Taylor v. Mason

9 U.S. 325
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 3, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 U.S. 325 (Taylor v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Mason, 9 U.S. 325 (1824).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion.of the Court; and, after stating, the case, proceeded as follows:

If the estate. should yield . any surplus profits, after satisfying the charges placed, on it by the tes-tátor, J. T. M. is directed to account for. those profits, and they are the property of “ the person that may have the right,” according to the language of the will.

Are the heirs at law the persons “who havéAhe right,” according to this language ?

Certainly not. The plain intention of the will is to exclude them. They admit this; and support their claim by alleging that the will, safar as respects the devises which are to táke place after the death of J. T; M., is'utterly void, the limitations over being too remote.

The first limitátion is to the male heirs óf my nephew, J. T. M., lawfully begotten, for ever, agreeably to the law of Englandthat is, the oldest male heir to take all.

If the clause stopped here, there could be no question in the case. The person who should be the eldest male heir of J. T. M. at the . time of his death, would take the estate. But the testator proceeds to prescribe the “terms” on which such [340]*340eldest male heir should take. They are, “ that the name of the one that may have the right, at the age of twenty-one, with his consent, be changed to Abraham Barnes, by an act of public authority of the State, without any name added, together with his taking an oath before he has possession “that he will not make any change during his life in this my will, relative to my real property. And on his refusing to comply with the above mentioned terms, to the next male heir, on the above mentioned terms; and so on, to all the male heirs of my nephew, J. T. M., as may be, on the above terms; and all of them refusing to comply in a reasonable time after they have arrived at the age of twenty-one, say not exceeding twelve months, if in that time it can be done, so that no act of intention to defeat my will shall be allowed of; and on their refusing to comply with the terms above mentioned, if any- such person may be, then to the son of my late nephew, H. T. M.” &c.

The time allowed the eldest male heir of J. T.M. to perform the condition on which his estate would, according to the words of the will, become absolute, is twelve months after he shall attain his age of twenty-one years. As J. T. M. might die, leaving np son alive at his death, but leaving his wife ensient of a son, it is obvious that the contingency on which the estate depended might not happen within a life, or lives,’ in being, or within twenty-one years and nine months after the death of J. T. M. If, therefore, the estate did not vest until the contingency should happen* the limitation over to the eldest male heir of j. T. M., dé-[341]*341ponds on an event which is too remote to be tolerated by the policy of the law, and the remainder is, consequently, void. If, on the contrary, the estate is to vest on the death of J. T. M., to be devested on the non-performance of the condition, the limitation in remainder is valid, and the plaintiffs are not entitled to the account for which the bill prays.

The inquiry, then, is, whether the conditions annexed to the devise of the remainder, be precedent or subsequent; and this, it is admitted, must be determined by the intention of the testator, which intention is to be searched for in his will.

All the instruments of writing purporting to be his last will, show that his firm and continuing purpose, from the 31st day of October, in the year 1789, to the time of his death, in the year 1804, was to preserve his estate entire for the benefit of a single devisee, and, not to permit it to be divided among his heirs. The same papers, likewise., show that the first object of his affection and bounty, was J. T. M.; and the second, was the eldest male heir of J. T. M. An ample and unconditional provision, perhaps equivalent to the whole value of bis real estate, is-made for J. T. M. during his life; and on his death, the whole real estate, with any residuum of profit which might possibly be ac: cumulated during his life, is given to his. eldest male heir. If these devises should be expressed in ambiguous language, this obvious and* paramount intention, ought to- serve as a key to the construction*

The language of the devise in remainder, imports an intention that it should take effect on the [342]*342determination of the particular estate. So soon as J. T. M., the first object of his bounty, is removed, the eldest male heir of J.T. M., the second object of Lis bounty, comes into view : “1 give the whole of my property” “to the male heirs of my nephew, J. T. M., lawfully begotten, for ever, agreeable to-the law of England ; that is, the oldest male heir to take all, on the following terms,” &c. These words postpone the interest of the devisee no longer than till he can be ascertained ; that is, till the death of J. T. M., who was to occupy the premises for his life. The eldest male heir of J. T. M. would be known at his death, at which time the particular estate which was carved out of this general devise, v mid determine, or at farthest, within nine nr nths afterwards. The language is not such as a man would be apt to use who contemplated any interval between the particular estate and. the remainder. The words import the same intention, as ifhehadsaid, I give to the eldest male heir of J. T. M. all my property, on condition that, at the age of twenty-one years, his name be changed to that of Abraham Barnes, by an act of public authority of the State, &c. . Such words, it seems to the Court, would carry the estate immediately to the devisee, without yvaiting for the performance of the condition.

. With this general intent, manifested in each of these instruments, and this language, showing the expectation that no interest would intervene between the particular estate devised to J. T. M. and that to his eldest male heir, the conditions oh whiclj that devise was made, must be expressed [343]*343in language to show very clearly, that they were to be performed before the estate could vest, to justify the Court in putting that construction on this will.

Let that language be examined. The devise is of the whole property to the male heirs of J. T. M., in succession, the eldest to take first. The condition is to be performed by “ the one that may have the right;” In the mind of the testator, then, the right was to precede the condition, not be created, by it. He would not have described the person who was to perform the condition, as already having “ the right,” if the impression on his mind had been, that no person would have the right until the condition should be performed.

This expression is entitled to the more influence, from'the consideration that the condition is to be performed by the person having the right at the age of twenty-one, or in a convenient timé after-wards. The devisee might be an infant at the time of the death of J. T. M. The person who has thé right, if an infant, is allowed till he attains his age of twenty-one years, and .a reasonable time afterwards, to perform the condition. This is -inconsistent with the .idea that the condition must be performed before the estate vested, before the right accrued.

. The testator then directs, m addition to the change of name, that an oath, prescribed in his will, shall be taken, and then proceeds, “ and on his (the person that may have the right) refusing [344]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blythe v. City of San Diego
S.D. California, 2025

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 U.S. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-mason-scotus-1824.