Bancroft v. Ives
Bancroft v. Ives
Opinion of the Court
The revised statutes provide that “ when any testator shall omit to provide in his will for any of his children, or for the issue of any deceased child, they shall take the same share of his estate, both real and personal, that they would have been entitled to if he had died intestate ; unless they shall have been provided for by the testator in his lifetime; or unless it shall appear that such omission was intentional, and not occasioned by any mistake or accident.” Rev. Sts. c. 62, § 21. Section 22 makes a similar provision for a child born after his father’s decease.
We think it manifest that it was not the intention of the commissioners and legislature to alter the law in this respect, but
The first reported case which came before the court was that of Wild v. Brewer, Suffolk, 1797, before the regular reports, but published in a supplement to 2 Mass. 570. There the testator had given to grandchildren, children of a daughter named, living. Though nothing was given to the daughter, yet it was neld that, being named, and her children receiving bequests, the omission was designed, and not through mistake, and that she was not entitled to a share by the statute. The other cases were Terry v. Foster, 1 Mass. 146 ; Church v. Crocker, 3 Mass 17; Wilder v. Goss, 14 Mass. 357.
It seems to us that the revised statutes reenacted this law, eon <
It was argued that by the term “ omit to provide in his will ” must be meant a child then living, living at the time of making his will, because no other could be intentionally omitted. This argument we think is plausible, but not sound. A very slight change of words would have left no foundation for it. Suppose the statute had been thus : “ If any testator shall omit to provide by his will,” or “ by will,” for any child. And such we think is the fair construction. A man’s will is ambulatory until his decease ; it may be revoked, republished, altered or modified, by any codicil or number of codicils, quite up to the time of his death. A man’s will then is one, whether it consist of one or many instruments; and all the testamentary papers in force and capable of taking effect, at his decease, constitute his will. The time, therefore, to which the question of omission applies is the time of the testator’s decease. If he has then made no provision by his will, including all codicils, the case of the statute arises: he has made a wifi, but left a child, without having made any provision for such child.
If this is the true construction, the effect is, that a child shall have a share as in case of intestacy, if the testator, at his decease, shall have made no devise to him and given him no legacy, unless it appear that such omission was intentional, and not accidental. Upon any other construction, children not born when the particular will was made, though born during the life of the testator, and whose existence is known to the testator during his life, would not be provided for by the statute; although a posthumous child, bom after the death of the father, for whom the testator could not be expected to provide in his will, because his birth might not usually be anticipated, is carefully provided for by the statute.
Such being the construction which seems to us to be the correct one, we think that children, born after the making of the will actually proved, are children omitted by the testator, within the meaning of the statute, and are entitled to shares of the estate of their father, as if he had died intestate. And it makes no difference that, at the time of making such will, other children -were living. They died during the life of the testator, leaving no issue, and their legacies of course lapsed.
Nor do we perceive in this case any evidence of the intention of the testator to omit making any bequest to these two children. It is not a question whether he intended that they should take a share by intestacy; that does not depend upon his will or intention, but upon the operation of law, upon his omission to make any devise or bequest to them. But the question is whether there is sufficient evidence of his intent to omit them. Taking his will, and the. legacies therein given to the children then living, it appears that it was not his intent to omit any of his children, but to give each a legacy, though a small one. The conversation testified of, between him and his, wife, is too vague and indefinite to warrant an inference of such intent. We are therefore of opinion that the plaintiff did not take the entire estate by force of the will, to the exclusion of the children, and that her deed would not make a good title to a purchaser.
Judgment for the defendant.
Reference
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- Hannah Bancroft v. Stephen B. Ives
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