scope of the residuary clause is, as we have said, the turning point in the case.

The twenty-second clause of the will commences as follow s: Twenty-secondly. Of the rest, residue and remainder of my estate I give and bequeath,” etc., and then follows bequests of sundry pecuniary legacies to children and grandchildren. The twenty-third clause is as follows: “ Twenty-thirdly. If the said rest, residue and remainder of my estate shall not be sufficient to pay all the above-named legacies contained in the twenty-second clause of this my will, they are each to be *234 reduced proportionately, according to the amount of such remainder. This reduction, however, is not to apply to the legacies granted by any other parts or clauses of this my will. If after the payment of all these legacies there should remain a surplus undisposed of, I do give and bequeath the same unto my sons John, George and Anthony, and to my daughter Agnes Richards, to be equally divided between them.”

The construction of residuary clauses in wills has been frequently before the courts. The intention of the testator is to be followed if the actual intention is discoverable from the language employed. There is no rule of law which prevents a testator from restricting the operation of a residuary clause to a particular or specific residue. He may make the residuary clause general and comprehensive, so that it shall carry any residue, whether of personalty or realty, or both, or he may confine its operation to property of a particular class or to a particular interest. But where the language of a residuary clause is ambiguous, the leaning of the courts is in favor of a broad rather than a restricted construction. It prevents intestacy, which it is reasonable to suppose testators do not contemplate, and if the mind is left in doubt upon the whole will as to the actual testamentary intention, a broad rather than a strict construction seems more likely to meet the testamentary purpose, because such a clause is usually inserted to provide for contingencies or lapses, and to cover whatever is left, after satisfying specific and special purposes of the testator manifested in the other clauses of his will. The court in Floyd v. Carow (88 N. Y. 560), in considering the construction of a residuary clause in a will, said: “ The intention of the testator to restrict the operation of the residuary clause cannot be deduced from the mere absence of words in the will directing that a particular interest or estate upon which the residuary clause is claimed to operate, was in the contemplation of the testator when the will was made or from the fact that the reversion was a mere expectancy dependent upon the failure of issue or other improbable contingency. A general residuary devise carries every real interest, whether *235 known or unknown, immediate or remote, unless it is manifestly excluded. The intention to include is presumed, and an intention to exclude must appear from other parts of the will, or the residuary devisee will take.” And in Riker v. Cornwell (113 N. Y. 115), Gray, L, said: “I think the doctrine is firmly established by reports of cases and the text books, that where the residuary bequest is not circumscribed by clear expressions in the instrument, and the title of residuary is not narrowed by words of special and of unmistakable import, he will take whatever may fall into the residue by lapse, invalid disposition or other accident.” The contention here is that the residuary clause is not general but special and refers to personalty only, and that the perusal of the will shows an intelligent use of appropriate legal language throughout the instrument, and it is insisted that the language of the residuary clause should, therefore, have a strict construction and that words' therein should be deemed to have been used in their exact legal sense. The will indicates that it was drawn by a competent and experienced draftsman.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E. 133, 131 N.Y. 227, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 112, 86 Sickels 227, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-lamb-ny-1892.