Orcutt v. Hoyt

77 A.2d 227, 6 N.J. 46, 1950 N.J. LEXIS 155
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 11, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 A.2d 227 (Orcutt v. Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orcutt v. Hoyt, 77 A.2d 227, 6 N.J. 46, 1950 N.J. LEXIS 155 (N.J. 1950).

Opinion

*49 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

The appeal is from a judgment in the Superior Court, Chancery Division, Essex County, and comes to us on our own motion.

In the estate of Kate Good Orcutt, deceased, were two rings inventoried as follows:

“(1) Platinum King-Set with Marquise Diamond Weighing Approximately 4.5 carats $2,250.00
“(2) Gold Ring Set with Solitaire Diamond Weighing Approximately 1.50 carat (Diamond is ‘Old-Mine-Gut,’ and of poor quality and imperfect) 300.00”

The litigation had but one issue, stated thus in the pretrial order:

“The sole question for determination is which of the aforesaid two rings was bequeathed to the plaintiff in Article ‘Second’ of the Last Will and Testament of the decedent.”

Article “Second”'of the will provided:

“Second: I give and bequeath unto my son, Brent Good Orcutt, my large diamond solitaire ring as and for his absolute property.”

The trial court concluded- that the will presented no ambiguity; that both rings were solitaire diamond rings; and that the márquise ring came 'clearly within the designation of “my large diamond solitaire ring” and, therefore, went to the decedent’s son, the plaintiff in the action. Judgment was awarded accordingly. Defendants appeal.

It was the position of the defendants at the trial that they should be permitted to prove certain facts from which, as they contended, the inference could be drawn that the decedent, in using the expression “my large diamond solitaire ring,” did not refer to the marquise diamond platinum ring. The *50 argument was resolved into an offer of proof which was refused and a question which was overruled. In our opinion the matter thus rejected was entirely lacking in the significance imputed to it. To understand the compass and effect .of the rulings it is necessary to consider them specifically and to appraise the circumstances attendant upon them.

Defendants offered to prove that the decedent had executed earlier wills, specifically a will made in 1940, which contained the precise language of Article Second of the present will. Mrs. Oreutt did not own the marquise ring until 1943 when she acquired ownership under the will of her stepmother. The argument upon which defendants rested their offer was that since testatrix did'not own that ring in 1940, she could not have had it in mind when she made the will of that year, and that inasmuch as in 1947 when she made the present will she used the same language as in the 1940 will, it followed that she could not, in 1947, have had the marquise ring in mind. That reasoning,’on its own content, is neither conclusive nor persuasive, and the attendant circumstances deprive it of any efficacy. Defendants’ attorney, in making his offer of proof, stated that if he were permitted to introduce the 1940 will, he would put in no further proof. No evidence was presented or offered that the testatrix, at the making of the earlier will, had the smaller diamond or indeed any solitaire diamond ring. Therefore, even if the 1940 will had been admitted, there would have been nothing from which the court could have deduced that the testatrix referred in that will to either of the rings in dispute or to any object of which we now have knowledge, whereas both of the rings were in the decedent’s ownership at the making of the 1947 will. The implications are of a complete change in the circumstances toward which testamentary disposition was directed.

The two rings were shown to the trial court and, by photographic reproduction, are shown to us; and it appears from the inventory that the marquise is three times the size of the other. Assuming that the marquise is a diamond solitaire ring, it is clear that as between the two rings it was the dece *51 dent’s “large diamond solitaire ring” and, therefore, the subject of the bequest. There was no substantial dispute in the evidence upon the propositions that both rings were solitaires, and-that the term “marquise” had relation to the cut and shape of the stone, not to its aspect as a solitaire. It was also in proof, without contradiction, that the presence of smaller stones surrounding a large diamond produces what is known as a “cluster,” and that a diamond so set is not a solitaire, but that the presence of smaller stones, as here, on the shank of a ring containing a diamond, even though the diamond be cut as a marquise, does not change the classification from that of a “solitaire.” The two expressions refer to unrelated facts; a marquise is such because of the shape of the stone, and a solitaire, whether the stone is cut as a marquise or otherwise, is a solitaire because of its setting. Defendants pxxt a jeweler upon the stand for the purpose of drawing a distinction between the two rings, but the substance of his testimony on the point of dispute is reflected in this question and answer:

“Q. You wouldn’t say that that (the marquise) was not a solitaire, would you ?
A. No, I wouldn’t.”

Therefore, the assumption at the beginning of this paragraph becomes a fact and the conclusion based thereon is established.

The second article of the will speaks with complete sense and clarity. Every word is apt. It is without ambiguity either as to legatee or to thing given, and this is true whether we regard the second article of the will by itself or in conjunction with the entire instrument. The marquise ring answers exactly to the description in the will, and the other ring, manifestly, does not. Cf. Griscom v. Evens, 40 N. J. L. 402 (Sup. Ct. 1878); affirmed, 42 N. J. L. 579 (E. & A. 1880); Van Nostrand v. Board of Domestic Missions of Reformed, Church in America, 59 N. J. Eq. 19 (Ch. 1899); Commercial Trust Co. v. Heintz, 99 N. J. Eq. 411 (E. & A. 1925). To show that the testatrix did not intend to do that *52 which the will plainly states, namely, give her “large diamond solitaire ring” to her son would be to show an intention in conflict with the writing itself; and this may not be done. The word “large,” as here used, is a word of distinguishment; it requires another article of similar substance with that to which it is appended to conform to the ordinary use of language. (Cf. Van Nostrand v. Board of Domestic Missions of Reformed Church, supra, 59 N. J. Eq., at p. 21.) If a testator were devising the only house he owned, even if it were a big house, he would scarcely refer to it as “my large house,” or, if he were bequeathing a piano, his only piano, he would hardly describe it as “my large piano,” even if it were large.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A.2d 227, 6 N.J. 46, 1950 N.J. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orcutt-v-hoyt-nj-1950.