Sammis v. Sammis

14 R.I. 123, 1883 R.I. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 24, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 14 R.I. 123 (Sammis v. Sammis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sammis v. Sammis, 14 R.I. 123, 1883 R.I. LEXIS 18 (R.I. 1883).

Opinion

Dukpee, C. J.

The purpose of this suit is to get the defendants enjoined from selling on execution the right, title, and interest of Albert A. Sammis and Frederick E. Sammis in and to certain lands, in which the defendants contend they have an attachable interest under the will of their late father, Edson A. Sammis, by force of the second and fourth clauses thereof. The second and fourth clauses are in the words following, to wit :

Second. I give and bequeath unto my beloved wife Martha G. Sammis the lot of land with buildings and improvements thereon, situated on Lockwood Street, in the city of Providence, for and during her natural life, and the expenses of keeping the same in repair, together with the taxes on the same, shall be paid out of my estate by my executors hereinafter named, and at her *127 decease it is my wish that the same may be given to my two sons, Frederick E. Sammis and Albert A. Sammis, subject to the same conditions as the property mentioned in clause fourth of this my last will and testament.”
Fourth. I give and devise unto my beloved wife Martha G. Sammis the income arising from one undivided quarter part of all my estate, real, personal, and mixed, and to my three sons, George E. Sammis, Albert "A. Sammis, and Frederick E. Sammis, the income arising from the remaining three quarter parts of all my estate, real, personal, and mixed, until my youngest son then living shall have attained the age of forty years. At the expiration of said time it is my will that all my property, real, personal, and mixed, shall then be divided into four equal quarter parts, and that my said sons, George E. Sammis, Albert A. Sammis, and Frederick E. Sammis shall each respectively receive one equal quarter part of said property to them, their heirs, and assigns forever. I give and devise the remaining quarter part of all my property at the expiration of said time to my beloved wife Martha G. Sammis, for and during her natural life, and at her decease it is my wish that said quarter part of the income (if she should decease before the youngest living son shall have attained the age of forty years) shall be equally divided between my two sons, Albert A. Sammis and Frederick E. Sammis, subject to tbe same conditions as the income or property herein devised and bequeathed, and to the further condition on the part of my said son George E. Sammis that he . shall sell or otherwise dispose of the trotting or sporting horse now owned by him, and shall not buy or replace said horse by another for the purpose of trotting or sporting, and shall attend strictly to his business. And in case he shall not observe and obey these my wishes, he shall not have or draw the said income or have any part thereof, but said income shall be divided equally among my other heirs until the youngest son shall have attained the age of forty years, but this is not to interfere or encroach in any way upon son’s (George E. Sam-mis’s) quarter part of the property.” The will appoints the complainants executors.

The bill alleges that the youngest son is twenty eight years old, having been born July 19, 1854. The bill also alleges that the *128 complainants immediately on the probate of the will, entered into possession of the estate, paid the debts, and have ever since applied the income according to the directions in the will. The case is before us on general demurrer to the bill.

The suit is brought by the complainants as trustees under the will of both the real and the personal estate. The complainants as executors are doubtless trustees constructively of the personal estate in their hands so long as they retain it. But they did not as executors succeed to the real estate unless it was devised to them as such, either expressly or by implication. It was not expressly devised to them. If they have it, therefore, they have it by implication, because it is necessary for them to have it to discharge the duties imposed on them. We do not find that any duty in regard to the real estate is expressly imposed on them by the will, except the duty of paying for repairs and taxes on the Lockwood Street estate during the life of the widow. These payments, however, must be made out of the personal estate unless it is deficient, which is not alleged. The ground on which the complainants predicate the existence of a trust of the real estate is, that under the second and fourth .clauses of the will only income is devised to the sons, until the youngest son who lives to reach the age of forty years shall have reached it. The complainants infer that until then it is the duty of the executors to collect and pay over the income of both the real and the personal estate. The inference is not necessary. It is well settled that a devise of the rents and profits, or of the income of the land, is in legal effect a devise of the land itself. Mannox v. Greener, L. R. 14 Eq. 456; Parker v. Plummer, Cro. Eliz. 190; South v. Alleine, 1 Salk. 228; Doe dem. Goldin v. Lakeman, 2 B. & Ad. 30, 42; Johnson v. Arnold, 1 Ve. 169, 171; Plenty v. West, 6 C. B. 201. On the authority of these cases, unless a trust be implied, the estates out of which the income is to accrue go directly to the sons. They will enjoy them undivided if they conform to the will, until the arrival of the time for division, and will then divide and enjoy them in severalty. The question then is what kind of estates do they have; are they vested or contingent, attachable or n on-attachable ? Let us consider the devise of the three quarters to the sons contained in the fourth clause. It will be observed that the *129 three quarters are given to the three sons in two parts, the one part being a mere chattel interest or term of years, and the other part the entire residue, so that the whole estate is exhausted. Is there anything to prevent a merger of the two parts? We see nothing unless it be that the particular estate is to be enjoyed in common and the remainder in severalty. The direction is, that at the expiration of the particular estate the property shall be divided into quarters and each son have a quarter. But no particular quarter is given to any particular son, and therefore we think the devise is to be construed as a devise of the property to the mother and the sons, to he divided into quarters and enjoyed as directed by the will. If this be so, there is nothing in our opinion to prevent a merger, and each son is entitled under the will to an undivided quarter of the real estate given by the fourth clause in fee simple, an estate which is of course attachable. And so, a similar construction being applied, the two sons, Albert and Frederick, have vested remainders after the widow’s life estate in the Lockwood Street property. We think this construction so far as it goes is correct.

But even if there be an implied trust under which the estates vest in the complainants, the complainants nevertheless take only such interest as is necessary for the fulfilment of the trust. Their estate will therefore terminate as soon as the youngest of the sons, living so long, reaches the age of forty years, and thereupon the remainder will go free of the trust to the widow and sons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 R.I. 123, 1883 R.I. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sammis-v-sammis-ri-1883.