Lane v. Citizens & Southern National Bank

25 S.E.2d 800, 195 Ga. 828, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 307
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 6, 1943
Docket14463.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 S.E.2d 800 (Lane v. Citizens & Southern National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Citizens & Southern National Bank, 25 S.E.2d 800, 195 Ga. 828, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 307 (Ga. 1943).

Opinions

Reid, Chief Justice.

The question involved in this case arises from a construction of the will of B. Y. Lane. The will was executed in 1916. His death occurred in 1917, and the will was thereupon probated. At the time he executed the will and at the date of his death his heirs at law were his widow and six children, namely, Mary Lane Denmark, Walter T. Lane, Mills B. Lane, Edward W. Lane, all of whom were married and had children, John Lane, whose wife was dead and who had a living son, I. Tillman Lane, and Ben L. Lane, who at the time was not married. John Lane died in November, 1917, after the death of his father, leaving no widow surviving him, but leaving I. Tillman Lane as his sole heir at law. Mrs. B. Y. Lane died on January 16, 1918, leaving as her heirs at law the children above named of B. Y. Lane and her grandson, I. Tillman Lane. On May 5, 1925, Ben L. Lane was married to Miss Pauline H. Brack, and they lived together as husband and wife until his death in February, 1941. There was no issue of this marriage, and Ben L. Lane died without leaving a *830 child or representative thereof. Ben L. Lane had made a will which was probated in 1941, and in which he left all of his property to his wife, Mrs. Panline Lane. The entire estate of K. Y. Lane, deceased, was devised by item l’of his will. The share of Ben L. Lane, his son, and the husband of the plaintiff in error, is dealt with in item 1-c thereof. Item 1 of the will is as follows: “I give, devise, and bequeath all of my estate, property, and effects to my trustees hereinafter named, to be held in trust upon the following uses, trusts, and limitations: (a) The entire net income of my trust estate shall be paid to my wife for and during her life; said income to be paid to her by my trustee in quarterly, semi-annual, or annual installments, as they may deem most practicable. (b) Immediately upon the death of my wife, my trustees shall divide said estate into six equal parts or shares. One shall go in fee simple and be delivered by my trustees to each of hay children, namely: Mary Lane Denmark, Walter T. Lane, Mills B. Lane, and Edward W. Lane, or the lineal heirs of any of said children who may not be in life at that time, the lineal heirs of any deceased child to take only the share that would have gone to their deceased parent and in accordance with the laws of inheritance, (c) The two remaining shares shall be retained by my trustees and held upon the following additional trusts and limitations: The entire net income cf one share shall be paid to my son, John Lane, for and during his natural life; and at his death the corpus of such share shall go in fee simple and be delivered to his heirs at law. The entire net income of the other share shall be paid to my son, Ben L. Lane, for and during his natural life; and at his death the corpus shall go in fee simple and be delivered to his heirs at law. The net income from the two shares so held in trust shall be payable only to the respective beneficiaries above named, and shall not be subject to garnishment, attachment, or any other legal process.^ Mrs. Pauline B. Lane, as widow and sole heir at law of Ben L. Lane and as executrix under his will, brought her petition against the Citizens and Southern National Bank, the substituted trustee, seeking to recover and have delivered to her the one sixth share which, after the death of Mrs. B. Y. Lane, the trustee under item 1-c of the will had retained and the income from- fvhich had ■ been paid to her husband during his life. She asserted that she as the.sole heir at law of her deceased husband, Ben L. Lane, was *831 entitled under the terms of the will to his share of the estate, claiming also that under the will a fee-simple title to his one sixth part had vested in Ben L. Lane and was merely held in trust as a spendthrift trust set up in his behalf, and that it was not held as a life-estate only for him. All of the heirs at law of R. Y. Lane were made parties, and they filed a joint demurrer and joint answer to her petition. The defendants, who are the present living children of R. Y. Lane and their descendants, contended that under the will Ben L. Lane took a life-estate only in trust, with a limitation over of remainder to his children; that, since he died leaving no children or representative of children, the remainder failed for the lack of a remainderman to take, creating an intestacy as to his share, which reverted to the estate of R. Y. Lane as of the date of the death of R. Y. Lane; that this remainder estate should be divided into six parts, one part to go to each of the living children of R. Y. Lane, and the share of a deceased child to go to whomever would take under the statute of descent and distribution. In this way the share of the one sixth interest in Ben L. Lane would go to the plaintiff. The case was submitted to the judge upon a stipulation of facts in substantial conformity to what is stated above, and upon consent determined by him without the intervention of a jury. He held in accordance with the contentions of the defendants, and ordered the trustee to make delivery in accordance therewith. Error is assigned on this judgment.

1. The rules of law which must govern this case are not in any sense disputed. They are fully recognized and familiar. As is so often the case, any difficulty presented arises in their application. We may start out with the familiar approach that in the con-' struction of a will the intention of the testator as manifested in its terms must control. Code, § 113-806; Hertz v. Abrahams, 110 Ga. 707, 708 (36 S. E. 409, 50 L. R. A. 361); Sumpter v. Carter, 115 Ga. 893, 896 (42 S. E. 324, 60 L. R. A. 274); Comer v. Citizens & Southern National Bank, 182 Ga. 1, 5 (185 S. E. 77). In Williams v. McIntyre, 8 Ga. 34, 36, Nisbet, J., speaking for the court, said: “The first thing to be ascertained, in the construction of a will, is the intention of the testator. In the language of the books, that is the polar star. The intention is imperative on the courts, unless it is in conflict with some established rule of law. If it is, the law is more imperious than the intention, and the latter *832 will yield to the former. The law, though, in order to defeat the intention, must be clearly and decidedly in conflict with it. The courts will studiously give effect to the intention, unless constrained by the law to disregard it. No man’s will is so high in its obligations upon the courts as the laws of the land. If the intention could prevail against the law, then the will of a testator would make or repeal the law. The effect would be, that there would be no law to regulate the transmission of property by will. The intention is to be ascertained, primarily, from the will itself. That is, generally, the highest and best evidence of it. In most cases, it is the only evidence. The testator having written his will, the writing is the exponent of his intentions, and if that is clear — if, in the will itself, there is no ambiguity — it is solemnly obligatory upon the court, and it can resort nowhere else.” Another rule to be considered in this case and of equal force and certainty is, as will be presently noticed, that certain words and expressions must be given a rigid and fixed meaning in specified instances.

Does the devise in item 1-c which relates to Ben L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 S.E.2d 800, 195 Ga. 828, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-citizens-southern-national-bank-ga-1943.