Meacham v. Graham

39 S.W. 12, 98 Tenn. 190
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 39 S.W. 12 (Meacham v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meacham v. Graham, 39 S.W. 12, 98 Tenn. 190 (Tenn. 1897).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

Samuel L. Graham died on January 8, 1892, leaving a will executed on July 23, 1888, and a codicil executed May 27, 1891. He owned an estate of the estimated value of five hundred thousand dollars, and left surviving him a widow, Martha J. Graham, a son by a former marriage, John M. Graham, and a son and daughter, Harry H. and Thomasella H., by his second marriage. Harry H. and Thomasella H. were minors at the date of the will, but both had attained the age of twenty-one years before it took effect. The will and [193]*193codicil were duly probated in the County Court of Hickman County, Tennessee, on the first Monday in February, 1892, and J. M. Meacham qualified as executor.

The testator devised and bequeathed specific property to his three children respectively, valued by him as follows:

To John M. Graham_$158,000
To Harry H. Graham_ 93,000
To Thomasella H. Graham_ 85,000

This was given to them absolutely and without limitation, and about it there is no controversy. It was by Item 5 of the will and Item 2 of the codicil that the above property was given to Thomasella, and, as to this property, there is no controversy.

Item 6 of the will is: “I bequeath and devise to my son, Harry Hardeman Graham, and to my daughter, Thomasella Graham, an equal portion of my entire estate with my son, John M. Graham. It is my intention and desire to' give to each of my three children an . equal share in value of my estate, no one having any preference the one over the other.

‘ ‘ Item 7. When my son, Harry H., arrives at the age of twenty-one -years, my executor will pay over to him, out of the assets of my estate, an amount equal in value to that bequeathed and devised to my son, John M., in the third clause of this will; provided, that, in his opinion, there will [194]*194be enough to make the two younger children equal to John M., and, if not, he shall turn over to Harry H. only what he may think his share will amount to.

“Item 8. At the day and date my son Harry arrives at the age of twenty-one years, my executor shall make an inventory and account of my estate, and if my two younger children have not already been made equal in value and amount with my son, John M. Graham, then my executor will pay over to each of them, my said younger children, an amount equal in value to that devised and bequeathed to my son, John M. Graham, and after they have been made equal with my son John, then the re-mainde,r and residue of my estate to be equally divided into three shares, and one share of one-third each to be paid over to each of my three children, so that each shall receive an equal share of my entire estate, except the special gifts herein provided by myself.

“Item 9. At the same date and time, just above mentioned, my executor will pay over to my daughter, Thomasella Hardeman Graham, in the manner hereinbefore and hereinafter indicated, out of the assets of my estate, an amount equal in value to that bequeathed to my son, John M., in Item 3 of this will.

“Item 12. I will and direct that my executor pay over the legacy herein intended for my daughter, Thomasella Hardeman (except the small special gifts), to a trustee to be appointed by the proper [195]*195Court, under good and sufficient bond, for my said daughter, except the plantations devised to her in Item 5, to wit: ‘Wayside’ and ‘Redleaf,’ and a part of ‘Mosswood,’ purchased of A. E. Wheeler, in Washington County, Miss., and containing, in all, about three thousand acres. This land is given to her without limitation or restriction. That part of her share to be paid to her trustee shall be for my daughter, to her sole and separate use, free from the control, contracts, and liabilities of any husband that she may thereafter have. Upon the written application of my said daughter said trustee shall have the power to invest as much as the one-half of' the funds or assets that may come into his hands in a home' or in land for her, to be held in trust as above stated. But in the event of her attaining the age of twenty-one years unmarried, then, and in that event, her said legacy shall b'e paid to her directly,- to be held and used by her until her marriage, and then to be settled upon a suitable trustee of her own selection. The legacy to be held in trust for my said daughter, subject to the foregoing limitations and restrictions, for and during her natural life, and, in the event of her death without living children, her share of the estate to go to my sons, John M. and Harry H., equally, and, in case either of them shall be dead, leaving living children, then to their child or children.”

These are all the clauses necessary to be quoted.

Appellants- insist that, under said will, Thomasella [196]*196takes only a life estate in that portion of the property bequeathed to her, outside of the Mississippi lands, with a limitation over — in event Thomasella dies without living children — to John M. or Harry H., or their children if either of them should be dead. Appellees, Harry H. Graham and Thomasella Graham, insist that the said Thomasella, having survived her father, takes an absolute estate in the said property.

The Chancellor decreed in favor of the contention of the said Harry H. and Thomasella, adjudging that Thomasella is the owner in fee of said property. Construing said will, the Chancellor adjudged that the following clause of the twelfth item: “And in the event of her death, without living children, her share of the estate to go to my sons, John M. and Harry H., equally, and in case either of them shall be dead, leaving living children, then to their child or children, ’ ’ was a limitation intended to take effect only in the event Thomasella died before the testator, and the said Thomasella, having survived the testator, her estate became, and is, absolute.

From this decree John M. Graham and his children prosecute an appeal, and assign this action of the Chancellor as error.

Harry H. joined with his sister, Thomasella, in this construction of the will, and does not complain. The cause has been heard by the Court of Chancery Appeals, and that Court held that the limitation was void because of the absolute power of disposition and [197]*197unlimited right to ' use the legacy in controversy, vested by the will in Thomasella, and thus arrived at the same result as the Chancellor. From this decree John M. Graham and his children appealed to this Court.

It appears that Thomasella attained her majority before the filing of the bill in this case, and was then, and is still, alive and unmarried.

A preliminary question of importance confronts us at the threshold of our investigation, and that is whether the matters now submitted to the Court are not prematurely brought before it; and whether this is not a bill to declare future rights, and whether any decree, at the present time, can be rendered by this Court upon the matters submitted. This question has not been presented by counsel or considered by the Court of Chancery Appeals or the Chancellor. All parties and their counsel desire the matter adjudicated and settled. But inasmuch as a premature adjudication is in law no adjudication, and will not be binding, we proceed to consider this question in the outset of our investigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.W. 12, 98 Tenn. 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meacham-v-graham-tenn-1897.