Lee v. Waltjen

119 A. 246, 141 Md. 450, 1922 Md. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 119 A. 246 (Lee v. Waltjen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Waltjen, 119 A. 246, 141 Md. 450, 1922 Md. LEXIS 131 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Fun er, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The will of Prudence A. Patterson, who died in 1883, devised certain real estate in the City of Baltimore to her nieces, Ruth A. Payne and Emma Mordecai, and her nephew, Frank Brown, subsequently Governor of Maryland, as tenants in common for life, and provided that “at the death of any one of said life tenants, the share of the one so dying is to go to his or her legitimate children and in the event of such life tenant dying without leaving such child or children, then such share is to go to the child or children of the other life tenants per stirpes and not per- capita.” The property thus devised was sold in 1905 under a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, and the sum of $6,895, being one-third of the net proceeds of the sale, was distributed to a trustee, appointed by the decree, to be held subject to the *452 life estate created by the will for the benefit of Governor Brown and to the interests of those entitled in remainder. On February 3, 1920, Governor Brown died, leaving a daughter, Mary R. Brown Lee, and an infant grandson, Frank S. R. Brown, Jr., whose father, Frank S. R. Brown, had died in 1918. The daughter, Mrs. Lee, is now deceased, and her husband, Merwyn K. Lee, is the sole devisee under her will. The son, Frank S. R. Brown, left a widow, who has since remarried and whose present name is Mary M. K. Waltjen. In view of the testamentary provision under which the trust fund referred to is held, we are to determine whether it should go as a whole to the estate of the daughter of the life tenant who survived him, or should be distributed in the proportions of one-half to her estate and one-half to the child and widow of his predeceased son. The latter method of distribution was approved by the court below, and the executors and beneficiary of the daughter’s will have appealed.

. The essential inquiry in the case is whether the estate devised in remainder to the children of the life tenant was vested or contingent. It appears from the record that his son and daughter were both born during the lifetime of the testatrix, and before the execution of a codicil confirming the provision of her will which we have quoted, and she may be presumed to have had them in mind when she devised the property at the death of the life tenant to his children. But it is said that the limitation over in the event of the life.tenant “dying without leaving such child or children” indicates an intention that a child who died before the expiration of the life estate was not to have an interest in the property devised.

The contingency upon which the limitation over was to become effective did not in fact occur. The life tenant did not die “without leaving such child or children,” and hence those who might have claimed to be entitled if that contingency had happened, are not concerned in this litigation. *453 If the estate devised to the children of Governor Brown was a vested but defeasible remainder, it has never become divested, as to either of them, because the possibility of its defeasance was obviated by the actual event.

In Tayloe v. Mosher, 29 Md. 455, ibis Court said: “The fact that an estate is liable to be divested in whole or in part upon a contingency, does not make it a contingent estate.” This statement was quoted and emphasized in the opinion delivered in Roberts v. Roberts, 102 Md. 149. It was said in Dulany v. Middleton, 72 Md. 75: “The contingent event, provided for in the will, of the death of the devisee and legatee for life without leaving issue, and the limitation over of the property thereon, does not, as contended on the part of the appellants, render the gift or devise to the children of such devisee or legatee contingent, and forms no ground for postponing the vesting of the interest devised.” In the construction of the will in this ease we must, therefore, proceed upon the theory that the devise in remainder to the children of the life tenant is not rendered contingent by the succeeding limitation to others upon the contingency specified. It is simply necessary to decide whether the remainder was originally vested.

The law favors the earliest vesting' of estates. In Swift v. Cool, 133 Md. 653; Martin v. Cook, 129 Md. 198; Tayloe v. Mosher, supra, and other cases, it was said: “Estates will be held to be vested whereever it can fairly be done without doing violence to the language of tlie will, and to make them contingent there must be plain expression to that effect, or such intent must be so plainly inferable from tlie terms used as to leave no room for construction.” It lias been held to be a general principle that “any devise or bequest in favor of a person or persons in esse, whether such persons be individualized or treated as a class, unless there be some clearly expressed desire or some manifest reason for suspending or deferring the time of vesting, confers an immediately vested interest, though the time of possession or enjoyment may *454 be postponed.” Dulany v. Middleton, supra. Approval has been given by this Court to the rule stated in Moore v. Lyons, 25 Wend. (N. Y.) 144, that “where a remainder is so limited as to take effect in possession, if ever, immediately upon the determination of a particular estate, which estate is to determine by an event which must unavoidably happen by the efflux of time, the remainder vests in interest as soon as the remainderman is in esse and ascertained; provided nothing but his own death before the determination of the particular’ estate will prevent such remainder from vesting in possession.” Lewis v. Payne, 113 Md. 135; Cox v. Handy, 78 Md. 121.

In the case last cited there was a devise to the testator’s wife for her life, and it was provided that after her death the property should be sold, if a sale were necessary for equal partition, or, if divisible without a sale, should be divided among his children equally, “the child or children of any deceased child to take the portion to which the parent if living, would have been entitled.” It was decided that a vested remainder was devised to each of the testator’s children, subject to be divested in the case of any remainder-man who might die leaving children in the lifetime of the devisee for life, but not subject to such defeasance as to any remainderman dying without children during that period. The estate devised to the testators’ children was held to be vested at the time of his death, although it was only as the result of a sale or division directed to be made after the death of his widow that they could receive their respective portions.

This conclusion was reached notwithstanding the further provision that the child or children of any deceased child of the testator should take the share to which the parent “would have been entitled,” if living. The language of this ■ contingent limitation was not regarded as indicating an intention on the part of the testator to postpone the vesting of the primary remainder until the life estate had expired.

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Bluebook (online)
119 A. 246, 141 Md. 450, 1922 Md. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-waltjen-md-1922.