Young Women's Christian Home v. French

187 U.S. 401, 23 S. Ct. 184, 47 L. Ed. 233, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1658
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 5, 1903
Docket73, 74
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 187 U.S. 401 (Young Women's Christian Home v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young Women's Christian Home v. French, 187 U.S. 401, 23 S. Ct. 184, 47 L. Ed. 233, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1658 (1903).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Fullee,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The rule is that there is no- presumption of survivorship in the case of persons who perish by a common disaster, in the absence of proof tending to show the order of dissolution, and that circumstances surrounding a calamity of the character appearing on this record are insufficient to create any presumption on which the courts can act. The question of.actual sur-vivorship. is regarded as unascertainable, and descent and distribution take the same course as if the deaths had been simultaneous, Underwood v. Wing, 4 De Gex, M. & G. 633; Wing v. Angrave, 8 H. L. Cas. 183; Newell v. Nichols, 12 Hun, 604; S. C., 75 N. Y. 78; Johnson v. Merithew, 80 Maine, 111; Cowman v. Rogers, 73 Maryland, 403; Russell v. Hallett, 23 Kansas, 276; In re Willbor , 20 R. I. 126; 1 Greenl. (15th ed.) §§ 29, 30.

Conceding this to be so, the next of kin of Mrs. Rhodes contend that her estate has passed to them as in case of intestacy, because it does not appear that the son survived the mother, or that the mother' survived the son", and the estate was given to the son only in the one event, and to the Young Women’s Christian Home only in the other. This view was rejected by the District Supreme Court in holding that the intention of the testatrix was plain that the Young Women’s Christian Home should take in the. event that' the husband and son did not survive her, and should be carried out; and the Court of Appeals rejected it in holding that the will by its terms vested the *411 estate in Eugene Rhodes immediately on the testatrix’s death, and that a prima facie right existed in the personal representatives of the son, which was not displaced by proof of the mother’s survival.

The cardinal rule is that the intention of the testator expressed in his will, or clearly deducible therefrom, must prevail if consistent with the rules of law. And another familiar rule is that the law prefers a construction which will prevent a partial intestacy to one that will permit it, if such a construction may reasonably be given. Kenadary v. Sinnott, 179 U. S. 606, 616.

In this case, we think it is apparent that Mrs. Rhodes designed to dispose of her entire property; to provide for her husband by securing to him for life an income from one half of her estate; to provide for her son by leaving him the estate absolutely, subject to the husband’s income; and, if her son died before his father, that the husband should have the income of the whole estate for his life, and at his death the estate should go to the Young Women’s Christian Home. But that if her husband and son should both be dead when she died, the estate should go at once to the charitable institution, that is to say, that if they did not survive her, the property on her death was immediately to take that destination.

But the argument is that the testatrix’s wishes cannot be carried out, inasmuch as, it is insisted, each of the devises and bequests was on the express condition of survivorship, and to give effect to the alleged intention would require the interpolation of some phrase covering the contingency of inability to ascertain survivorship, which interpolation would be wholly inadmissible.

This, however, is matter of construction, and if the state of facts at the time of Mrs. Rhodes’ death did not substantially . differ from what the will shows she contemplated when it was executed, then no interpolation is required, and the property must go according to the intention necessarily deducible.

The applicable principle is well expressed by Mr. Justice *412 Gray, then Chief Justice of Massachusetts, in Metcalf v. Fram ingham, 128 Massachusetts, 370.

The case is stated in the head notes thus: “ A testator bequeathed personal property in trust for the benefit of his wife’s sister and her husband during their lives, as follows: During her life, to pay the net income to her semi-annually ; in case she should die before him, to transfer one half of the principal to a charitable institution, and to pay the income of the remainder to him during h,is life; in case he should die before her, then at her death to transfer the whole of the principal to the same institution. She died before her husband, and one half of the principal was paid to the institution and the other half kept in trust for him. Held, that on his death the institution was entitled to this part of the principal also, and that it did not pass to the residuary devisees; although a similar bequest for the benefit of another husband and wife contained an express direction for a transfer of the second half of the principal to the charitable institution upon the death of the survivor.”

Gray, C. J., said: “ The decision of this question doubtless depends tipon the intention of the testator, as manifested by the words that he has used, and an omission to express his intention cannot be supplied by conjecture. But if a reading of the whole will produces a conviction that the testator must necessarily have intended an interest to be given which is not bequeathed by express and formal words, the court must supply the defect by implication, and so mould the language of the testator as to carry into effect, as far as possible, the intention which it is of opinion that he has on the whole will sufficiently declared.”

“It is a question in each case,” said Mr. Justice Matthews in Robison v. Portland Orphan Asylum, 123 U. S. 702, “of the reasonable interpretation of the words of the particular will, with the view of ascertaining through their meaning the testator’s intention.” In that case Robison left a will providing, thirdly, that his widow should have the income of all his estate, with the right to spend it, but not to have it accumulate for her heirs; fourthly, that if his sisters, Ann Smith and *413 ‘Eleonora Cummings Robison, “ be living at the death of myself and wife, Jane S. Robison aforesaid, that they or the one that may be then living shall have the income of all my estate so long as they may live, and at their death to be divided in three parts, one third part of the income to go to the Portland Female Orphan Asylum,” and one third to each of two other institutions. Roth sisters died before the testator.

It was ruled that the fact that the sisters died before their brother, “ whereby the legacy to them lapsed altogether, is not material, because if property be limited upon the death of one person to another, and the first donee happen to predecease the testator, the gift over would, of course, take effect, notwithstanding the failure, by lapse, of the prior gift;” that unless it appeared on the face of the will

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Bluebook (online)
187 U.S. 401, 23 S. Ct. 184, 47 L. Ed. 233, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-womens-christian-home-v-french-scotus-1903.