Salter v. Philbrick

91 A. 914, 77 N.H. 322, 1914 N.H. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 27, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 A. 914 (Salter v. Philbrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salter v. Philbrick, 91 A. 914, 77 N.H. 322, 1914 N.H. LEXIS 153 (N.H. 1914).

Opinion

*324 Parsons, C. J.

The primary question is the character of the title of the petitioner, Huldah Salter, to one third of the property of which partition is asked. Does she own that one third in fee simple, or a less estate therein? The determination of this question involves the construction of the will of her grandmother, Eliza P. Philbrick, under which Huldah claims title.

“The end to be attained in interpreting a will is to effectuate the testator’s intention as indicated by the weight of competent evidence, which is not required to come from any given source, or to be of any given weight, if it is relevant to the issue. ‘The whole will must be taken together, and such construction be put upon it as will carry into effect the purposes the testator had in view’ (Claggett v. Hardy, 3 N. H. 147, 151); and this construction does not depend upon the order of sentences, or the part of the instrument where qualifying or restrictive words are found. ” Stevens v. Underhill, 67 N. H. 68, 70. “Contracts, wills, and statutes are the makers’ intentions proved by competent evidence. . . . The evidence of intention may include various inherent probabilities and the probative force of many circumstances, as well as the literal sense of the words' used. When the meaning is found by giving due weight to everything that legally tends to prove it, it is not a matter of discretion whether it shall be adopted or rejected.” Opinion of the Justices, 66 N. H. 629, 651. “The construction of the will is the ascertainment of the testator’s expressed intention, — what he meant by what he said, — which is to be determined by the court as a question of fact, and not by the application of arbitrary rules of law. . . . The situation of the testator, the surrounding circumstances, his family and relatives, the devisees and legatees, the nature, amount, and situation of his property, facts tending to place the court in the position of the testator, constitute evidence competent for our consideration upon the issue of what he meant by the words used.” Stratton v. Stratton, 68 N. H. 582, 585, 586. “It is not necessary that the intention of any written instrument should be expressed in a particular form of words, or by the use of technical terms. . . . Decisions 'which have in so many cases defeated the intention of testators by substituting, through the application of an artificial and technical rule of law, a different estate from that which the testator intended’ (Eaton v. Straw, 18 N. H. 320, 329, 330), are not now followed here.” Hayward v. Spaulding, 75 N. H. 92, 93, 94.

*325 The will of Eliza P. Philbrick disposes of a large amount of property. It bears the marks of the professional scrivener and plainly was not committed to writing by the testatrix. A part of the estate owned by the testatrix and disposed of by the will consisted of the Farragut and Atlantic House property, as it is called, summer resort hotels upon the seacoast, including the real estate and personal property used in operating them. This property formerly belonged to the testatrix’s husband, John C. Philbrick. In the settlement of his estate, one third became the property of the testatrix, while two thirds fell to her son, Frank A. Philbrick. After John’s death the hotel business was conducted by the testatrix and her son as partners, under the firm name of John C. Phil-brick & Son. At the making of the will, the testatrix’s immediate relatives were her son, Frank A., two daughters, Fannie W. Carter and Carrie P. Philbrick, and a granddaughter, Huldah Salter, the petitioner, a daughter of Fannie W. Carter. These persons and no others are mentioned in the will, the two daughters being made residuary legatees.

The primary purpose expressed by the testatrix was the division of all her property among these immediate connections, her children and grandchild. With a single exception, the clauses of the will are clearly expressed and easily understood. The difficulty arises from a single clause in the seventh paragraph. By that paragraph, the testatrix, having disposed of all her other property by specific gifts to the son and daughters and by making the daughters residuary legatees, as above stated, proceeds to dispose of her one-third interest in the hotel property. This she gives explicitly to the two daughters, “as joint tenants and to the survivor of them, for the term of their lives and the life of the survivor of them,” describing the property as “my undivided one-third interest, which I own with my son, Frank A. Philbrick, in the real estate and all personal property known as the Farragut and Atlantic House property, consisting of the Farragut and Atlantic Houses and the grounds (excepting a lot of land conveyed to St. Andrews Church), together with all other houses, outbuildings, stables, sheds, and structures of whatever kind thereon situated and connected with the business which I and my son . . . have carried on there in the name of J. C. Philbrick & Son, and also the furniture, utensils, fixtures, and apparatus, together with the personal property of every kind therewith connected and made use of in conducting said business, excepting the horses, carriages, har *326 nesses, robes, blankets, and other personal property connected with the stables or belonging thereto which have heretofore been bequeathed unto my said son, Frank A. Philbrick, by this will.” The bequest to Frank last mentioned was made by the third item of the will, but was made upon the condition that Frank’s interest in certain other personal property should be given by him to the testatrix’s daughters or to the survivor of them.

This hotel business had been a family affair carried on by the husband and father and by his widow and son after the death of the original owner. The testatrix’s purpose was to keep the ownership of all the property, real and personal, so that the business might be carried on after her death in a similar manner. Having given her daughters only a life estate in the property, the testatrix provides for the remainder after the termination of those estates in the following language: “And upon the decease of my said daughters, Fannie W. Carter and Carrie P. Philbrick, I give, devise, and bequeath the said undivided third part of the Farragut and Atlantic House property, the furniture and personal property thereto belonging, unto my grandchild, Huldah Salter, if she be then alive, or to her child or children if she should leave any surviving her then living, and to her and their heirs.” This language explicitly, unmistakably, and technically conveys to Huldah the estate in fee simple, upon the sole condition that she survive her mother and aunt. Having so survived — -performed the condition — Huldah claims the estate. Whether the testatrix intended she should have the estate so explicitly and technically given is the main question in controversy.

As the will is written to this point, the only question open was the disposition of the estate in case neither Huldah nor any child of hers survived the testatrix’s daughters, who had already been made residuary legatees. The clause naturally to be expected in the will is a provision for the possible contingency of Huldah’s childless death during the existence of the life estates.

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Related

Fowler v. Ladd
114 A. 271 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1921)
Roaf v. Champlin
107 A. 339 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A. 914, 77 N.H. 322, 1914 N.H. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salter-v-philbrick-nh-1914.