Timberlake v. Parish's

35 Ky. 345, 5 Dana 345, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 10, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 Ky. 345 (Timberlake v. Parish's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timberlake v. Parish's, 35 Ky. 345, 5 Dana 345, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 72 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

James Parish, who died early in the year 1830, leaving a widow by whom he had no children, and also leaving six children by a former marriage, made a will, admitted to record in April, 1830, by which he directed his execu[346]*346tor to sell and distribute among his children, or their representatives, so as to make them all equal, the whole of his estate, real and personal, after satisfying the following legacy to his surviving “wife;” — “First, I give and be- “ queath unto my beloved wife, Tabitha Parish, one negro man named Harry, twelve hundred dollars in gold or silver, one horse — her choice of my stock of horses, “ one gig and harness, one choice bed and furniture, two “ cows and calves, five head of sheep, and one bureau— “ all of which property my said wife is to hold for her “ own use and benefit during her natural life, .and, at her death, to descend to her grand-daughter, Mary Brand.”

Mrs. Parish having, according .to the statute of this State on that subject, renounced the provision made for her by the will, the County Court allotted to .her .one third of the personal estate and of the land .and slaves. And thereupon, the executor, being of the .opinion that the legacy in remainder to Mary Brand, had been destroyed by the widow’s renunciation, sold, for about one hundred and fifty dollars, all the .perishable property embraced in it, excepting Harry, whom he retained in his .own hands; and, after Mrs. Parish’s death, in December, 1834, he refused to deliver to Mary Brand, any portion of the legacy bequeathed to .her, insisting, as he doubtless believed, that she was entitled to nothing. Afterwards, in October, 1835, Henry H. Timberlake, who had, in the mean time, intermarried with Mary Brand, whilst she was a minor, brought this suit in chancery, in his own name and in that of his wife, against the executor, William Woods, for enforcing their claim to the legacy. The executor, in his answer, resisted the prayer for relief, on the plea that, by the renunciation by the legatee of the particular estate, the legacy in remainder had been destroyed. And the Circuit Court, upon the hearing of the case on the bill and answer, and some depositions tending, if admissible, to prove, in some degree, that the whole legacy to the widow and her granddaughter, who was no blood relation of the testator, was intended as a substitute for the widow’s legal interest, as widow, dismissed the bill absolutely; and this appeal brings up, for revision, that decree.

As the intention generally prevails in a will, an executory interest may be created by it, without the intervention of an immediate estate; and the fact, that an estate for life given by a will, was not accepted, does not, per se, destroy the remainder — as it might where the gift was by deed-; the remainder being made not to depend on the particular estate, but to succeed to it, the consequence of the of the latter, might be, that the devisee in remainder would succeed to the possession immediately, instead of being postponed till the death of the devisee for life. A testator bequeathed a sum of money,a slave and other chattels to his wife to hold &c during her natural life, and, at her death,to descend to her granddaughter:” held that the term ‘descend,’ thus used in the will, is legatory; and that the granddaughter takes a vested remainder, and not a contingent interest as successor to the wife; that the testator’s intention Was to give the legacy to the grand daughter, for her own sake, and independently of the widow’s acceptance or refusal of the estate for life; and that, though the widow—preferring the interest which the law gave her—renounced her legacy, that fact did not destroy or defeat the legacy in remainder given to the granddaughter—there being nothing in the will indicating an intention on the part of the testator, that the grand daughter’s legacy was to depend upon the election which he is presumed to have known the widow had a right to make.

The fact that the particular estate was not accepted, and therefore did not take effect, did not, per se, destroy the remainder, as it might have done, had the document of title been a deed instead of a will; for, not only does the intention generally, prevail in a will, but an executory interest may be created by it, without the intervention or support of an intermediate estate. And therefore, as every distinct legacy or devise, without any expressed motive or object, will be deemed, in the absence of any intimation to the contrary, in the will, a bounty to each several devisee or legatee, the non-acceptance or forfeiture by one, cannot destroy the separate right of another beneficiary, but would have the effect only of hastening the enjoyment by the latter, when his vested interest was made—not to depend upon the former, but only to succeed it.

Nor will the well established rules prescribed for interpreting testamentary provisions, allow the deduction, from the face of the will in this case, that the legacy to Mrs. Timberlake was given as a consideration in lieu of her'gran'd-mother’s legal rights,as survivor of the testator.

Although the testator only declared that the slave, money and other chattels bequeathed to her grand-mother for life, shall “descend to herself, nevertheless, the legal interpretation of that declaration is, that it was legatory, and therefore, that she would be entitled to a vested remainder as a legatee, and not to a contingent interest as a successor of the testator’s wife, whose interest was limited by the will to her own life. The language of the will imports that the testator intended that, after his wife’s death, Mary Brand should be entitled to the-property bequeathed to the former for life, and, of course, all her right to the remainder being derived from his bounty, he must have used the word “descend” synonimously with pass, or other word of purchase from him[348]*348self. Nor can we feel authorized to decide that, though she was a legatee, her grand-mother was the only consideration of the bequest to her, or that she should have nothing unless it should pass to her through her grand-mother, and in consequence of her grand-mother’s acceptance of the life estate provided for her by the will.

According to the common law, a legacy to the wife is not construed as having been given in lieu of the slaves or her thirds — unless the intention that it should so operate, is expressed, or plainly to be inferred from the will, or unless any other interpretation, would be plainly inconsistent; &, independent of the statute of this state, a devise of a portion of a testator’s estate to his wife, and all the residue to others, or of the whole to be sold for the benefit of the wife and others, does not authorize the conclusion that the devise to her, was intended to be in lien of her dower (nothing appearing in the will, indicating that such was the testator’s intention,) and the other devisees, or the purchasers under the will, in such case, will take subject to the right of dower.— But the act of 1796 § 24 requires a renunciation by the widow, of the provision made for her by the will, before she can be entitled to any interest in the chattels

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ky. 345, 5 Dana 345, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timberlake-v-parishs-kyctapp-1837.