Scott v. Turner

102 So. 467, 137 Miss. 636, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 6
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1925
DocketNo. 24351
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 102 So. 467 (Scott v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Turner, 102 So. 467, 137 Miss. 636, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 6 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Sykes, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

John Milton Scott, a. resident of Shelby county, Tenn., in 1902 made and executed his last will and testament [645]*645and died a few days thereafter. In this case we are called upon to construe item 3 of this will, which is as follows:

“I have some notes secured by mortgages and also some other notes and accounts due me by various parties. I wish my executors to collect these as soon as they can without causing too great distress or embarrassment to my debtors, and I give my executors authority to grant these debtors reasonable indulgence if in their opinion it can be done without endangering the debts.
“I also direct my said executors to rent out my lands in Tunica county, Mississippi, and out of these rents pay my wife five hundred dollars annually on the 1st day of December of each year so long as she lives.
“The balance of said rents after payment of taxes, and necessary repairs and expenses, and all amounts collected from my notes and accounts, after the payment of my debts and the expenses of administering my estate, I direct my executors to invest in lands taking title to themselves as trustees of my estate. I recommend to them that these investments be made in lands near mine in Mississippi, but want them left free to use their own judgment as to such investments.
“I want my Mississippi lands and all lands bought by • them held until twenty years after my death and at the end of that period I direct that all such lands and all monies then on hand arising from rents of said lands be disposed of as follows:
“If all my children shall be living at that time, or if any that may have died should have left children or grandchildren surviving them, I want all these lands and monies then belonging to my estate divided into six (6) equal shares and one of said shares given to the children of each of my children or descendants of such children, each family of children taking an equal interest without regard to their number. And the representatives of each [646]*646of my six children taking an equal one-sixth interest in my estate then on hand. However if when this division is made, some of my six children then living have no children, these are to receive the share which would go to their children, if any, subject however to the restrictions and qualifications hereinafter stated.
“If by that time, any of my children shall have died 'leaving no issue, then the number of shares into which my property then on hand is to be divided is to be reduced proportionately, my wish and desire being that the share and interest of such child or children so dying without issue shall revert to my estate, and be disposed of as hereinbefore directed in the present item.
“Likewise if any of my children should die after the above-ordered division is made, leaving no issue at their death, then and in that event, I wish and direct that the shares and interest of such children so dying without issue in the property mentioned in this item shall also revert to my estate and go to the children of their sisters and brothers or to such sisters and brothers themselves if any,such have no children to be held by such childless brothers and sisters subject to executory devise in favor of my descendants in the event of their dying without issue.
“I want it clearly understood that this division directed to be made twenty years after my death is intended principally and primarily for the benefit of my grandchildren, and none of my children can participate therein except such as have no children and these only to the extent of taking their share and interest subject to an executory devise in favor of any descendant in the event of their dying without issue at their death.”

In item 2 he had devised.and bequeathed certain property to his children. At the time of the death of the testator he had living four childless children. At the end of the twenty-year period after his death he had living three childless children.

[647]*647One of the testator’s children, Dr. Glen Scott, had born to him a son within nine months after the twenty-year period expired. We are therefore called upon to decide whether or not this son, John Milton Scott, was devised an undivided one-sixth interest in fee by this item of the will. Under the authority of Harper v. Archer, 4 Smedes & M. 99, 43 Am. Dec. 472, John Milton Scott, grandson of testator, was in esse at the end of the twenty-year period and therefore entitled to an undivided one-sixth interest in fee in the estate devised in this item of the will. It was so held by the learned chancellor in the court below.

The three childless children at the end of the twenty year period are O. M. Scott, Malvina Scott, and Mrs. Laura Strickland. The other children of the testator had children living at the end of the twenty-year period, and the chancellor correctly held that these grandchildren of the testator under the will were devised an undivided one-sixth interest per stirpes in this estate. There is no controversy as to the interest devised these grandchildren. The controversy here is about what interest was devised the above-named three childless children under item 3 of this will.

Briefly stated, it is the contention of the appellee that under this item of the will these three childless children were devised life estates for the life of the longest liver with remainder over to their children, or if they were still childless at the time of their death to the other grandchildren of the testator or their descendants. For this contention reliance is principally had upon the case of Redmond v. Redmond, 104 Miss. 512, 61 So. 552.

It is the contention of the appellant that the three childless children are devised a fee determinable on the birth of issue to them, or at their death, with a one-sixth similar fee of this estate to the childless children living at the time of the death of the first childless child, and with a similar devise to the third and sole remaining childless child at the time of the death of the second childless child. [648]*648Or in other words, that there is a succession of donees exceeding two, namely, three donees, at the end of the twenty-year period, which violates section 2765, Code of 1906, section 2269, Hemingway’s Code, commonly known as the two donee statute. The learned chancellor held that this item of the will did not violate the statute, and' that these three childless children were devised life estates by this item of the will. In the hands of the executor uninvested in real property at the time this suit was filed was about twenty-five thousand dollars, which the court correctly treated as real property because the executor under this item of the will was ordered to invest this money in real property.

We have examined with great care and with a great deal of interest the very able briefs of learned counsel in this cause. It is, of course, axiomatic that the court should be controlled in construing the will by the intention of the testator which should be gathered from the entire will, and that effect should, be given to this intention if not violative of the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 So. 467, 137 Miss. 636, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-turner-miss-1925.