Abrahams v. Abrahams
Decision Date | 16 May 1929 |
Docket Number | 2 Div. 936. |
Citation | 219 Ala. 533,122 So. 625 |
Parties | ABRAHAMS ET AL. v. ABRAHAMS ET AL. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Rehearing Denied June 13, 1929.
Appeal from Circuit Court, Sumter County; Benj. F. Elmore, Judge.
Bill in equity by Florence Abrahams and others against Armistead L Abrahams and others. From a decree overruling a demurrer to the bill, respondents appeal. Affirmed.
Thos F. Seale, of Livingston, and Henry Upson Sims, of Birmingham for appellants.
McKinley & McDaniel, of Demopolis, for appellees.
This proceeding presents for consideration the proper construction to be accorded items 2 and 3 of the will of James A. Abrahams, deceased. These two items concern devises to his daughters, Sallie Wayne and Lilly Abrahams, and are in identical language except as to description of the property and the names of the devisees.
While the entire will appears in the report of the case, we reproduce here for convenience item 2, a consideration of which will suffice as to item 3 also (for further convenience, we substitute the word "Blackacre" for the description of the property):
The will was executed on January 5, 1881, the testator being critically ill at the time, and making evident preparations for his death, which occurred the day following. He was 76 years of age, and his two daughters, Sallie Wayne and Lilly Abrahams, were in apparent good health and in the prime of life. Each of the daughters died without issue, Sallie Wayne in 1923 and Lilly Abrahams prior to March 10, 1924.
Complainants are not of blood relation to testator, but inherit their interest from his issue, and the insistence is made they are without interest in the residuary estate. It is insisted the gift over did not take effect for the reason the death of the donee did not occur before the death of the testator.
The rule is well established in this state that "words of survivorship in a will, unless there is a manifest intent to the contrary, always relate to the death of the testator." Spira v. Frenkel, 210 Ala. 27, 97 So. 104; Darrow v. Florence, 206 Ala. 675, 91 So. 606. But in the instant case there is manifest intent to the contrary.
The circumstances surrounding the execution of the will, proper here to be considered (Castleberry v. Stringer, 176 Ala. 250, 57 So. 849; Rutland v. Emanuel, 202 Ala. 269, 80 So. 107), in connection with the language used, make it too clear for discussion that the gift over was to take effect upon the death of the donee, and that the general rule as to words of survivorship relating to the death of the testator can have no application without doing violence to the testator's manifest intent to the contrary. Dickson v. Dickson, 178 Ala. 117, 59 So. 58; Smith v. Smith, 157 Ala. 79, 47 So. 220, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1045; McGlathery v. Meeks (Ala. Sup.) 121 So. 67.
The devise to these daughters created in them a base or determinable fee. Dickson v. Dickson, supra; Boshell v. Boshell (Ala. Sup.) 118 So. 553; Davis v. Memphis, etc., R. Co., 87 Ala. 633, 6 So. 140.
The exact technical definition of the residuary estate, whether a contingent remainder or an executory devise, is not a matter of controlling importance here, and we need not stop to inquire or consider. That the testator had the right to so dispose of his property is very clear (Dickson v. Dickson, supra; section 2144, Code of 1876), and the only question for determination is the intention of the testator as to who should take such residuary estate. The language of the will is that it shall "revert to my heirs at law or such of them or their heirs as may be living at that time."
"The heirs at law of a deceased person are those who, in the absence of a will, are appointed by law to inherit his real estate." Hatter v. Quina, 216 Ala. 225, 113 So. 47. This is the generally accepted statement. 29 C.J. 288, 291, 302. Castleberry v. Stringer, 176 Ala. 250, 57 So. 849; De Bardelaben v. Dickson, 166 Ala. 59, 51 So. 986; 29 C.J. 293.
In Castleberry v. Stringer, supra, the will was drawn by one unskilled, and the court from the context concluded the word "heir" should there be properly construed as children. In contrast is the case of De Bardelaben v. Dickson, supra, where the court found nothing in the context of the will justifying a different meaning to be given the word "heir" from its technical sense, saying: These observations are applicable here.
The will bears evidence of having been drawn by one skilled in such work and acquainted with legal phraseology, used in the will with technical accuracy. An examination of the context of the will discloses no...
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