Turner v. Withers

23 Md. 18, 1865 Md. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 28, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 23 Md. 18 (Turner v. Withers) 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
Turner v. Withers, 23 Md. 18, 1865 Md. LEXIS 10 (Md. 1865).

Opinion

Bartol, J.,

delivered the opinion of this Court:

James Oalder, late of Baltimore county, died in the year 1808, leaving a last will and testament, executed on the 14th day of May 1807. This will was duly attested, so as to pass real estate. Those parts of the will, upon the construction of which the decision of these appeals depends, are as follows:

i£I give and bequeath unto my wife, Margaret Calder, the one-sixth part of the rents and profits of all my lands during her life, in six equal parts to be divided, and the one equal sixth part of all my personal estate, after my debts and funeral expenses are paid, according to an agreement made between us previous to marriage.
“I give and devise to my son, George, and to my four daughters, Margaret, Mary, Sarah and Charlotte, all my lands, tenements, hereditaments and real estate whatever and wheresoever, during the term of their natural lives, to be equally divided between them, without impeachment of waste, and with full power to grant leases, reserving a reasonable rent of all or any part of the said lands for any term not exceeding the term of seven years, subject, nevertheless, to the above devise of one-sixth part of the rents and profits of my said lands to my wife, during her life.
C£I also give to my said son George, and to each of my said daughters, the one equal sixth part of mjr personal estate, share and share alike with my wife.
££I further will and devise, that if my said son or either of my daughters shall die without leaving any children or descendants alive at his or her decease, the part or parts of my lands and estate devised to such child or children so dying, shall be equally divided between my remaining children during the term of their natural lives, without impeachment of waste, and with like power to lease the same, as above provided.
££I also will and direct, that at the death of any of my said children, who shall leave any child or children alive at his or her decease, or any descendant of such child or [38]*38children, the part of my lands which my child so dying shall he entitled to for his or her life, shall belong to, and I do hereby devise the same, unto the child or children of my child so dying, or to their descendants, as the case may he; if more than one, to he equally divided between them and to their heirs forever, per stirpes, and not per capita.
“In case of the death of all my children without issue, 1 give and devise all my estate to my friend, John Grwynn, and to his heirs forever.” „

The widow and five children of the testator survived him. The widow renounced her rights under the will, and died long since. George, the son, died in 1809, without any children, never having been married.

In 1811 the four daughters made a division between them, by metes and bounds, of all the real estate of the testator, including the interest of George. Mary, one of the daughters, having married-Little, whom she survived, died in 1852, leaving children and descendants of deceased children, among whom the part allotted to her in the division' was divided by proceedings in the Circuit Court for Baltimore county. No question arises upon those proceedings, and it is unnecessary to refer to them further, except to say, that by the original division two tracts of land, consisting of about 1,174 acres, near Parkton, in Baltimore county, became the property of Margaret Park, one of the daughters, in severalty for hef'Tife, and after her death^ to be held in severalty by those entitled in remainder under the will of James Calder.

Margaret Park survived her husband, and died on the 1st day of July 1860, leaving no children or descendants.

The;-questions in this case are upon the proper division of the real estate held by Margaret under the will.

The only children of James Calder now living, are Sarah Turner, one of the complainants, and Charlotte Withers, one of the respondents, both of whom have children living, who are parties to this suit. The children and descendants of Mary Little are also parties.

[39]*39The complainants, and Charlotte Withers and her representatives, contend, that by a proper construction of the will of James Calder, the land acquired thereunder by Margaret Part, that is, the one-fifth of his estate devised to her for life, and her one-fourth of George's share, which, on his death, survived to her, passed, on her death, to her two surviving sisters, Sarah Turner and Charlotte Withers, in undivided moieties for their several lives, and after their several deaths, will pass to their children or descendants who may he living at the time of their several deaths, in fee; the children or descendants of each to have the undivided moiety of their mother, per stirpes, and not per capita.

The judge of the Circuit Court adopted this construction of the will, and decreed accordingly, as to the original share or one-fifth part devised to Margaret by the will; but deciding that a share having once survived, would not survive again, decreed that the part of Margaret’s estate which had accrued to her by the death of George, (being one-fifth thereof,) should be divided between the heirs-at-law of James Calder, to whom .it had descended. From this decree all parties have appealed.

The cause has been argued with much ability and learning ; and a great number of cases have been cited and relied upon in support of the various points and theories presented by the counsel in argument. Without attempting a particular examination of the various theories and rules of construction suggested by counsel, or entering upon an analysis of the cases cited in their support, we think the true construction of the will can be more easily and satisfactorily determined by a careful examination of the terms of the will itself, keeping in view the well-settled rules of law governing the questions before us; and aided in their application by reference to a few adjudged cases.

The question in dispute is, whether the children and descendants of Mary Little, deceased, are entitled to a share of the land of Margaret Park, devised under the will oí [40]*40James Calder; and that question involves, first, the inquiry as to that part of Margaret Park's lands originally devised' to her for life; and secondly, as to that part which accrued to her by the death of her brother George.

1st. As to the original share: By the plain words of the will the estate of Margaret Park was for her life only, and the limitation over after -her death, is a contingent remainder. This is clear upon all the authorities. “It is a general rule in the construction of wills, that a limitation which may operate as a contingent remainder, shall not he construed an executory devise.” Hoxton vs. Archer, 3 G. & J., 211.

The remainder is limited with a double aspect, — if she leave any child or descendants alive at the time of her death, then to them in fee; if she leave none, (which is the contingency that has actually hajjpened,) then the devise is to the remaining children of the testator for life. Who are the remaining children of the testator ? Only Sarah Turner and Charlotte Withers. They therefore take, by the plain terms of the will, as tenants for life.

The counsel for the heirs of Mrs. Little, have contended that the words •remaining children,

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Bluebook (online)
23 Md. 18, 1865 Md. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-withers-md-1865.