Roberjot v. Mazurie

14 Serg. & Rawle 42, 1826 Pa. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 17, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Serg. & Rawle 42 (Roberjot v. Mazurie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberjot v. Mazurie, 14 Serg. & Rawle 42, 1826 Pa. LEXIS 23 (Pa. 1826).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Duncan, J.

This is an inquiry on a will where the intention of the testator is obscured by an overstretched anxiety to be plain, and. the use of a redundancy of words to express that of which the testator in his own mind had formed a distinct and clear idea. In forming a judgment of this intention, the understanding is not tied to the technical sense" of any form of words. No other'man’s will can guide us in the construction of this man’s will; for no other man’s will is'worded as this is. Every case of the kind is governed by its own circumstances, and is individual; and we are sensible of the kindness of counsel in relieving us from the .fatigue of hearing numerous cases on the ill-expressed wills of other men.

The will and codicil have been properly considered as but one [46]*46testamentary disposition. The declaration of the testator, as.to the way in which he wished his property to go on his death, and the aid of a former will have been enlisted by both parties, to assist in their opposite constructions. 1 know of. but one rule, and that is the dictate of common sense, to take an expansive view of every part of the will, the testator’s estate, and his family, and from that endeavour to come at his general plan; for almost every testator has formed to his own conception some general plan, and, however ambiguous his verbiage may-be, and however inconsistent, particular expressions may be, (which ought not to be caught at to defeat his general intention,) by transposing clauses in the will, giving full effects to his hints, circumstances will break out to ascertain the leading intention, and render that plan clear on meditation, which on a first and even a second perusal might appear doubtful. S.uch was the state of my mind when I first read this will and codicil; but, on a more mature examination, considering it. provision by provision, step by step, and word by word, all doubt has vanished, and the scope of the testator’s view, both as to the first disposition and the last destination of his estate, both real and personal, appears to my vision as clear as that of any other will I have had occasion to consider. A will is never to be construed by adverting to a single clause. Every thing bearing on that subject must be taken together; every word is to have effect, and have a meaning imputed to it, if capable of it, without violating the general intent; and if any general intent can be collected, pr any one particular object, expressions militating with that may be rejected.

The testator was possessed of a considerable real, but much larger personal estate; he had a wife about thirty-two, an only child, a son, of about twelve, when he made this will and codicil. Seven years before that, when he made his first will, these were the only objects of his bounty; he did not then contemplate provision for any other human being. That will was drawn by a gentleman who has expressed the intention of the testator, in a manner not to be misunderstood. By that will his wife had first a specific bequest of plate, household furniture, and other enumerated articles of considerable value, without any inventory or account to be taken of the items of his personal estate, to her absolutely and for ever. Moreover, he devised to her the one-third part of the nett rents, issues, and income, of all his real estate during all the time of her natural life: the rest, residue, and remainder of his estate, real and personal, he bequeathed to his son, James V. Mazurie, to hold to him, his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns for ever. He made his executors testamentary guardians of his son, and appointed his wife, Roberjot, the plaintiff, and Joseph Do-nath, his executors. On the 25th oí.February, 1S22, he revoked this will, and drew up another in his own handwriting. It is evident that he had before him the revoked will, for he copies, in some provisions, its very words; and indeed there is little - differ[47]*47ence between these instruments, except that he devises to his wife two-thirds instead of one, and instead of giving his wife the per-sonai estate absolutely and for ever, he adds the word real. But there is added to these devises this most significant clause, and at the death of his mother to become, or he becomes, sole heir of all I have bequeathed to his mother. A few daj-s afterwards, on the 9th of March, he adds the codicil with his own' hand; and then, for thé first time, an intent appears to preserve and continue his property in his own family; for although he sets out with the declaration of an intention to alter his will with regard to his son only, and for his advantage, yet, as to the son, on any construction, it is not very beneficial, but if the mother’s construction prevails, it is as to him, far from being a very natural and kind disposition. He is to be a minor until,thirty, dependent on his mother’s bounty; and instead of an absolute estate, in one-third of both real and personal estate, with a remainder on his mother’s death of'the whole estate, he has only a life estate in one-third of both real and personal, and a remainder in the two-thirds of the real. But the testator did not so intend, for there is an entire new modification of his'estate. He looked beyond this — the death of his wife, and the death of his son without children, and provides another succession, on the happening of these events, both'as to the real and personal estate. On the mother’s death, the two-thirds bequeathed to her are to go over to James, for the benefit, of his children; and on James’s death without children, in his.mother’s lifetime, to go over to her for her life; and on James’s death without children, and on the mother’s death, the whole of his estate, both real and personal, is to go over to his real heirs. These are. more than translations; they are the plain words of the testator, written with his own hand. Throughout this whole codicil there is a constant endeavour on his part to be understood that his wife and his son were to have life estates, both in the real and personal property, and that on the death of the son without children, the mother was to take the whole, and on the death of the mother, the son, for the benefit of his children; and that when the mother' is dead, and the son is dead without children, then the whole is to go over, the real estate in bulk, and the capital of the personal without diminution, •to.the real heirs of the testator. I care not whether he gave to any. words either their appropriate legal meaning, or did not use them in that sense, when the inquiry is after intention and not on the effect of words of legal limitation. Heye there was a singleness in the intent; provision for his wife during life, ample and liberal; for his son during life, and, if he left any children, they were to enjoy the whole, but if he died without children, then to his real heirs; for real heirs may be applied either to his heirs at law, or to his personal representatives, with respect to the different kinds of estate. What interest the son takes — what interest his children take — who are the'real heirs intended by the testator to' [48]*48take on the death of his son without -children, are not subjects of inquiry at present. The inquiry is, what interest does the wife hold? The counsel of the defendant, while they contend for her absolute interest’ in the personal estate, consider that she only holds a life estate in the real. The construction which gives consistency to every part of the will,- and effectuates both the general and particular intent, ought to prevail.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Serg. & Rawle 42, 1826 Pa. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberjot-v-mazurie-pa-1826.