Marshall v. Marshall

20 S.E. 298, 42 S.C. 436, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 2, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 298 (Marshall v. Marshall) 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
Marshall v. Marshall, 20 S.E. 298, 42 S.C. 436, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 62 (S.C. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice McIver.

This was an action for the sale of a certain tract of land, situate in Lancaster County, aud for a division of the proceeds of such sale amongst the several parties entitled thereto, under an alleged will of one John Marshall, in certain proportions mentioned in the complaint, and also for an account of the rents and profits of the said land from such of the parties as have used and occupied the same, since the interests of the plaintiffs have become vested, as alleged. The appellants answered, denying all the allegations of the complaint, and claiming that they are exclusively entitled to the land in question under the will of one John W. Marshall.

[438]*438The testimony was taken — the most of it — -by the clerk under the provisions of sec. 2210 of Gen. Stats, of 1882, and the same was heard upon this, with some additional taken at the hearing, by his honor, Judge Gary, who rendered his decree, holding that, while much of the testimony taken by the clerk is inadmissible under sec. 400 of the Code, there was abundant evidence, which is free from objection, that John Marshall made his will during the year 1849, and died in April of the same year; that soon thereafter his will was duly admitted to probate in the proper office; that the original will was either lost or destroyed during the recent war; that its contents have been properly proved, and he, therefore, found “that John Marshall left a last will and testament, and that the same was properly admitted to probate, and that exhibit A of the plaintiffs’ complaint contains a correct copy of the provisions of the same.” Proceeding, then, to consider what was the proper construction of the will, he held that the land in question was devised to the testator’s widow for life, with remainder to his son, John W. Marshall, in fee defeasible, if he should die without children; and that the widow having died in 1864, and the said JohnW. Marshall having died in 1888, without children, under the limitation in the eleventh clause of the will, the land should be sold, and the proceeds divided as directed in the said clause. He, therefore, rendered judgment that the land be sold, and the proceeds be paid over “to the plaintiffs or their attorneys, in accordance with their interests as set out in the complaint;” and reserved the question as to the rents and profits until a further order of the court, as there was not sufficient evidence before him to adjudicate that issue.

From this judgment the appellants have taken this appeal, based upon numerous exceptions set out in the record. It is proper here to note that a manifest inadvertence in the decree, whereby the proceeds of the sale were directed to be paid over to the plaintiffs only, has been corrected by a notice, served on appellants’ attorney, and incorporated in the record, to the effect “that the plaintiffs conceded the right of all the defendants to take such share of the proceeds of the land according to their interests therein as set forth in the complaint, and their will[439]*439ingness that an order be taken, on the part of the defendants, directing the clerk of the court to pay over to them their share of the proceeds, in conformity to the allegations and prayer of the complaint.” The exceptions raise two general questions: 1st. As to the competency and sufficiency of the evidence offered to establish the will of John Marshall. 2d. As to the proper construction of that will.

We, will consider the second question first, as that question is raised by one of the exceptions in the nature of a demurrer, upon the ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. For if the construction of the will contended for by appellant is sound, then it is obvious that the plaintiffs have no rights, so far as the land in question is concerned, under the will as set forth in the exhibit to the complaint. To determine the question as to the proper construction of the will, it is only necessary to set forth three clauses of the will, which read as follows: “3rd I .leave to my beloved wife her lifetime the plantation whereon I now reside,” besides certain personal property therein mentioned. “6th I give to my beloved sons Wm. K. and John W. Marshall at the death of my wife the residue of my land being the plantation whereon I now live commencing at the Hickry corner mentioned in Bobert’s tract to extent of my land boundary west of the Potter road, the same to be equally divided between them giving John the side next W. W. Bell’s with these considerations, that each one pay to me or my executor the sum of sixteen dollars yearly commencing on the first of Jan. 1849 for the support of myself and wife during my lifetime and the lifetime of my wife should she outlive me they refusing to comply with said terms forfeit so much out of the said lands so given them and by their compliance I give said parcels of land to them and their heirs forever.” “11th should my son John W. Marshall die leaving no children to inherit the land left him by me at his death it is my desire and I leave it as my will that the parcel of land so left him by me be sold and the proceeds be equally divided between my son Samuel and my three daughters Mary Susan and Sarah or their heirs.”

[440]*4401 [439]*439The practical inquiry is, whether the testator intended, by [440]*440the words which he has used in the eleventh clause of his will, that the fee previously given to John W. Marshall by the sixth clause of the will should be defeated by his death without children during the lifetime of the widow, or by his death without children at any time when that event should occur; for both parties concede, and the Circuit Judge so holds, that John took a fee defeasible upon the happening of one or the other of said contingencies. Now, which of these contingencies did the testator contemplate? Looking at the language he used, especially in the light of the surrounding circumstances, as it is permissible to do, we think there can be no doubt that the testator intended that if John W. Marshall should die at any time without children, then the land given him should be sold and the proceeds be equally divided between the persons named in that clause. We see nothing in the clause which warrants the idea that the testator intended that the contingency upon which the estate previously given to John W. Marshall was limited to his death during the lifetime of the widow, and to put such a construction upon the will, it would be necessary to interpolate words into the will which no court has the power to do. Indeed, it seems to us that the express language of the clause forbids such a construction, for the direction is, that the land is to be sold at the death of John W. Marshall, which clearly indicates that the testator did not contemplate the death of John W. Marshall, without children, during the life of the widow, for that would have defeated the life interest of the widow, which, certainly, the testator did not intend. The undisputed testimony shows that, when the will was made, though John W.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 298, 42 S.C. 436, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-marshall-sc-1894.