Warren v. Webb

68 Me. 133, 1878 Me. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 2, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 68 Me. 133 (Warren v. Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Webb, 68 Me. 133, 1878 Me. LEXIS 45 (Me. 1878).

Opinion

DioKerson, J.

This case is presented on report, and involves a construction of the will of Samuel Whitmore, late of Deer Isle, deceased. The principal questions arise under the second item in the will, which is as follows: I give, bequeath and devise to my beloved wife, Abigail H. Whitmore, for and during her natural life, all my estate and property, real, personal and mixed, wherever found and however situated, to have and to hold the same to her and her assigns, for and during the term aforesaid, for her proper use, benefit and support' and maintenance ; and after her decease, said-estate and property, or the residue and remainder thereof, to be legally divided to and among my children, namely,” etc. The first item of the will provides for the payment of the testator’s debts and funeral charges by his executors, Seth Whitmore and William Whitmore, who returned an inventory of the estate in June, 1867. One of the executors, William Whitmore, died before any account was filed by the executors in the probate court. Seth Whitmore, the surviving executor, filed the first and only account in the probate court, in June, 1870, charging himself with the personal estate, and giving credit to the estate for debts paid, including the sum of $54,747.56 [135]*135paid to the widow. That aeooiiDt shows a balance, due the estate from the executors, of $121.27. Subsequently to filing this account, Seth Whitmore resigned his trust as executor, whereupon the present plaintiffs, Thomas Warren and Franklin Clos-son, were appointed administrators de bonis non; they filed an inventory in the probate court, December term, 1871, consisting of real estate appraised at $280.00, and personal property, mostly household furniture, amounting to $208.00. No question arises with regard to the payment of the debts or funeral charges of the testator, who died April 3, A. D. 1864.

The intention of the testator, as deduced from the language of the instrument, is the criterion for the interpretation of wills. When ascertained, such intention is to have effect, unless it is inconsistent with the rules of law. The disposing words of the will, “give, bequeath and devise ” to the testator’s wife all his property, real and personal, “ during her natural life,” with remainder over to his children, creates a life estate only, unless the subsequent language enlarges, limits or qualifies their meaning. But for the limitation of the habendum, “ during the term aforesaid,” that would seem to enlarge the estate created; but with that limitation it does not admit of that construction. It is, however, clear that the subsequent words, “ for her proper use ” and “benefit,” are not synonymous with the phrase, “ for her support and maintenance,” but have a more enlarged signification, and imply that the devisee was not only to have simply “ her support and maintenance ” out of the estate, but, also, a right to employ it for her advantage, gain and profit. Her right of “ use ” and “benefit ” was superadded to her right of “support” and “maintenance;” otherwise those prior words are meaningless. Consequently the devisee liad such power over and control of the estate devised as was reasonably necessary, not only to secure her “ support ” and “ main tenanee,” but, also, to facilitate her “ proper use ” and “ benefit ” thereof.

The subsequent clause, providing for the division, among the testator’s children, of “ said estate and property, or the residue and remainder thereof,” after the devisee’s decease, has the same implication. This language necessarily implies the liability of the [136]*136estate to be diminished while in the hands of the devisee, and as there is no provision in the will for its diminution except through her agency, her right of control and even of disposal, at least upon the happening of one or more of the contingencies contemplated in the will, is inescapable. Something more must have been intended by this phraseology than the residue and remainder,” after the ordinary wear and tear of the property, natural decay and loss by inevitable accident, else the rights of the remainder-man would have been expressly qualified by such contingencies. Besides, the law would take notice of such considerations in determining the rights of parties, whether mentioned in the will or not.

In Harris v. Knapp, 21 Pick. 412, 416, a case strongly analogous to the one at bar, the testatrix devised one-half of what remained of her real and personal estate to her daughter, “ for her use and disposal during her life,” and whatever should remain at her death she gave to other relatives. The court gave great force and effect to the phrase, whatever shall remain at her death,” deducing from it the conclusive implication that the devisee had the right to dispose of the property. The use of the word “ disposal ” in the will, however, undoubtedly contributed to the conclusion arrived at by the court.

In Stevens v. Winship, 1 Pick. 318, the court held that the wife took only a life estate with a contingent power to sell, under a will devising a messuage to her for life and giving her full power to sell all his real and personal estate for her comfortable support, in case she should stand in need. In that case, it was decided that the wife took only a life estate with a contingent power to sell, and that the burden is on those claiming under the wife to show that the power was well executed, and that the contingency had happened; and that the jury were to determine whether the contingency existed. See, also, Larned v. Bridge, 17 Pick. 339.

In Scott v. Perkins, 28 Maine, 22, 35, the bequest was of the estate and income, to be disposed of for the devisee’s comfort and convenience during life, and the court held that she had a right to sell and dispose of the personal estate when that was necessary [137]*137for ber comfort and convenience, and that it was for the jury to determine whether such contingency had arisen, in a controversy between the vendee of the personal estate, who purchased it of the devisee, and a third party, having received delivery of it from the administrator. The jury found for the vendee of the devisee, and the court sustained their verdict.

The principal case is obviously no stronger in support of the devisee’s unqualified power of disposal than the last two cases cited, where the word disposal ” was used in the will and the court substantially denied such power. It is more like Downing v. Johnson, 5 Coldw. (Tenn.) 229, where the bequest was to the wife “ of the whole estate, both real and personal, for and during her natural life, to be by her freely possessed and enjoyed. . . the balance of the property, money or other effects that might be on hand at her decease,” to go to others. In that case the court held that the wife was entitled to the possession, use and enjoyment, during her life, of all the property belonging to the testator at the time of his death, and that if her support and maintenance, in her discretion, required it, she could consume the corpus of the entire estate except the land.

The court are of opinion that it was not the intention of the testator to empower his widow to sell the estate bequeathed to her, in any event, at her will and pleasure, but that she took a life estate, with an implied power to sell upon the happening of the contingency or con tingencies, and to effectuate the purposes mentioned in the will; her power to sell depended upon these; if they did not require a disposal of the property the widow had only a life estate.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Me. 133, 1878 Me. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-webb-me-1878.