Moore v. Lyons

25 Wend. 118
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by168 cases

This text of 25 Wend. 118 (Moore v. Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Lyons, 25 Wend. 118 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

The following opinion was delivered in the supreme court:

By the Court,

Nelson,.C. J.

The remainders to the children of Mary were clearly not vested, but were contingent, as they went to the survivor : who this might be was altogether uncertain. The counsel for the defendant • concedes the case to the plaintiff, unless he can maintain that the clause of survivorship referred to the event of the death of the testator. Such a con’elusion would conflict with the plain intent of the will. The premises were given to Mary for life, and after her decease to the three daughters, the [93]*93survivors or survivor of them—clearly referring to the event of her death. The plaintiff is entitled to judgment.

Judgment being accordingly entered, the defendant sued out a writ of error, removing the record into this court, where the case was argued by

W. W. Van Wagenen, for the plaintiff in error.

J. W. Gerard, for the defendant in error.

*Foints presented and argued on the part of the plaintiff in [ *121 ] error :

I. The words from and after her death, in this devise, refer simply to the time when the enjoyment of the estate in remainder is to commence, and cannot affect the nature of the estate. They appoint and fix the time when the remainder is to vest in possession, and not in interest. 2 Cruise, 295 ; 1 Fearne on Remainders, 368.

H. The words or survivors or survivor of them, being thus uncontrolled and unexplained, mean the longest livers or longest liver of them—an absolute and indefinite survivorship. But upon this interpretation, the devise being to the three children, or to the two longest livers, or to the longest liver, without fixing the period for the alternative, it is altogether uncertain, from the particular devise alone, what estate was intended to be given.

III. The general intention of the testator is then to be gathered from the scope of the whole will, and such a construction is to be put upon the particular devise as will effectuate this intention. 6 Cruise, 157, 158. The manifest intention of the testator here is, to provide first for Mary, next for her children, and afterwards for their descendants.

IV. The words survivors, ¿-c., relate to the death of the testator. Doe v. Sparrow, 18 East, 358 ; Cambridge v. Roos, 8 Vesey, 11. The limitation of the premises in Greorge-street, to Susan, Jane, and Betsey, after the death of their mother, must have taken effect as a vested remainder on the death of the testator, and the words “ to the survivors or survivor of them" &c., must refer to the testator’s death. Rose v. Hill, 3 Burr, 1881; Garland v. Thomas, 4 B. & P. 82. Susan, Jane, and Betsey, therefore, took vested remainders in that property, as tenants in common; and the estates of those deceased go by inheritance to their heirs—consequently, Betsey took one-half, and each of the nephews a quarter of the premises.

V. ' The same effect, confirming the estate to the issue of those deceased, would be produced—first, by supplying before the words or to the survivors, ¿•e., the words if either should die without issue, then. Jackson v. Strang, 1 Hall 22 ; *Spelding v. Spelding, Cro. Car. 184, [ *122 J cited and approved by Lord Ellenborough, in Doe v. Micklem, [94]*946 East, 489. Or, secondly, by rejecting the words “ or to the survivors or survivor of them,” or her,” as creating uncertainty. Or, thirdly, by reading and in place of or—thus creating a vested remainder in joint tenancy in fee at common law, but under the statute, a tenancy in common. Jackson v. Blansham, 6 Johns. R. 54; 4 Kent's Commentaries 361; Act to abolish Entails, & c., passed 23d Feb 1786.

VI. In order to make this a contingent remainder dependent upon a survivorship of Mary, it would be necessary to supply, after the words, “ survivors of them,” the words at the time oe heb death. Doe v. Provoost, 4 Johns. R. 65. But the law will always prefer such a construction of a devise as will create a vested rather than a contingent remainder; and the words of the particular devise being ambiguous, and their true interpretation uncertain, the court will require the clearest and most unquestionable evidence of such being the intention of the testator, before they will so interpret a will as to give the estate to the surviving children, to the prejudice of the issue of such as may have died. The burthen of proof to make out this intention, rests upon the defendant in error. Doe v. Micklem, 6 East. 489.

Points presented and argued on the párt of the defendant in error:

I. The remainder to Susan, Jane, and Betsey, the children of Mary, was contingent, because at the death of the testator it was unknown, which, or whether any of them, would survive their mother ; and the plaintiff being the only child surviving, on the death of her mother, took the whole estate in fee., Doe v. Provoost, 4 Johns. 62. Hawley v. James, 16 Wend. 237-8-9. Jackson v. Waldron, 13 Wend. 178, 218, 219, 220. Tier v. Pennell, 1 Edward Ch. R. 354. Jackson v. Thompson, 6 Cowen, 178. Wilkes v. Lyon, 2 Cowen, 333. 2 Cruise's Digest, 261, § 13.

[ *123 ] II. The intention of the testator to limit the estate to the survivors or survivor of the three children of Mary, living at the death of Mary, is so clearly expressed in terms as to leave no room for construe-í tion, and distinguishes this case from Doe v. Provoost, 3 Johns. R. 60, and the other cases there cited.

HI. The will appears to have been drawn by one acquainted with the use of technical terms, and who knew the meaning of the language used.

After advisement, the following opinions were delivered :

By the President of the Senate.

As I shall feel it my duty in this case to vote for a reversal of the judgment of the court below, it is due in respect to that court, as well as to this, that I should give my reasons for such vote. I am the more inclined to do this, because I consider the rule of [95]*95law to be adopted in this case as one of great general importance and in this court new.

Upon the facts found by the special verdict, the plaintiff below, on the termination of the life estate of her mother, Mary, claimed the whole estate in fee, as the last survivor of those interested in remainder : insisting that the remainder was contingent, and that the survivorship referred to the death of the tenant for life.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Wend. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-lyons-nysupct-1840.