Owen v. Eaton

56 Mo. App. 563, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 114
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 56 Mo. App. 563 (Owen v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owen v. Eaton, 56 Mo. App. 563, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 114 (Mo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Ellison, J.

— This ease involves the. construction of the will of William Eaton, deceased, and was instituted by the executor,'as stated by the parties, for the purpose of obtaining a judicial construction thereof, the matter of contention relating, principally, to the third clause, which is as follows: 1 ‘Item third. — I also give and bequeath to my son Lanson Eaton all of my money, notes and stock, except said cow to my wife, after my debts and funeral expenses are paid, except the sum of $2,500 to be paid over to my executor hereinafter named; and it is my will that [566]*566said executor shall loan said sum, $2,500, out at the highest legal rate of interest, and out of said interest pay my wife, Mary, said $175 so long as she may live, annually, and at the decease of my wife then said $2,500 to be paid over to my son, Lanson Eaton, or Ms heirs if he should not be alive.” The point of dispute is whether Lanson Eaton took a vested interest in the $2,500, upon the death of his father, or whether such interest was contingent; that is to say, dependent upon his being alive at the death of his mother. Lanson Eaton died during the life of Ms mother.

It is clear that the $2,500, was no£ bequeathed to Lanson in the first portion of the paragraph, for it' is expressly excepted from the other bequest to Mm. The question, then, in one respect, may be somewhat simplified by eliminating the first clause of the paragraph and looking upon the second clause as an independent provision. This may properly be done for the purpose of simplifying, since the two clauses .have no necessary connection, and have no dependence One upon the other; at least not more than if they •‘were in separate divisions of the will. If separated, the last clause would read that 1 fit is my will that said executor shall loan said sum, $2,500, out at the'highest legal rate of interest, and out of said interest pay my wife Mary, said $175 so long as she may live, annually, and at the decease of my wife then said $2,500 to bo paid over to my son Lanson Eaton, or his heirs if he should not (be-alive.”

It is thus made apparent that the only words importing a gift or bequest to Lanson of this $2,500 are the following: “At the decease of my wife then said $2,500 is to be paid over to my son Lanson Eaton, or his heirs if he should not be alive.” This is the first intimation that Lanson was to have that sum, under any circumstances or conditions. It thus [567]*567quite clearly appears that the gift and the payment became operative, if at all, at one and the same time— indeed, the only words of bequest he has, are those implied in the direction to pay. There are no words then which bequeath to him an interest, except upon the contingency that he be alive at the time of his mother’s death, the effect of which was to give him a contingent remainder, as we shall attempt to make apparent in the course of this opinion.

If a testator, after giving his wife a life estate, proceeds to direct that “and after her death to descend to her children by me, living at her death” the remainder, thus created, is contingent upon the children being alive at the wife’s death. Rodney v. Landau, 104 Mo. 258. These definitions of a contingent remainder are cited with approval in DeLassus v. Gatewood, 71 Mo. 376: “A remainder is contingent, whilst the person to whom, or the event upon which it is limited to take effect remains uncertain. ’ ’ And ‘ ‘where the estate in remainder is limited to take effect, either to a dubious and uncertain person, or upon a dubious and uncertain event.” In the case at bar, the remainder is limited to take effect upon the uncertain event of Lanson Eaton being alive at the time of the expiration of the life estate. In Thompson v. Ludington 104 Mass. 193, Judge Gray said: “The devise at the death or marriage of the widow ‘to and among such of my children as shall then be living, share and share alike,’ gives a contingent remainder to such of the children as shall be living when the contingency of such death or marriage happens.” So, the same thing was decided in Olney v. Hull, 21 Pick. 311. In that case, after bequeathing the intervening estate, the devising clause read: “Should my wife marry or die, the land then shall be equally divided among my surviving sons.” On this it was held that a son who died during the [568]*568life of the mother, had taken no interest.

But there is another view of the provision of this will which goes far to relieve its construction of difficulty. By omitting all expression of bequest except that contained in the direction to pay, the testator has, himself, explained his intention by fixing a contingency upon which the payment is' to be made, to-wit: “if” his son should be alive. It is, therefore, one of the settled rules concerning bequests of personal property, that, where there is no substantive gift of the legacy until the time when it is payable, it does not vest until then, unless perhaps, such time must inevitably arrive. In such case there is no gift until payment. It is not a gift in prmsenti with a time fixed for payment afterwards. Lamb v. Lamb, 8 Watts, 184. The rule is stated in Moore v. Smith, 9 Watts, 403, and in Bowman’s Appeal, 34 Pa. St. 19, that where there is no antecedent gift or bequest independent of the period fixed for payment, then it is not vested, but contingent. In the latter case the bequest was, “to my three grandchildren, Elizabeth, William Wesley, and Martha Bear, the children of my daughter, Martha, deceased, the further sum of $400 each, to be paid to them respectively when they severally arrive at the age of twenty-one years, making the sum of $1,200.” There the gift of $400 each, is definitely made, and then a time is fixed for its payment, making “a clear case of a vested legacy.” The gift is made in prmsenti and becomes vested on the testator’s death, notwithstanding that its payment is to be in the future. But if there is no gift or bequest preceding the direction of payment, and the direction of payment is dependent upon a contingency, then ihe legacy is contingent and not vested until the contingency ripens into a fact. In the present case, as we have before observed, the only bequest is that contained in the direction to [569]*569pay, which, is made to depend upon whether the legatee be alive. In such case, the legacy is contingent. Willetts v. Rutter, 84 Ky. 317; Nixon v. Robins, 34 Ga. 6. The rule is clearly and aptly stated by Justice Green in Gifford v. Thorn 1 Stockton 702, as follows: “The general rule applicable to this question; adopted both in the ecclesiastical courts and courts of equity, is well settled. Where the time specified in the bequest is annexed to the payment only, as where the legacy is given, payable of to be paid when the legatee attains the age of twenty-one years, the legacy vests immediately upon the death of the testator. It is a present gift. The time of payment only is postponed. But where the time is annexed not to the payment only, but to the gift itself, as when the legacy is given to the legatee at twenty-one, or ‘if’ or ‘when’ he attains the age of twenty-one, the legacy does not vest until the legatee attains that age. The gift is upon the condition that the legatee shall attain the age specified. His attaining that age is a condition precedent; and if the condition be not fulfilled, the legacy never vests. The cases upon this subject are very numerous, and with few exceptions the rule will be found to have been for more than a century inflexibly maintained.”

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Bluebook (online)
56 Mo. App. 563, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owen-v-eaton-moctapp-1894.