Wyman v. Johnson

59 S.W. 250, 68 Ark. 369, 1900 Ark. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 59 S.W. 250 (Wyman v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyman v. Johnson, 59 S.W. 250, 68 Ark. 369, 1900 Ark. LEXIS 81 (Ark. 1900).

Opinion

Bunn, C. J.

Joseph M. Johnson, a citizen of Lee county, died on the 28th day of July, 1887, the owner of a plantation in said county and a small amount of personal property, all of which last was absorbed in the course of the administration of his estate. He made his last will and testament on the 27th day of September, 1886, and after his death this, was duly probated. This suit was brought by the grandchildren of the testator, who are named as beneficiaries in the will, to have the same construed, and to set aside as invalid a certain deed of trust made by their parents, wherein the plantation was conveyed, and for general relief.

The parts of the will involved in this discussion are as follows, viz.: “(2) I want M. J. Johnson, my faithful friend and sister-in-law, to have and be supported out of my effects so long as she shall live, should she not otherwise have a sirfflcient support. (3) I waut half of all the property that I now own or may own at my death to be set apart for the benefit of the heirs of my son, Samuel H. Johnson. My son, Samuel H. Johnson, can have and control said property during his natural life, but said property shall not be subject to the debts of Samuel H. Johnson. If at his death his wife shall be living, she can control the property as long as she remains the widow of Samuel H. Johnson. (4) I want the remaining half of my property at my death to be set apart for the benefit of the heirs of Edna Gibson. I want S. A. Gibson, the husband of my daughter, Edna Gibson, to hold and control said property as long as he remains her husband, but said property shall not be subject to or be taken for his debts. Now, if my daughter should die, and her husband, S. A. Gibson, should marry again, then said property shall be taken charge of by the executors of this will, and used for the benefit of the heirs of Edna Gibson. (5) I want the executors of this will (before my estate is divided) to pay John M. Johnson, B. F. Johnson and Nannie J. Sapp the sum of one hundred dollars each. (6) I leave my dutiful son, Samuel H. Johnson, and my beloved nephew, John M. Johnson, and my son-in-law, S. A. Gibson, executors of my will.”

It is suggested in argument that the very language of this will shows that its author was an ignorant or unlearned person, and this is true, bur it bears no internal evidence of a want of common sense. It is, at all events, sufficiently explicit, we think, as an expression of his will, to show the real intention and wishes of the testator. After the death of the testator the property remained undivided, both as between the two sets of grandchildren, per stirpes, and also as between these grandchildren individually, in respect to each half, and remained in the control and management of Samuel H. Johnson and S. A. Gibson, until taken possession of by the receiver appointed by the court in this case.

Samuel H. Johnson had six children, viz.: Virginia V., born January 31, 1881, died November 20, 1896; Nannie, born September 29, 1882, died June 18, 1896; Joseph L., born April 1, 1879; George W., born May -30, 1884; Ada Belle, born March 26, 1889; and Edward, born October 19, 1893. The last four still live. The first two died without issue, unmarried and intestate, and after the death of the testator, leaving their father, the said Samuel H. Johnson, surviving them as their sole heir at 'law. Ada Belle and Edward were born after the death of the testator. Joseph L. and George W. are therefore the only ones of the children of said Samuel H. Johnson, who were born prior to the death of the testator and still survive.

Mrs. Edna Gibson, sometimes called Curmiller Gibson, had two children only, both still living when this cause was determined in the lower court, and both born prior to the death of the testator, by name Joseph and Fannie Gibson. Acting, apparently, upon the belief that they held the fee in the respective halves set apart to their children by the will, Samuel H. Johnson and Mrs. Edna Gibson (the wife of the former and the husband of the latter joining with them) borrowed the sum of $3,000 of the Globe Investment Company, and to secure the same gave a deed of trust on said plantation, and this debt and deed of trust subsequently became the property of the appellants, Wyman et al., the Globe Investment Company claiming to have had no notice of any defect in the title of said grantors in the deed of trust, and Samuel H. Johnson and S. A. Gibson continuing in possession. These, as mortgagors, paid'the interest on said secured debt, as it accrued, until tbe institution of this suit.

There was a mortgage debt on the plantation, made by the testator in his lifetime, which amounted to the sum 'of $431, when this $3,000 was borrowed, and by agreement of the parties this mortgage debt was settled out of the $3,000 by the Globe Investment Company at the time of making the loan. Nothing was ever paid on this $3,000 by the debtors, or any one for them, either to the Globe Investment Company, or its assigns, except the interest aforesaid. This is a bill filed in behalf of the said children of Samuel H. Johuson and Edna Gibson, then surviving, on March 18, 1896, by their next friend, John M. Johnson, who was the active executor of the will, and nephew of the testator; the administration, however, having been closed, as we infer.

The main question involved is as to the estate of these grandchildren and their parents, given by the third and fourth clauses or paragraphs of the will of Joseph M'. Johnson, which are set forth above. For several reasons we are of opinion that the rule in Shelley’s case does not apply in the construction of these clauses of the will.

In the first place, we must assume, from the context and surroundings, that the testator did not intend to make any distinction between his own children, and, that being the case, the language of the fourth clause itself does not in any sense give an estate to Mrs. Edna Gibson, the daughter. Consequently the testator did not intend to confer any estate upon the son, Samuel EL Johnson, notwithstanding the language used in his case was somewhat different from that used in the case of the daughter. It is manifest that only a control and management was conferred upon Samuel EL Johnson, the son, as was conferred upon his wife in case of her death, and upon S. A. Gibson, the son- in-law, and, in case of his death or marriage to another after the death of Edna, then upon the executors.

Secondly, these bequests are in terms made directly to the grandchildren of the testator, no intermediate estate being created; and the management and control were the subject of clauses following these direct bequests,, showing that the management and control of the two halves until the grandchildren should he old enough to assume the same, although not expressed in words, was all that was intended to be conferred upon the son and daughter. The whole was devised for the benefit of the grandchildren in express terms, and no others are referred to as beneficiaries.

The estate of these grandchildren is therefore an independent estate, not resting or based upon any estate in their parents, Samuel H. Johnson and Edna Gibson, and, that being so, the rule in Shelley’s case is not applicable. It follows that no estate was conveyed in the deed of trust, except as to the interest of the two children of Samuel H. Johnson, who were living at the death of the testator, but who died without issue before the institution of this suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 S.W. 250, 68 Ark. 369, 1900 Ark. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyman-v-johnson-ark-1900.