Stearns v. Stearns

130 A. 112, 103 Conn. 213, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 130 A. 112 (Stearns v. Stearns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stearns v. Stearns, 130 A. 112, 103 Conn. 213, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 123 (Colo. 1925).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The husband and two of the children of the testatrix would construe' the language of the third clause of the will of Mrs. Stearns, “I hereby give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my personal estate,” as devising and bequeathing all the residue and remainder of the real and personal estate of the testatrix. The husband and the two children of the testatrix contend that the term used in the third clause of the will is equivocal or ambiguous as to the property disposed of therein, and *219 that the intent of the testatrix, the ascertainment of which is the primary end of all construction of every will, can only be known by resort to extrinsic evidence, and that the extrinsic evidence offered was admissible to show the purpose of the testatrix in making her will, to be to carry out an arrangement made with her husband that they make mutual wills of a certain character, and that pursuant to that purpose, they instructed a scrivener to make such wills, and both the testatrix and her husband understood 'that the will of the testatrix and that of the husband as drafted by the scrivener and executed by them, had conveyed to the other all the residue of their respective estates after the cash legacies to their children. This claim is based upon the rule of construction of wills as expressed in Wigram’s fifth proposition: “For the purpose of determining the object of a testator’s bounty, or the subject of disposition, or the quantity of interest intended to be given by his will, a court may inquire into every material fact relating to the person who claims to be interested under the will, and to the property which is claimed as the subject of disposition, and to the circumstances of the testator, and of his family and affairs, for the purpose of enabling the court to identify the person or thing intended by the testator, or to determine the quantity of interest he has given by his will.” Wigram on Wills (5th Ed.) p. 56. Quoting and approving this proposition in Thompson v. Betts, 74 Conn. 576, 579, 51 Atl. 564, we add this comment: “In short, the court may, by evidence of extrinsic facts other than direct evidence of the intention of the testator, put itself as near as may be ‘in the condition of the testator in respect to his property, and the situation of his family,’ for the purpose of rightly understanding the meaning of the words of his will.” The contention is made that the term “personal es *220 tate” as used in the will before us is an ambiguous or equivocal term and that the court may receive extrinsic evidence for the purpose of enabling it to determine the quantity of interest given by this term. “Personal estate” is an ambiguous term. It may be used to designate every species of property not coming under the denomination of real estate; in its broader meaning it embraces personal property of every description and kind. Bellow v. Allen’s Administrator, 22 Vt. 108, 110; In re Althause’s Estate, 63 N. Y. App. Div. 252, 71 N. Y. Supp. 445. It may be used to designate personal effects, as jewelry, wearing apparel and the like, but not stocks or intangibles. In re Lippincott’s Estate, 173 Pa. St. 368, 34 Atl. 58, 59. In Southington Bank & Trust Co. v. American Baptist Home Mis. Soc., 96 Conn. 107, 113, 113 Atl. 166, we held that, from the surrounding circumstances, it was clear that the testator used the term “personal estate” in the more restricted sense of personal effects. And when the context and extrinsic evidence does not show that it was used in a restricted sense, it will be held to embrace every form of personal property, that is, all property not falling within the category of real estate. Gallagher v. McKeague, 125 Wis. 116, 103 N. W. 233, 234. Moreover, this term is found in the residuary clause of this will, indicating that the testatrix intended by it to embrace alb of her personal property, of every description and kind and not within the designation of real estate.

Extrinsic evidence can show, between different meanings of this term, the meaning the testatrix intended, but her intention to give something more than the quantity of property that might, be embraced in the term under any of its meanings cannot be shown, for that would be to make a will for the testatrix other than the one she did make. If personal estate as used *221 in this clause has the meaning of personal property of every kind, the equivocation or ambiguity in the use of this term is resolved. The clause would then disclose a clear purpose and a definite meaning which evidence of extrinsic facts indicating a different purpose or intention on the part of the testatrix would not be admitted to contradict, vary or control. The extrinsic evidence admissible under Wigram’s fifth proposition is received “in order to aid a doubtful interpretation, and not so as to materially qualify or contradict the instrument or interpolate a testamentary gift which its own tenor did not justify.” 1 Schouler on Wills (5th Ed.) § 588. Counsel-inveigh against a rule excluding the evidence offered as one which would carry us back to the “stiff and superstitious formalism,” to use the language of Wigmore (2d Ed., Yol. 5, §2461), from which the law had slowly emerged into a condition of “flexible rationalism.” We find no occasion to trace through our own decisions the completeness with which we have accepted and applied Wigram’s fifth proposition. We admit parol evidence of the meaning of the testator in the use of some term or word in a will when the meaning is equivocal or ambiguous. That is a very different proposition from that which would substitute in place of the term or word another term or word not used by the testator, or add to a term or a clause an omission.

In re Curtis-Castle Arbitration, 64 Conn. 501, 30 Atl. 769, is an example of our application of this rule, and with its citations makes the rule easily understood. The attempt to prove by oral evidence that the testatrix intended to devise and bequeath her real estate as well as her personal property when her will gave merely her “personal estate” is not new to this jurisdiction. A similar attempt in related matters has been made on other occasions and uniformly failed. We cite *222 four of the most conspicuous instances. In Mahoney v. Mahoney, 98 Conn. 525, 120 Atl. 342, parol evidence was offered that a testator knew and believed that his daughters never intended to marry, in reality for the purpose of striking from the will the phrase “leaving no child or children at the death, of my said wife.” This was an attempt to show that the testator intended something other than the language of the will expressed. We held that the intention was clearly disclosed in the will, and that evidence to vary that intention could not be considered. In Day v. Webler, 93 Conn. 308, 105 Atl. 618, parol evidence was offered that the testatrix intended by the use of the term “children” to include Mrs. Loomis, who was not a child. We held the offer inadmissible. In Jackson v. Alsop, 67 Conn. 249, 252, 34 Atl. 1106, a devise was made in a will to Dr. Alsop of a one-quarter interest of certain real estate “to him . . .

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Bluebook (online)
130 A. 112, 103 Conn. 213, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stearns-v-stearns-conn-1925.