In Re Estate of McKay
In Re Estate of McKay
Opinion of the Court
The two appeals in this case are from decrees of partial distribution made upon the separate petitions therefor of the respondents herein, Horton L. McKay and Ethel M. Newman, formerly Ethel M. McKay. The testator, Angus McKay, made his last will and testament, which was duly admitted to probate, and thereafter, in the course of such probate proceedings, the petitions for partial distribution above referred to were filed. The will of Angus McKay is, in point of brevity, and, with the single *362 exception in respect to which it is assailed herein, in point of clarity, a model. The devising portion of said will is the second paragraph thereof, which reads as follows:
“2nd. I give, devise and bequeath all my estate, real and personal, whatsoever and wheresoever, in manner following: To my wife Elizabeth M. McKay the one-fifth (l/5th) part thereof, and to each of my children Horton L. McKay and Ethel M. McKay the undivided four-fifths (4/5ths) part thereof.”
The point of the appellant’s assault upon this will is directed to the concluding clause of the above paragraph thereof, it being the contention of the appellant that the phrase “to
each
of my children Horton L. McKay and Ethel M. McKay the undivided four-filths (4/5ths) part thereof” renders the entire will void for uncertainty, because a strict, literal, and grammatical interpretation of said clause would result in an attempted disposal of nine-fifths of the testator’s estate.
But the word “each” in this will is not to be given such interpretation, if, taking the language of the will as a whole, it is reasonably susceptible of another interpretation which would sustain the will. Thus regarding this word, it is to be noted that the testator by his preceding bequest has disposed of one-fifth of his estate, thus leaving four-fifths thereof subject to further disposition. The use of the word “undivided” in connection with his attempted disposition of this remaining four-fifths of his estate is evidence that he intended that his children share equally therein, and in every part thereof; or, in other words, that he wished the remainder of his estate to go to his children together and in an undivided portion rather than separately and in a segregated two-fifths bequest to each of them. This evident intent on his part works a modification of the use of the word “each” in the phrase in question, and indicates an intent upon the part of the testator that his two children were to share equally and together the remaining portion of the estate which he was seeking to devise to them. The testator would perhaps have expressed this intent more clearly had he devised to each of his children an “equal share” in the remaining four-fifths of his estate, in the above precise terms. But taking his will as a whole, we .are of the opinion that this was his real intent, and that such intent is fairly inferable from the entire context of his will.
The principal authority cited by the appellant in support of her contention is the case of Rodisch v. Moore, 257 Ill. 615, [101 N. E. 206], wherein a testator devised one-half *364 of his estate to one person, one-fourth to another, and one-half to a third, but that case is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar, since it would be plainly impossible to determine which one of the above bequests should be diminished in the distribution of the estate.
For the foregoing reasons we think that the will of said testator was susceptible of the construction which the trial court placed upon it, and for that reason the decrees of partial distribution appealed from are affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Bardin, J., pro tem., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on September 18, 1919.
All the Justices except Melvin, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the Matter of the Estate of ANGUS McKAY, Deceased. HORTON L. McKAY Et Al., Respondents; ELIZABETH M. McKAY, Appellant
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published