Warner's Executors v. Swearingen

36 Ky. 195, 6 Dana 195, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 11, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 195 (Warner's Executors v. Swearingen) 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
Warner's Executors v. Swearingen, 36 Ky. 195, 6 Dana 195, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 24 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court;.

Elijah Warner, late of Lexington- in this State — owning a large estate in houses and lots in that city, and in slaves, choses in action, and other chattels — published a will, in January, 1828, whereby he gave to his only son, William Warner, twenty two thousand dollars in real estate and slaves, specifically described, and in money to be obtained from his chattels and choses in action-, and to his only daughter, Elmira Warner, thirty three thou[196]*196sand dollars, in the like specific articles of property, and ¡n money to be raised in the same mode; and then, after making several other bequests and devises to other persons, directed that, if, after satisfying all the devisees an¿ legatees, any surplus of his estate should still remain, it should be divided among all of them pari passu. Having afterwax’ds purchased a tract of land, and several houses and lots and slaves, he died in October, 1829, without having either revoked or republished his will.

Thomas Van Swearingen, who afterwards intermarried with Elmira Warner, claiming for his wife, as undevised, one moiety of the land and slaves thus acquired by the testator, subsequently to the publication of his will, and the executors resisting the claim, and ixxsisting that all the estate to which the testator was entitled at his death, passed by his will, they submitted an agreed case to the Judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, who decided that the slaves passed by the will, but that the land did not; and that, therefore, Mi’s. Sweax’ingen, as heiress, is entitled to one half of the land and lots purchased by her ancestor after publishing his will.

The executors, not being satisfied with that decree, have brought the case to this Court for revision.

Accoi’ding to the civil law of Rome, which divided all property into moveable and immoveable, a general testamentary disposition of a testatox’’s estate had the same constructive effect as to each class, and embraced all the pi'operty, immoveable as well as moveable, to which he was entitled at the time of his death; first — because he had the same right to dispose of his prospective acquisitions of each class of property; and secoxxdly — because a last will was considered as a designatioxx of an heir to succeed the testator, and, therefore, a genei’al heresfactus created by testament, was, to the extent of his testamentary right, deemed as much an heir as a heres natus, and of course, like the latter, was, by a general devise, total or residuary, entitled to property owned by the -testator at his death, although it may have been acquired after the date of his will.

As to personal property and testamentary dispositions of it, the common law adopted, to a very great extent, [197]*197the doctrines'of the Roman civil law respecting moveables, and the disposition of them by last will; because those doctrines were rational and matured, and generally consistent with the local policy and institutions of England, so far as personalty was concerned. And, as such property is peculiarly mutable, and a testamentary disposition of it would be often nugatory, or the testator’s purpose would frequently be frustrated if his will should be restricted to such articles only as he owned at the date of its publication; and as, moreover, according to the ancient common law, all of a testator’s chattels that did not pass by his will, went either to his executor, or to no person; therefore, the testamentary doctrines of the civil law were applied by the common law Judges to moveable property. And consequently, by a general bequest of such property, a testator will, according to the common, as well as the civil law, be understood as speaking at the time of his death, and not at the date of his will. And as slaves are perishable, and not only intrinsically personal, but legally as well as actually moveable, most of the reasons which apply to other moveables apply also to them, so far as there may be any question as to what shall be constructively embraced by a general bequest of slaves, or even by a more comprehensive one of the testator’s personal .estate. The statute of 1800 of this State, declaring that slaves shall pass like land by last will, does no.t, according to the established judicial construction of it, aifect this question, by determining either what slaves shall be embraced by a general devise of the testator’s slaves, or that .no slave shall pass by a general bequest of the testator’s personal estate. This Court has frequently decided that slaves will pass by a general bequest of personal estate, and in the case of Walton's Heirs vs. Walton's Executors, (7 J. J. Marshall, 58,) it was settled that a bequest of all the testator’s slaves, nothing else appearing, embraced all the slaves he owned at his death; and the case of Mason vs. Mason's Executors, (3 Bibb, 448,) clearly implies the recognition of the doctrine that a general devise of slaves will include all the slaves the testator shall own at his death.

The statute of 1800, which declares that slaves shall pass like land by last will, does not affect the construction of the will as to what slaves shall pass by it; but only prescribes the mode in which they shall pass. And it is well settled that, since the statute, slaves pass, as they did before [the statute, by a genera] devise of the testator’s per sonal estate; & that a general devise of slaves will include all the testator owned at the time of his death. In England, a devise of lands applies only to the lands which the testator owned the will; he has there no power to devise those which he may wards Evenañ express devise of testator may acquire if is void. But this results from the peculiar phraseology oftbestatute of wills — -of the law has been respect^ in this State, by a Va. adopted hereby which a testator devisee property thathemay of his death,tho’ he had no title to it when the will was publish-to ’lands* will is here’ undering° atathePtkaé of its publicadhferenWntendon is expressly declared, or is plainly to be inferred from the will itself; and such an intention, will not be inferred from the mere fact that the testator makes a general disposition of his real estate.

[198]*198Prior to the statute of 1800, a will, as to slaves, was construed as speaking at the time of the testator’s death; an(j that statute, as has been determined, was not in-J tended to affect the construction as to what slaves should pass by will, but only prescribed the mode of passing such as the will should be construed as embracing or intending to pass.

But the same doctrine is not applicable in England, and does not necessarily apply here to land, or immoveable property.

The well established doctrine in England, is that, as ^anc^ or °ther real or immoveable estate, a testato1* speaks at the date of his will, and not at the time of his death;.and it is there undeniably settled that, even an express devise of all land which a testator may acquire ter tbe publication of his will, and own at his death, will be void; because, according to the British law, there is no such testamentary power over after-acquired real estate. Although it -is believed that the

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 195, 6 Dana 195, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warners-executors-v-swearingen-kyctapp-1838.