Willett's Adm'r v. Rutter's Adm'r

1 S.W. 640, 84 Ky. 317, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 S.W. 640 (Willett's Adm'r v. Rutter's Adm'r) 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
Willett's Adm'r v. Rutter's Adm'r, 1 S.W. 640, 84 Ky. 317, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 78 (Ky. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy on this appeal from the Harrison Chancery Court involves the construction of the sixth clause of Alex. Rutter’s will, which is as follows, to-wit:

[319]*319“ If, at my death, there shall be any surplus stock or personal property, or any cash or cash notes on hands, it is my will and desire that the stock and personal property may be sold, the money collected .and loaned out during the life of my wife, and at her death I desire that it may be--divided between my said daughter and granddaughter.”

Yiewing this clause in the- light of its own language, the question is, first, did the legatees mentioned therein take a vested interest in the.fund therein mentioned at the death of the testator, or did they take only a contingent interest therein dependent-on the death of the testator’s wife; or, second, granting that the legatees took only a contingent interest in the principal of the sum directed to be divided between them at the death of the wife, did they take a vested interest in the interest arising from the principal 1

First, as to the principal: In the first volume of Jar-man on Wills, side page 760, it is said as to “the rules which regulate the vesting of'personal legacies, the payment of which is postponed to a period subsequent to the decease of • the testator, a leading distinction is, that if futurity is annexed to the substance of the gift, the vesting is suspended, but if it appears to relate to the time of payment, the legacy vests instanter.”

Thus, if the legacy is, in the first instance, given or devised to the legatee, as I give or devise to A certain property, and is then directed to be paid at some definite period of time after the decease of the testator, as when the legatee arrives at twenty-one years of age, then the legacy vests immediately.

The same rule obtains when the legacy is given to two or more persons, with words directing a division or [320]*320distribution of the legacy among them at some future time, as when one shall attain the age of twenty-one years. In other words, the testator must, by the provisions of the will, give an immediate interest in the estate to the legatee ; and the superadded words fixing the time of payment or distribution to some future time must relate to the time of passing the possession of the property to the legatee and not to the gift. (Jar-man on Wills, vol. 1, side page 761.)

On the other hand, “if the payment or distribution is deferred, not merely until the lapse of a definite interval of time, which will certainly arrive, but until an event, which may or may not happen, the effect, it should seem, is to render the legacy itself contingent.”

Also, “where the only gift is in the direction to pay or distribute at a future age, the case is not to be ranked with those in which the payment or distribution only is deferred, but is one in which time is of the essence of the gift.” (Jarman on Wills, p. 762.)

Also, in the case of Roberts' Ex'rs v. Brinker, 4 Dana, 570, this court says: “It is an established rule of construction respecting legacies, that when there is no other legatory expression .or intention than that implied in a direction to pay or distribute at a future time, or on a contingent event, the bequest, nothing else appearing, should be considered as contingent. But as, prima facie, it may be presumed that a testator did not intend that any interest bequeathed in his will should lie dormant or undisposed of after his death, or should ever lapse, therefore, a slight circumstance may be sufficient for showing that a legacy is vested and not contingent.”

[321]*321Also, in the case of Combs' Devisees v. Branch, 4 Dana, 548, it is said: ‘ ‘ Where there is nothing legatory, except what may be implied in the direction to distribute or pay to the legatee, the legacy shall be deemed contingent until the time for distribution or payment, nothing else appearing -for determining the testator’s intention; for in such a case, the time of distribution or payment is considered as annexed as an implied condition to the gift itself.”

Also, to the same effect is the case of Briscoe's Devisees v. Wickliffe, 6 Dana, 158.

Thus we see that when the gift is created simply by directing the payment or distribution of the legacy at some future period of time after the decease of the testator, or upon the happening of a contingent event, and there is no provision in the will for vesting the legacy immediately, then the future time fixed or the happening of the contingency is of the essence of the gift.

It is true that this rule does not prevail when the provisions of the will show a contrary intention of the testator, such as directing the application of the interest accruing on the fund in the interim to the use of the legatee, or application of the rents or use of the property in the interim for the benefit of the legatee. These circumstances will show almost conclusively that the testator intended the body of the property to vest in the legatee immediately also.

So also, if it appear that any interest devised in the will would fail for the want of a legatee^ or be undisposed of after his death, ip. consequence of the legacy not vesting in the legatee until the future period of time, or the happening of the event fixed for the enjoy[322]*322ment of the legacy by the legatee, then the presumption would be strong that the testator, not wishing such a state of affairs to exist, intended the legacy to vest in the legatee immediately.

But here the other provisions of the will show that the testator intended this provision of the will to mean just what its langurge, taken alone, legally imports. For he provides that this fund should be kept out at interest, and by implication that his executor should be the trustee for that purpose. Also, that the legatees should only have a life estate in the property devised to them, and at their death the property was to go to their living children, and the descendants of those that had died, if any; and in case either one of the legatees should die without leaving living children, or descendants of those that had died, then the estate devised to her should go to the other legatee for life, and at her death to her living children, and the descendants of such as might be dead, if any. And in case both of said legatees should die without living children, or living descendants of such as might be dead, then said estate to go to his nearest blood relations.

So we see that the testator provided in the will against the lapse of any of the estate bequeathed, and against the possibility of any of it being undisposed of.

It is also manifest, from the other provisions of the-will, that the testator meant the clause of the will in question to have the effect that its language legally imports ; for the other clauses which give legacies to these-legatees are different in language. They start out by [323]*323the expressions, “I give and bequeath to,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.W. 640, 84 Ky. 317, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willetts-admr-v-rutters-admr-kyctapp-1886.