Taubenhan v. Dunz

20 Ill. App. 262, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 132
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 8, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ill. App. 262 (Taubenhan v. Dunz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taubenhan v. Dunz, 20 Ill. App. 262, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 132 (Ill. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Moran, J.

The question for determination is, what is the correct construction of the words in the last clause of the will, “ and all other property of every kind.”

Appellant’s contention is, that those words are to be construed as bequeathing only property ejusdem generis with loose property in, on and around the homestead, and that as to such portion of his estate as was not specifically disposed of in his will, Charles Medler died intestate.

It is contended for appellants that where bequests are made by words of enumeration, "which are followed in the same clause by collective words, or words of general description, the latter are to be confined to matters ejusdem generis. The earlier cases in England, which are cited by counsel, give a degree of support to .their contention, but an examination of those cases shows that a rule can not be drawn from them, as each case depends upon the peculiar phraseology of the will.

In Rawlings v. Jennings, 13 Vesey, 39, where the bequest was to the wife, of certain bank stock, together with all testator’s “household furniture and effects, of what nature or kind soever,” that he might be possessed of at the time of his decease, the master of rolls held that the bequest was to be confined to articles of the nature of those specified, and did not comprise the general residue. But immediately following the general clause of the will, the testator gave bequests of money to different persons, and among others a pecuniary legacy to his said wife, and the court laid stress on that fact, observing that part of the property being given to her afterward, the word effects must receive a more limited construction.

Mr. Jarman, in his work on Wills, remarks on this case, that •¿he words of the will were very general, “ but the manner in which the testator, after making the bequest in question, had g..ne on to give specific and pecuniary legacies, seemed hardly reconcilable with the supposition that the prior gift to the wife was intended to embrace the general residue, as it is more natural, though certainly not invariable, for the testator to reserve his residuary disposition until the end of his will.”

In Dole v. Johnson, 3 Allen, 364, by the third clause of the will, the testator gave to his wife “ all my real and personal estate * * so long as she shall remain my widow.” By the fourth clause he gave “all my household furniture, wearing apparel and all the rest and residue of my personal property.” The personal estate having been in one clause for life and the personal property in the other absolutely, the court considering that the things named in the fourth clause are chattels of strictly personal use, regard the meaning of the whole will as made more consistent by restricting the word property in that clause to chattels ejusdem generis with those enumerated therein, and regarding productive personal property as covered by the words “all my personal estate,” in which not an absolute but a life interest was given by the third clause of the will.

But in the later case of Brown v. Cogswell, reported in 5 Allen, 556, the same judge held that under a clause of a will giving “ all my household furniture, wearing apparel and all the rest and residue of my personal property, saving-and excepting one feather bed,” the legatee therein named took the whole of the residue of testator’s personal property, although no intention is expressed in the will to dispose of the testator’s whole estate, and the will, in subsequent clauses, gives various specific legacies in money, and although various collateral heirs at law of the testator, one of whom is nearer in degree than the legatees therein named, are not mentioned in the will. It was argued that the case was governed by Dole v. Johnson, and the court observed that while no reason was seen to question the correctness of that decision, yet it was to be observed “ that it was a case of great difficulty, by no means free from doubt, and which carried the doctrine upon which it rests as far as it can safely extend.”

Johnson v. Goss, 328 Mass. 433, was a case like Dole v. Johnson, in that the court makes the same distinction between articles of personal use and convenience and personal property of a productive nature, such as mortgages and bank stock. The bequest was “ all my personal property, my household effects, horse and carriage, my life insurance and two mortgages on real estate,” which are described. The court said, “ It is clear beyond doubt that the testator did not intend to use the words ‘all my personal property,’ in their ordinary sense, because he proceeds to give his wife and other legatees large portions of his invested and productive personal property. And it was accordingly held that mortgages not described by the testator in the clause did not pass under the terms.

In Fraser v. Alexander, 2 Dev. Eq. 348, the testator directed, that “all my property, consisting of lands, stock of every kind, household and kitchen furniture, wagon and farming tools, be sold at public sale, and the money thence arising ” to be given to three certain churches. It was claimed that negro slaves passed by the general words “ all my property.” The court held that the words following, viz: “ stock,” etc., qualified the use of the preceding larger term, but the decision is made to rest mainly on the fact that the negroes are -referred to in another clause. The court say: “ But whatever doubt might arise on that clause standing by itself, it is removed by the subsequent one, which relates to the negroes specially. From that it is clear they were not intended to pass by the first, because they are directed to be disposed of by private sale, a manner different from the articles enumerated in the first. This difference being in the contemplation of the testatrix, she must be considered as purposely withholding them from the former provision for the sale of the latter, although she afterward makes no actual disposition of the proceeds that does not bring the proceeds again within the operation of the clauses from which they had been designedly excluded.”

Farish v. Cook, 78 Mo. 212, is simply an adjudication that the words in a will “ all my worldly goods,” do not embrace real estate where the context of the will shows that they were not understood to do so by the testator ; the court say, “But the subsequent language indicates by its enumeration, that he did not intend it should include real estate, for he continues, ‘ consisting of household furniture, clothing, beds and bedding, money and cattle.’ He wills her his worldly goods, and tells what they are, thus restricting the meaning to personal property. He next wills the debts due him, which, as rights of action, do not ordinarily fall under the designation of 1 goods.’ He next proceeds to dispose of his real estate, making special mention of it, which naturally excludes that kind of property from the operation of the language which he had restricted to certain kinds of personal property.”

In Wrench v. Jutting, 3 Beav.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ill. App. 262, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taubenhan-v-dunz-illappct-1886.