Logan v. Cassidy

50 S.E. 794, 71 S.C. 175, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 17, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 794 (Logan v. Cassidy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Logan v. Cassidy, 50 S.E. 794, 71 S.C. 175, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 37 (S.C. 1905).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice Pope.

This is an action brought by the executors of Charles Logan, deceased, praying the construction of the will and codicils of testator in sundry particulars. All parties named in the will and codicils have been made pax-ties, except those to whom- were bequeathed purely pecuniary legacies. The following is a copy of the complaint (omitting the caption) :

*177 “1. That Charles Logan, late of the city of Columbia, in the county and State aforesaid, died on the 29th day of November, 1903, seized and possessed of a considerable estate, real and personal, and leaving of force a last will and testament, with three codicils thereto, a copy of which will and codicils is hereto attached as Exhibit A, and made a part of this complaint.

“2. That by said will and codicils, Louisa D. Logan, Edward Ehrlich, T. H. Meighan and Jennie Logan were nominated and appointed as executors thereof, of whom the plaintiffs, Louisa D. Logan, Edward Ehrlich and T. H. Meighan, alone have qualified and received letters testamentary.

“3. That all the legatees and devisees under said will and codicils, interested in the questions raised by this complaint, are-named as defendants to this action, the issue of the defendants, Peter, James, Charles, John and Patrick Cassidy, if any, being unknown to plaintiffs.

“4. That estate of testator is very large, probably exceeding in value the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and as to several matters, some by reason of the wording of will and codicils, and some by reason of extrinsic facts, the plaintiffs as executors are in doubt as to their duties, and for the protection of themselves as trustees, and for the benefit of the several beneficiaries, the plaintiffs ask the direction, instruction and judgment of the Court as to the duties of the executors and the rights of the several parties defendant, in the particulars mentioned in the succeeding paragraphs of this complaint and as to all other matters arising in the construction of said will.

“o. In item 2 of the will, the executors are directed to pay to the widow during the term of her natural life, the annual or semi-annual interest, as the case may be, upon twenty-five thousand dollars, in bonds, selected from such bonds as he might die possessed of; by the first codicil, dated 16th June, 1899, ‘fifty’ was substituted for ‘twenty-five,’ as stated in *178 the will. Since the death of testator, his widow has selected, with the concurrence of the executors, as these fifty thousand dollars in bonds: 32 Ga. R. R. Bank Co.’s bonds; 10 C., C. & A. R. R. bonds; 8 certificates of S. C. Registered stock, all for one thousand dollars each. The interest is payable on these bonds as follows: On the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company’s bonds and the South Carolina Registered stock, in January and July of every year, and on the Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad Company’s bonds, in April and October of every year. And plaintiffs ask the instruction of this Court whether the widow is entitled to receive the interest on these bonds when and as paid, or should she be paid the rate of interest called for by these securities reckoning only from the death of testator?

“6. Does the tenth item of the will dispose of any more of the testator’s estate than the property, the life estate in which will fall in at the widow’s death ? And how and to whom and in what shares is the property covered by this tenth item to be paid ? And is this whole tenth item revoked by the provisions of the latest codicil, dated 23d June, 1903 ? These are the questions as to which the plaintiffs are in doubt, and they ask the construction and direction of the Court.

“7. Does the word ‘issue,’ as used in the eight item of the will, bequeath five thousand dollars to the children of Mary Cassidy (here called Cassady) living at her death, the children of a deceased parent taking its parent’s part, or does it give said legacy to all the issue of Mary Cassidy per capita? And in what sense is the word ‘issue’ here used? In this matter the plaintiffs ask the construction and direction of the Court.

“8. In the latest codicil, of June, 1903, the will gives to the city of Columbia, which is a municipal corporation of this State, four acres of land in said codicil described, after the death of his widow. Does the widow take a life estate in said four acres, and, if not, who does? As to this the plaintiffs ask the direction of the Court.

*179 “9. Shortly after the death of testator, Louisa D. Logan claimed to be the owner and holder of eight bonds of the Southern Railroad Company, and twelve bonds of the city of Columbia,, for $1,000 each, aggregating twenty thousand dollars, face value, and presented the evidence of her ownership, but the plaintiffs feel that this matter should be adjudicated by the Court, and they ask that the evidence as to this claim be taken in this action, and the order of the Court taken thereon.

“10. Since the death of testator, a claim has been presented in behalf of a street of fifty feet in width on the eastern border of a tract of land belonging to testator, known as the Race Course Tract, of which there is no record evidence, and the plaintiffs do not feel justified in yielding the demand unless authorized so to do, as to which they ask the instruction of the Court.

“11. The will in its fourth item directs ‘the executors as soon as in their judgment advisable and practicable to sell all the remainder of my real and personal assets,’ which they desire to do; but Louisa D. Logan, the widow, claims that she is entitled to dower in all of the real estate of which her husband, the testator, was seized during coverture, exclusive of so much of said real estate as was given to her for life; and so long as this claim is pending, the sales directed by the will cannot be made to advantage, and the plaintiffs ask the Court to instruct them whether the widow is entitled to dower, and what her dower rights are under the terms of the will and codicils of the testator, and if she be so entitled, that she may assert and establish her rights in this proceeding, and such writs or other processes issue in the case as will determine and adjust these rights.”

Here follows description of lands owned by testator at his death.

“Wherefore plaintiffs demand judgment that the defendants to this action be permitted by proper pleading on their part to raise issues as they may be advised as to all the mat *180 ters hereinabove called to the attention of the Court, and that the judgment of the Court be rendered upon all the questions and things which the plaintiffs, as executors, have herein brought to the attention of the Court, in the discharge of their trust, and of all other matters arising in the construction of said will, and that the costs of this proceeding be paid out of the estate.”

Exhibit A, containing a copy of the will and three codicils, is as follows:

“State of South Carolina, County of Richland.

“In the name of God, Amen.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 794, 71 S.C. 175, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-cassidy-sc-1905.