Spence v. Robins

6 G. & J. 507
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 G. & J. 507 (Spence v. Robins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spence v. Robins, 6 G. & J. 507 (Md. 1834).

Opinion

Stephen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question arising in this case is important and interesting to the parties, and the decision of it has been found not free from difficulty. It arises upon the construction to be given to the will of the late Judge Robins, in that part of it which contains the following devises and bequest. After giving to his wife a life estate in certain of his lands he devises the same in the following manner : “ from and after her decease, I give and devise the said real estate and lands which I have herein before given to her during her natural life, to my youngest son during his natural life, and no longer; and from and immediately after my said youngest son’s decease, I give and devise the same to my said youngest son’s first son, and the heirs male of his body begotten ; and in case my said son’s first son should die without such issue male, as aforesaid, then I devise the same to my said son’s second son, and the heirs male of his body begotten ; and in case my said son’s second son should die without such male issue as aforesaid, then I give and devise the same lands last mentioned to my said son’s third son, and the heirs male of his body; and in case my said son’s third son should die without such issue male as aforesaid, then I devise the said lands to my said son’s fourth son, and his heirs male begotten forever, and so on, with like limitations as aforesaid, on the contingencies aforesaid, to my said son’s fifth, sixth, or other sons. And in case my said youngest son should die without leaving such heirs male, then I give and devise the said lands last mentioned to my said youngest son’s daughter or daughters, as tenants in common, if more than one, in special tail male to each daughter. And in case my said youngest son should die without leaving at the time of his death either sons or daughters, or such issue as aforesaid, of said sons or [511]*511daughters, then I give and devise the said lands to my eldest son, John P. Robins, and his heirs forever, on his paying my three daughters three dollars per acre for all the said lands lying on the west side of the county road, and excluding all mortgaged lands, adjoining said lands included in this devise which I may hold, it not being my intention to pass said mortgaged lands by this my will.” In the discussion of this case, several questions have been raised by the solicitors for the parties, and argued with great legal learning and ability ; but the most prominent and important one depends upon the character of the bequest to the daughters of the testator; that is to say, whether it was a legacy in its nature purely and absolutely contingent, or whether it vested prior to the happening of the contingency, so as to be transmissible to their representatives in case of their deaths or the deaths of either of them before the contingency happened. The decision of this question, and the principle involved it, particularly affects the complainant in this cause, whose wife departed this life before the contingency happened, upon which the contingent limitation to the testator’s eldest son was, to take effect, according to the provisions of the will. The rules of law in relation to legacies, make, unquestionably, a distinction between such as are payable out of real, and such as are payable out of personal estate; and legacies which they hold to be vested and transmissible, when payable out of the latter, will sink for the benefit of the heir or devisee, when charged on the real estate, as if a legacy is given to a legatee by words of immediate or present gift, but payable at a future period, as at the age of twenty-one, it is deemed a vested legacy; and if payable out of the personal estate, will not lapse though the legatee should die before the period arrives designated for the payment of it, but on his death will be transmissible to the personal representative; but if such legacy be charged upon land, it will merge in the land for the benefit of the heir or devisee. This is the general rule, and it is applied in all cases where the time of pay[512]*512ment is postponed on account of considerations having a personal reference to the legatee, unless it is controlled by some"'express provision of the will, or the manifest intention of the testator to the contrary, as where the legacy is payable at twenty-one or marriage, then if the legatee die before the age of maturity or marriage, the legacy sinks in the land, and will not be raised; for, in the language of the books, the law will not load or burthen the heir or devisee for the benefit of the executor. But the principle seems to be equally well established, particularly by the more modern authorities, that wherever it is apparent that the gift was not made immediate, but that the time of payment was postponed for the convenience of the estate, and not from considerations of a personal nature applicable to the legatee, the legacy shall not lapse, though the legatee should die before the contingency happens, upon the occurrence of which it is made payable. In such case it does not seem to be necessary, where the legacy is charged upon the land, that there should be express words of immediate gift to constitute the legacy so far vested as to make it transmissible; but that the legatee may acquire, without them, such an interest in the legacy as will go to the personal representative, and prevent its merger. It is true that, in many of the cases to be found in the books, the legacies have been charged upon vested remainders, and it has been said that the remainder being vested, the legacies charged upon them shall be deemed vested likewise: as, where an estate has been limited to A for life, remainder to B, and a legacy has been charged upon the remainder limited to B, there the legacy will be held to be vested, because the remainder upon which it is charged is vested. But it does not appear to be necessary that the legacy should absolutely vest in order to become transmissible in case of the death of the legatee before the contingency happens, upon which it is made payable. 2 Fearne on Remainders, 531, 532. The case of King vs. Withers, establishes the same principle, because the event upon which the additional [513]*513legacy was given to the daughter might never have happened, and yet the Ld. Chancellor determined, that it so far vested as to be transmissible upon the death of the daughter, before the contingency happened. Cas. Temp. Talb. 117. This is a case strikingly analogous to the present, and was strongly pressed upon the argument as decisive of the question in this case. That it establishes the principle that a possibility is transmissible, was the opinion of Ld. Kenyon, as may be seen in the opinion delivered by him in 3d Term. R. 94. In that case ho quotes a decision, C. J. Winns, where he says, “ the question is, whether an executory devise be transmissible ? Most of the old cases which hold that they are not devisable, were before executory devises were well established. But that doctrine is now exploded. Executory devises are not naked possibilities, but are in the nature oí contingent remainders; and there is no doubt but that such estates are transmissible, and consequently devisable.” Ld. Kenyon then uses the following language : “here then the chief justice gave a clear opinion that a possibility was devisable. That it is also transmissible, appears from the cases of King vs. Withers, and Marks vs. Marks, as establishing the same principle.

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Bluebook (online)
6 G. & J. 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spence-v-robins-md-1834.