Lytle v. . Beveridge

58 N.Y. 592, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 541
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 58 N.Y. 592 (Lytle v. . Beveridge) 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
Lytle v. . Beveridge, 58 N.Y. 592, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 541 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The plaintiff and defendant claim title from a common source, under the will of Isaac Lytle, who died in March, 1823, having made his will about six months before his death. The rights of the respective claimants to the *598 premises in dispute, depend upon the construction of the autographie will of a very illiterate man, ignorant not only of the several recognized estateTinTañcíj and of the technical rules relating to them, and the words necessary or appropriate to their creation, but also of the orthography and structure of the English language.

Of such a will, above all others, is it the duty of the court to be astute in discovering and giving effect to the actual intent of the testator, as the same may be spelled out from the body of the instrument, read in the light of the surroundings and relations of the author, and the circumstances in which he was placed, and, so far as may be, unembarrassed by technical rules of construction. The intent is to be gathered from the will, and not the subject of conjecture, and words which have acquired a fixed legal meaning must be intended to have been used in the sense which has been impressed upon them, unless it is apparent that they were used by the testator in a different sense. A devise is always most favorably expounded to carry out the intent and give effect ■to the will of the devisor, who, inojps consillii, preparing his own will, omits or misapplies the legal and proper phrases. The doctrine that the intent of a testator is the guiding and controlling rule of interpretation requires, not unfrequently, a disregard of the usual technical meaning of words and phrases, and when necessary such technical meaning must yield to the evident intent of the testator. (Hall v. Warren, 9 H. of L. Cases, 420; 2 Bl. Com., 380, 381; Paterson v. Ellis, 11 Wend., 259, 293; Chrystie v. Phyfe, 19 N. Y., 344; Young v. Robertson, 4 Macq. H. of L. Cases, 314, 325.)

Buies of construction are resorted to as helps'or aids, in arriving at the intent of a testator, and ought not to be followed when they lead to results subversive of such intent. There is no rigid rule of law to the effect that words shall only be used in one certain sense, or requiring courts to give .language the, same interpretation and effect, under all circumstances and in every connection. The infinite variety of circumstances that may occur, distinguishing one case from *599 another, in the use of the same words and phrases, renders it impossible to give an absolute and unbending .rule for the interpretation of language applicable to all cases. Mr. Chitty, in commenting on Perrin v. Blake (4 Burr., 2579), says, that: “To argue that the intention, shall be frustrated by a rule of construction of certain words, is to say that the intention shall be defeated by the use of the very words which the testator has adopted as the best to communicate his intention, and of which the sense is intelligible to all mankind.” (2 Bl. Com., 381, note.)

The plaintiffs claim the benefit of the rule in Shelly's Oase (1 Coke, 93, b), which, upon very subtle and artificial reasoning, held the doctrine that, when an estate of freehold is limited to a person, and in the same instrument there is a limitation either mediate or immediate to his heirs, or the heirs of his body, the word heirs is to be taken as a word of limitation, or, in other words," the ancestor takes the whole estate; if the devise be to the heirs of his body, he takes a fee tail; if to heirs generally, a fee simple. This is said to be a rule of law and not of construction, and Hr. Hargrave considered that it was so absolute and peremptory in its obligations, that it was beyond the control of intention when a fit case for its application existed. (4 Kent’s Com., 226; 2 Powell on Devises, 429; Brant v. Gelston, 2 J. Cas., 384.) By the rule, an estate for life is raised by implication to an estate of inheritance, and either an estate tail, or in fee simple, depending upon the words of succession used in the deed or will, is made to vest in the first taker. It was not at first supposed that an express estate for life could be thus enlarged, on the ground that implication could only be admitted in the absence of, but not in contradiction to, an express limitation, but it was soon held otherwise, and an estate tail raised in the first taker by implication, upon a devise expressly for life. But this was in cases where the intention of the testator was manifest that the estate should not go over until the whole line of his issue was extinct, thus basing the rule upon the supposed intent of the *600 testator. (Bamfield v . Papham, 1 P. Wms., 54; Attorney-General v. S utton, id., 754; Langley v. Baldwin, 1 Eq. Cas. Ab., 185, cited 1 P. Wms., 759; 1 Prest. on Est., 540, 602.) .

So far as the rule confers upon the tenant for life or first taker the power to disappoint the successor, either by alienating, the fee or barring the entail, it necessarily, in a great majority of cases, defeats the intention of the testator. In the cases in which the question has arisen, the testator has not intended that the tenant for life, to whose heirs or the heirs, of whose body the remainder is limited, should have " power to defeat the succession to them by an alienation to J their prejudice A distinction has been suggested between :.the intent;of the testator in' respect to the estate actually - created by the will in' the first taker, and his intent as to the legal results, and his design in point of fact to apply - the rule; and it has been claimed that if, upon a reasonable interpretation of. the will, a freehold is vested in the first . taker, those appointed to take in succession must take by inheritance, and .not by purchase, and the rule applies no withstanding the testator may not have intended that the first . taker should have power over the succession. They have deemed it impracticable to engraft upon a title by inheritance the' effects of a purchase, in obedience to the private intentions of the author of the estate. In the celebrated case of Perrin v. Blake (supra), the struggle was between the - intent of the testator and the-asserted supremacy of the rule, and as to which should be subservient to the other, and although upon the decision of the case in the Court of Exchequer Chamber, it was held by six of the eight judges; that the first taker was seized of an estate tail, which gave him the absolute power of selling of disposing of the estate ,-as he pleased, a majority of the .judges by whom opinions were given, in the two courts through which the case passed, relied upon and were for giving effect to the intent of the testator. Mr. Justice Blaokstone took the distinction in . that, case between an intent not to give a power of alienation, *601 and an intent to negative the rule, denying the sufficiency of the latter.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.Y. 592, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-beveridge-ny-1874.