Roberdeau v. Roberdeau

1 D.C. 305
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMarch 15, 1806
StatusPublished

This text of 1 D.C. 305 (Roberdeau v. Roberdeau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberdeau v. Roberdeau, 1 D.C. 305 (D.D.C. 1806).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Cranch, C. J.

The'questions'submitted-'to the.Court'in this case, and upon which it is necessary to decide, before a final decree can be made with propriety, are, 1. Is the' real 'estate of the testator liable to the payment of the' annuities' given by the will to the three younger children ? 2. Whether the executors’ commissions are to be a charge against the general estate, so as eventually to form a charge against the residuum after payment of the debts, specific [306]*306legacies, and the widow’s dower and thirds, or whether the specific legacies and dower are to bear their proportion of that expense.

1. Whether the real estate is liable for the annuities to the younger children. This question depends upon the construction of the will. The testator first directs his debts to be paid, and for that purpose empowers his executors to sell Pennsylvania lands on the waters of the Ohio, his shares in the Potomac Company, and his unimproved ground below the bank, in the town of Alexandria.

He then bequeathes to his wife his household and kitchen furniture, and devises to her, for life, his dwelling-house and lot, and by a codicil, a child’s share in fee-simple in the residuum of his real estate. The will then proceeds in these words : —

“ Item. I do order and direct., that my executors do, out of the rents of my estate, allot and appropriate the sum of £‘70, annually, to each of my three younger children, namely, Jane, James, and Plarriet, for their education and maintenance, which sums are to be respectively paid unto Jane and Harriet, until they arrive to the age of eighteen, and unto James until he arrives at the age of twenty-one years; and as my said children severally attain the age aforesaid, I direct that the aforesaid annual allowance of £70 shall cease.
“ And I do further direct, that if the rent at present arising from my estate, shall not, from any accident, be sufficient to answer the aforesaid allowance to my three children before mentioned, that my executors do adopt some mode for raising any deficiency, out of the other parts of my estate not hereby devised to my said wife.
Item. I give and devise all the rest of my real estate, not hereby in any manner before appropriated, unto my several children, Isaac, Ann, Mary, Selena, Jane, James, and Harriet, and to their heirs and assigns, to be equally divided among them.”

The testator then devises the reversion of the house and lot before devised to his wife for life, to his children, in fee, to be equally divided, &e.

Item. I give and devise to my said children, and to their heirs and assigns forever, to be equally divided between them, those parts of my said estate which have been hereby appropriated for raising the sums of money hereby directed to be appropriated for the education and support of my three younger children, namely, Jane, James, and Harriet, the said division to be made as those sums shall respectively cease to be paid.”

He then authorizes his executors to lease out the property devised to his wife, during her life, and pay the rents to her; and also to grant on ground-rent forever, during the minority of Jane, [307]*307James, and Harriet, such part of his unimproved grounds as, upon a division of .his estate, should be allotted to them, reserving the rent to the child whose ground should be so granted. He then appoints his wife guardian of his three younger children, and nominates her and Colonel Simms his executors. i

By a codicil, reciting that the rents of his lands granted to John Fitzgerald, and of a warehouse demised to Abraham Morehouse & Co., would amount to a greater annual sum than that which by his will he had appropriated to the education and maintenance of his younger children, he directs the surplus of those rents to be appropriated to the payment of his debts, and nominates Alexander Smith, executor, with the two others. Mr. Smith alone qualified as executor, and' the widow renounced her right under the will, and betook herself to her dower and thirds.

The testator seems to have been persuaded that the rents of a part of his real estate would have been sufficient to raise the annuities as they should become payable ; and in that case, and under that impression, he directed his executors to allot and appropriate a certain part of the rents for that purpose, intending thereby, as appears from the subsequent expressions of the will, that his executors should designate what part of his estate should stand specifically charged with those annuities, and that the residue of his estate (except what he had devised for payment of his debts, and also except what he had devised to his wife,) should be immediately divided, during the minority of his younger children. And that those parts of his estate which should have been allotted and appropriated by his executors to answer the annuities should be divided as the annuities respectively ceased. The whole of this arrangement depended upon the event that a part only of the rents of his real estate would have been sufficient to raise the annuities. ,

But he also contemplated and provided against the possibility of a different state of things, viz., that the rents of all his real estate (not devised to his wife and not dev.ised for the payment of his debts) might not be sufficient to raise the annuities for the younger children. In this event he declared his will to be that his executors should adopt some mode for raising any deficiency out of the other parts of his estate not devised to his wife, giving them thereby an unlimited authority, and demonstrating his intention to be, that the annuities should be paid at all events, and that the deficiency should be raised out of the other parts of his estate not devised to his wife. Words cannot be stronger to show an intention to charge such other parts of his estate with the payment of such deficiency. The question arises, what other parts? Other than what ? Other than the rents of his estate not devised [308]*308to his wife; for the case contemplated all those rents to be exhausted. These other parts could not be the household and kitchen furniture, for they were specifically bequeathed to his wife, and he has excepted them from the burden of the annuities. It could not mean the personal estate, because that was the proper fund for the payment of his.debts, and was contemplated by him as insufficient for that purpose, as appears by his devising certain parts of his real estate for the payment of debts, in aid of his personal estate. ■ The parts of his estate, other than the rents of his estate, must therefore have been the land itself, the fee-simple, the reversion. • A power to raise the deficiency out of the land itself or out of the fee-simple, or out of the reversion, must have been a power to mortgage, or to sell.

It does not appear in.this cause, that at any time since the testator’s death,'the'rents of his estate, clear of his wife’s prior claim, have been sufficient to answer the annuities. If the fact is that they have not been sufficient, then all'those provisions of the will which were predicated upon their sufficiency, failed of effect; and the other provisions of the will, which were predicated upon the insufficiency of the rents, came into operation.

It appears, by.

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Bluebook (online)
1 D.C. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberdeau-v-roberdeau-dcd-1806.