Halstead v. Hall

Decision Date04 May 1883
PartiesFANNIE G. E. HALSTEAD v. JULIUS C. HALL.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County.

This was an action of ejectment, brought by the appellant on the 13th of September, 1881, to recover from the appellee one undivided fourth part of a lot of ground, and the improvements thereon, situated at the intersection of Cornhill street and Market Space, in the City of Annapolis and also for mesne profits, by way of damages for the detention of the said property from the plaintiff. To the declaration the defendant pleaded "not guilty." At April Term, 1882, the case, by agreement of the parties, was submitted to, and tried before, the Circuit Court, on an agreed statement of facts, and judgment was rendered for the defendant. The case is further stated in the opinion of the court. The plaintiff appealed.

The cause was argued before Robinson, Yellott, Stone, Irving, and Ritchie, JJ.

John Ireland and William H. Tuck, for the appellant.

Frank H. Stockett, for the appellee.

Ritchie J., delivered the opinion of the court.

The determination of this appeal depends upon the construction to be given the following clause in the will of Mrs. Ann Lamden under which the appellant claims to be entitled to an undivided one-fourth in the premises sued for:

"I will and bequeath unto my aunt, Miss Harriet Goldsmith, all the rest and residue of my estate, real and personal, for her own use during her life; at her death, I will and bequeath it to my cousin, Captain William Henry Gardner, to descend to his female children and grandchildren, and to their heirs forever."

The will was made in 1848, and the testatrix died in 1872. Both Miss Harriet Goldsmith and Captain William Henry Gardner died before the testatrix; the latter in 1871, and intestate, leaving two daughters, Mrs. Fannie A. Halstead and Mrs. McKnight, and two grand-daughters, to wit, Fannie F. Gardner, a daughter of Farragut Gardner, son of said Captain Gardner, who died in 1859, and the present plaintiff, born in the life-time of Captain Gardner, who is the daughter of the said Mrs. Fannie A. Halstead, who is still alive.

Upon these facts, the appellant submitted a prayer, the substance of which is, that she took under the will an undivided one-fourth in the premises with her mother, Mrs. McKnight and Miss Gardner, they taking the other three-fourths, respectively. This prayer was rejected.

The appellee offered three prayers; the first submitting that under the said devise Captain Gardner took a vested estate in fee in the remainder in the real estate, the subject of the suit, which on the death of the testatrix descended to his heirs-at-law, of whom the plaintiff is not one, and, therefore, not entitled to recover; the second, that Captain Gardner took an estate tail female general in the real estate mentioned, which on the death of the testatrix, under the statute law of this state, descended to his heirs-at-law, of which the plaintiff is not one, and, therefore, is not entitled to recover. Both these prayers were rejected.

His third prayer contains the proposition that the plaintiff took no interest in or claim to the real estate in suit, under said devise, because her mother, the said Mrs. Halstead, one of the daughters of said Captain Gardner, was living at the time of the death of the said testatrix, and is still alive. This prayer was granted.

The case having been submitted to and tried by the court, the finding and judgment were for the defendant.

After full consideration of the clause in the will of Mrs. Lamden, before us for construction, we have reached the conclusion that the devise is to Miss Goldsmith for life, remainder to Captain Gardner for life, with remainder in fee to his female children and grandchildren.

That Captain Gardner did not take the fee, or an estate tail, as contended for by the appellee, seems clear from the explicit declaration of the testatrix, that the property first given to Miss Goldsmith for life, and at her death to Captain Gardner, is "to descend to his female children and grandchildren, and to their heirs forever." She uses the terms children and grand-children, and not the term heirs, words which are, in their usual sense, words of purchase and not of limitation, and are to be always so regarded unless the testator has unmistakably used them otherwise, which is not the case here. Stump v....

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8 cases
  • Carter v. Reserve Gas Co.
    • United States
    • West Virginia Supreme Court
    • 14 Octubre 1919
    ... ... other parts of the instruments or to resolve a doubt as to ... the intent expressed by an entire instrument. Chipps v ... Hall, 23 W.Va. 504; Browning, Petitioner, 16 R.I. 441, ... 16 A. 717, 3 L.R.A. 209; Eaton v. Tillinghast, 4 ... R.I. 276; Taney v. Fahnley, 126 ... the word "go" or "pass." Borgner v ... Brown, 133 Ind. 391, 33 N.E. 92; Doren v. Gillum, ... 136 Ind. 134, 35 N.E. 1101; Halstead v. Hall, 60 Md ... 209; Tate v. Townsend, 61 Miss. 316; Jones v ... Crawley, 68 Ga. 175; Moore v. Weaver, 16 Gray ... (Mass.) 305. That ... ...
  • Ringgold v. Carvel
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • 3 Noviembre 1950
    ... ... of the word 'heirs.' We cannot accept that ... contention. In 1883 this Court held in Halstead v ... Hall, 60 Md. 209, 212, that the words 'children' ... and 'grandchildren' are, in their usual sense, words ... of purchase and not of ... ...
  • Rupert v. Penner
    • United States
    • Nebraska Supreme Court
    • 2 Noviembre 1892
    ... ... ( Dennett v ... Dennett , 40 N.H. 498; Ballentine v. Wood , 42 ... N.J.Eq. 552, 9 A. 582; Halstead v. Hall , 60 Md. 209; ... Hodges v. Fleetwood , 102 N.C. 122, 9 S.E. 640; ... Tyler v. Moore , 1 Monaghan 529, 17 A. 216.) ... ...
  • Hayes v. Martz
    • United States
    • Indiana Appellate Court
    • 21 Abril 1908
    ... ... appellants concede that his interest was not that of a life ...          In the ... case of Halstead v. Hall (1883), 60 Md ... 209, cited by appellants, it is said: "The use of the ... word descend,' in [45 Ind.App. 708] a will, it is said in ... ...
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