McArthur v. Scott

113 U.S. 340, 5 S. Ct. 652, 28 L. Ed. 1015, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1690
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 2, 1885
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by254 cases

This text of 113 U.S. 340 (McArthur v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McArthur v. Scott, 113 U.S. 340, 5 S. Ct. 652, 28 L. Ed. 1015, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1690 (1885).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Gray

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case presents three principal questions :

First. "Whether the equitable estate in fee. which Duncan McArthur by his will undertook to devise to his grandchildren, children of his five surviving children, was vested or contingent ?

Second. Whether the devise of that estate, so far as it is to the present plaintiffs, was void for remoteness ?

Third. Whether the decree in 1839, setting aside his will and annulling the probate, is a bar to this suit %

I. The principal provisions of the will of Duncan McArthur, material to the decision of this case, are as follows:

By the fifteenth clause, he directs that his lands in the counties of Ross and Pickaway shall be leased or rented by his executors “ until the youngest or last grandchild which I now have, or may hereafter have,” the child of either of his five surviving children, Allen 0., James McD., Effie, Eliza Ann or Mary, “who may live to be twenty-one years of age, shall arrive at that age.” By the sixteenth clause, he directs that, until that time, the income of these lands, and the dividends of all stocks held by him or purchased by his executors, shall be by them annually divided equally among the five children aforesaid, or the issue of any child dying, and among the grandchildren also as they successively come of age.

The seventeenth clause provides as follows: “ It is my further will and direction that after the decease of all my children now [376]*376living, and when and as soon as the youngest or last grandchild, in the next preceding clause but one of this will designated and described, shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years, all my lands” in question “shall be inherited and equally divided between my grandchildren capita, the lawful issue of my said sons and daughters, Allen C., James McD., Effie, Eliza Ann and Mary, for them and their heirs forever, to have and to hold, or to sell and dispose of the same at their will and pleasure; and in like manner all the stocks belonging to my .said estate, whether invested before or after my death, ' shall at the same time be equally divided among my said grandchildren, share and share alike, per capita; but it is to be understood to be my will and direction that if any grandchild aforesaid shall have died before said final division is made, leaving a child or children lawfully begotten, such child or children shall take and receive per stirpes (to be equally divided between them) the share , of my said estate, both real and personal, which the parent of such deceased child or children would have been entitled to have and receive if living at the time of such final distribution.” The . word “ deceased,” near the end of this passage, was evidently intended to be prefixed to the word “parent,” instead.of to the words “ child or children,” so as to read “ deceased parent of such child or children.”

By the eighteenth clause, he directs that “ in such final distribution of my lands ” the executors for the time being shall make deeds of partition “ to and in the names of those who may be thus entitled thereto; ” and “ to enable my executors the more effectually to execute the powers and duties by this will devolved upon them,'and to protect my said children and grandchildren against fraud and imposition,” he devises the lands to his executors and their successors, “ and to their heirs, in trust for the uses and purposes and objects expressed in this my will, and the performance of which is herein above directed and prescribed, to have g,nd to hold the title thereof till such final division. or partition thereof, and no longer.” By the twenty-fourth clause, he appoints three executors, and directs and requests that if either of them shall die, resign, or refuse'to act, the court having probate jurisdiction for the county of [377]*377Ross shall appoint a new one instead, to act as an executor with the others, so that there shall always be three executors.

The devise in the eighteenth clause of the title in the lands to the executors and their successors, and their heirs, in trust for the uses and purposes expressed in the will, to have and to hold until the final division or partition, clearly gave them an estate in fee, to last until that time. Doe v. Edlin, 4 Ad. & El. 582; Maden v. Taylor, 45 Law Journal (N. S.) Ch. 569 And there can be no doubt that, as contended by the learned counsel for the defendants, the powers conferred and the trusts imposed upon the executors were annexed to their office of ex- • ecutors, and did not make them trustees in another and different capacity. Colt v. Colt, 111 U. S. 566, 581; Treadwell v. Cordis, 5 Gray, 341, 358; Gondolfo v. Walicer, 15 Ohio St. 251.

The equitable estate created by the gift in the sixteenth clause of the income to the children and grandchildren, being an estate which must endure for the lives of the children' and might endure throughout the lives of the grandchildren, though subject to be sooner determined in the contingency of the coming of áge of the youngest grandchild, was technically an estate for life. 2 Bl. Com. 121.

The nature of the equitable estate in remainder created by the seventeenth clause demands more consideration.

The counsel for some of the defendants contended that it was contingent upon the arrival of the youngest grandchild at twenty-one years of age.- In that view, the whole estate in remainder, being dependent upon the termination of the particular estate for life, and vesting’at that, time and not before, would be in legal effect an equitable contingent remainder to the grandchildren then living, and the issue then living of grandchildren theretofore deceased, as one class.

In behalf of other defendants it was contended that the remainder in fee expectant upon the estate for life vested immediately in the grandchildren living at the death of the testator, opened to let in afterborn grandchildren, and vested in them successively at birth, and would be divested as to the shares of those grandchildren only who should die, leaving children, before the determination of the life estate, by force of the direc[378]*378tion that such children should take those shares. In this view, all the grandchildren took a vested remainder in fee ; and the gift over to the children of any deceased grandchild, inasmuch as it did not depend upon any precedent particular estate, but was by way of substitution for the devise in fee to that grandchild, was an executory devise.

For many reasons, not the least of which are that testators usually have in mind the actual enjoyment rather than the technical ownership of their property, and that sound policy as well as practical convenience requires that titles should be vested at the earliest period, it has long been a settled rule of construction in the courts of England and America that estates, legal or equitable, given by will, should always be regarded as vesting immediately, unless the testator has by very clear words manifested an intention that they should be contingent upon a future event.

In the will before us, the testator directs the income to be divided annually, in specified and changing proportions, among his five children living at his death and their children, until the youngest grandchild comes of age. He gives no part of the income to children of grandchildren.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin
41 F.R.D. 147 (S.D. New York, 1966)
Jennie M. Warner v. Anna Parker Warner
237 F.2d 561 (D.C. Circuit, 1956)
Byrd v. Riggs
86 S.E.2d 285 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1955)
Harris v. France
232 S.W.2d 64 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1950)
In Re the Will of Winborne
57 S.E.2d 795 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1950)
Young v. Powell
179 F.2d 147 (Fifth Circuit, 1950)
De Korwin v. First Nat. Bank of Chicago
84 F. Supp. 918 (N.D. Illinois, 1949)
Burden v. Colorado National Bank
179 P.2d 267 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1947)
Brown v. Bibb
201 S.W.2d 370 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1947)
Pyne v. Pyne
154 F.2d 297 (D.C. Circuit, 1946)
Garrison v. Garrison
188 S.W.2d 644 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1945)
Jacobs v. Murphy
16 So. 2d 859 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1944)
Monaghan v. Kennerdell
137 P.2d 390 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1943)
McDowell v. McDowell
22 S.E.2d 851 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1942)
Weeks v. Bareco Oil Co.
125 F.2d 84 (Seventh Circuit, 1941)
Horton v. Moore
110 F.2d 189 (Sixth Circuit, 1940)
Swoope v. Darrow
188 So. 879 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1939)
Ussery v. Darrow
188 So. 885 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1939)
Rahming v. MacKey
187 So. 579 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1939)
Gunnell v. Palmer
18 N.E.2d 202 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 U.S. 340, 5 S. Ct. 652, 28 L. Ed. 1015, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcarthur-v-scott-scotus-1885.