McCaffrey v. Manogue

196 U.S. 563, 25 S. Ct. 319, 49 L. Ed. 600, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 924
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1905
Docket131
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 U.S. 563 (McCaffrey v. Manogue) 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
McCaffrey v. Manogue, 196 U.S. 563, 25 S. Ct. 319, 49 L. Ed. 600, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 924 (1905).

Opinion

Mb. Justice McKenna,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

It will be observed that the devises are expressed in exactly the same way. To Mary A. Quigley, however, there are given several pieces of real estate, the money of the testator in bank and his building association stock. She is charged with the payment of the testator’s funeral expenses and debts; also with the care of. his cemetery lot. Nevertheless, neither of the lower courts distinguished between the devisees — to all was applied the rule of law that a devise of land without words of limitation or. description gives a life estate only. The Court of Appeals held that the charge or burden upon- Mary A. Quigley to pay the funeral expenses and debts of the testator was offset by the gift to her of personal property. It is insisted that the ruling is contrary to the decision in King v. Ackerman, 2 Black, 408. It is there said: “The rule of law which gives a fee, where the devisee is charged with a sum of money, 'is- a technical dominant rule, and intendéd to defeat the effect” of the artificial rule established in favor of the heir at law, that an indefinite devise of land passes nothing but a life estate. It was, however, apparent to the Court of Appeals that, to follow King v. Ackerman, would not execute the intention of the testator by opposing one technical rule by another, but would discriminate between his heirs and destroy the equality between them which it was the purpose of the will to create. To effect this equality the court selected, not the “dominant rule,” whose virtue this court pointed out, but the other, regarding it the most commanding. It is altogether a strange tangle of technicalities. Apply either of them, or both *569 of them, and we defeat the intention of the testator. Are we reduced to this dilemma? We think not; nor need we dispute the full strength of the rule in favor of the heir at law. It is not an unyielding declaration of law. It cannot be applied when the intention of the testator is made plain. It cannot be applied when the purpose of the testator, as seen in the will, cannot be carried out by a devise of a less estate than the fee. Bell County v. Alexander, 22 Texas, 350. The policy of the law in favor, of the heir yields, we repeat, to the intention of a testator if clearly expressed or manifested. That policy, the reason for it and the elements of it, is expressed strongly by Mr. Justice Story in Wright v. Denn ex dem. Page, 10 Wheat. 204, 227, 228:

“Where there are no words of limitation to a devise,-the general- rule of law is,, that the devisee takes an estate for life only, unless, from the language there used, or from other parts of the will, there is a plain intention to give a larger estate, we say, a plain intention, because, if it be doubtful or conjectural, upon the terms of the will, or if full legal effect can be given to the language, without such an estáte, the general rule prevails. It is not sufficient, that the court may entertain a private belief that the testator intended a fee; it must see that he has expressed that intention, with reasonable certainty, on the face of his will. For the law will not suffer the heir to be disinherited upon conjecture. He is favored by its policy; and though the testator may disinherit him, yet the law will execute that intention only when it is put in a clear and unambiguous shape.” (Italics ours.)

We think the intention of McCaffrey is “put in a clear and unambiguous shape.”- He intended to dispose of his whole estate. It is true there is no introductory clause expressing such intention, but there is no residuary clause indicating that he intended to pass'less than all of his estate. And all of his heirs at law were his devisees. In other words, the very heirs for whom the rule is invoked are those among whom he distributed his, property, and surely he intended a *570 . complete distribution — to vest m each the largest interest he could give, not assigning life estates with residuary fees to the very persons to whom such life estates were devised. In other-words, making each heir the successor of the other and of himself. It was evident to the Court of Appeals — it is evident to us — that he intended to make his heirs equal. Of this purpose the charge upon his daughter, Mary A. Quigley, is dominantly significant, not only in effect, but in its expression. She is given a greater quantity of real estate than the other devisees. She is given personal property besides, but, declared the testator, she is to pay funeral' expenses and other legal debts I may owe, also to care for my lot in Mount Olivet Cemetery.” . That charge was not intended to enlarge the quantity of interest in the real estate devised in the sense contended for, but to make an equality between her and the other-heirs and devisees, and, we repeat, that was his especial purpose. In other words, he gave her more property, not a larger interest in it. The devise to his grandson, Frank Foley, shows how carefully the testator regarded his heirs. • Surely, as he regarded that grandchild as inheriting the rights which' his mother might have inherited, he did not intend a disposition of his property which precluded his other grandchildren of inheriting through their parents. And this will be the result if the appellees are right. No dévisee possesses an estate which can be devised to of inherited by his or her children.

Against the effect of the heirs at law of the testator being also his devisees, it may be said that it has been held that, though k testator has given a nominal legacy to, his heir or declared an intention to wholly disinherit him, the inflexibility of the rule in favor of the heir has been enforced. Frogmorton v. Wright, 2 W. Bl. 889; Roe d. Callow v. Bolton, 2 W. Bl. 1045; Right v. Sidebotham, 2 Douglas, 730; Roe d. Peter v. Daw, 3 M. & Sel. 518.

In Right v. Sidebotham, Lord Mansfield felt himself constrained to enforce the fule, but he observed in protest: I *571 verily believe, that, in almost every case where by law a general devise of land is reduced to an estate for life, the intent of the testator is thwarted; for ordinary people do not distinguish between, real and personal property. The rule of law, however, is established and certain, that express, words of limitation, or words tantamount, are necessary to pass an estate of inheritance.” And he hence concluded that words tending to disinherit the heir at law, ynless the estate is given to some one else, w;ere, hot sufficient to prevent the heir from taking.

Lord Ellenborough in Roe v. Dato followed the rule, and declared also that he thereby probably defeated the intention of the testator. It is a strange conclusion from the facts’and needs the sanction of those great names to rescue it from even stronger characterization. Lord Mansfield spoke in 1781, Lord Ellenborough in 1815. We cannot believe, if called upon to interpret a will made in 1896, when the rights of heirs are not so insistent and the rule in their favor lingers,.

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Bluebook (online)
196 U.S. 563, 25 S. Ct. 319, 49 L. Ed. 600, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaffrey-v-manogue-scotus-1905.