Brown v. Brown
Brown v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of this court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for St. Mary’s county, rendered upon a case stated, wherein the appellants sued the appellee, to recover certain land mentioned in the will of Clement Brown. The plaintiffs claimed as heirs at law of the deceased, and the defence was that this land had been effectively devised by the will, and “the only question was, whether, under said will, the land in controversy passed to any devisee mentioned in said will, or whether the said land was undisposed of by said will, and passed to the heirs at law of said Clement Brown?”
That the testator intended that certain of his negroes, whom lie manumitted by the will, should enjoy this land, cannot be questioned; and we think it is equally plain that he did not, intend they should have it by a devise of the legal title; because, apart from the language employed in reference to this portion of Ms estate, by a previous clause he had devised another lot to others, in terms indicating that he knew how to create an estate in fee-simple. A like circumstance wras relied on by the court in the cases of Dougherty vs. Monett, 5 G. & J., 459, and Mitchell vs. Mitchell, 2 Gill, 230, in ascertaining the testator’s intent in regard to particular clauses of wills.
It is well settled that trusts may arise by implication, and that where a trust, is created by will, or duties imposed on executors, and no express devise to them for the purposes of the trust, the legal estate may vest in them by intendment of Saw, to enable them to discharge such duties; because, other wise, the testator’s intent, might fail altogether. Lewin on
The same principle was applied in the case of Oates vs. Cooke, 3 Burr., 1684, which was between one of the heirs at law and the executor named in the will. The will did not contain a devise to the executor, but there were sums given to different persons, annually, with the direction that “these legacies be faithfully paid by my trustee, John Cooke, every year and yearly, one month after Martinmas.” The testator left to his trustee and executor, out of the yearly rents of the farm, one pound ten shillings a year and yearly, for repairs and other uses of the farm. There were other clauses in the will, and Cooke was named sole executor and trustee, he paying all the debts, legacies, and funeral charges. The question was, whether any estate, and what, passed to Cooke? Lord Mansfield said, he had no doubt that the intention was clear that the testator meant to devise" his real estate in trust, and the other judges concurred, Mr. Justice Wilmot observing, that the intention must be collected from ail the parts of the will; that if it was necessary to imply a legal estate in the executor, it was the same as if expressed; and that there were trusts to be executed which the trustee could not effectuate, without having an estate in fee.
In Anthony vs. Rees, 2 Cromp. & Jervis, 75, a testator gave his freehold estate to his granddaughter, and to his wife the sum of twenty pounds, yearly, as long as she lived, to be paid out of the freehold estate, and a leasehold estate, by trustees thereafter named; it was held, that the trustees had the legal estate, that they might perform the duties imposed upon them. And the same doctrine was announced in Beezeley vs. Woodhouse, 4 Term Rep., 89, where a testator directed moneys to be paid by his executor, out of his whole estate. The doubt was, whether the words included real property; but that being so decided, an estate was implied in the executors.
Upon considering this will in all its parts, we are of opinion that the testator intended that his executor should hold this land, as well as the personal property not otherwise disposed of, for the benefit of the negroes mentioned in that connection, of whom this appellee was one. The will manumits his negroes; some immediately, and others at different periods after his death; they, in the meantime, to be hired out by the executor. It directs his farm to be rented out yearly, and provides how the income from his real and personal estate shall be applied. The house is to be repaired, by the executor, from this income; and to JBeckey and her children he leaves a reasonable support, to be given, by the executor, from this income, as long as she may live; at her death, ail the income of the real and personal estate to be paid yearly to Elizabeth Ellen, Subject to the support of the infirm; and to the executor he gives ten per cent, on all money received by him and his heirs forever. It is manifest that the testator expected these hires and rents to come into the executor’s hands, and, after deducting this ten per cent., to be applied by him to the purposes of the will. Ue cannot pay as directed, unless he receives, and he must have an estate that will enable him to
The argument, on the part of the appellants, on the authority of Negro Monica vs. Mitchell, 1 Md. Ch. Dec., 357, does not apply here, even conceding the correctness of that decision, as to the act of 1831, ch. 281; for this will, instead of providing that the negroes shall live on the land, directs it to be rented out., and does not contravene the policy of outlaws in regard to that population, as the chancellor interpreted the will then before him. But we are not prepared to say— nor did the chancellor — that a master cannot leave land to negroes whom lie may manumit by his will. Indeed, we think such a devise may promote the policy of the State, by enabling negroes to provide the means of removing to Liberia, or elsewhere, beyond the State, when required to do so, as they may be, by the officers of the law, on the contingencies mentioned in the act of Assembly; at the same time, that such devises may have the effect of dispensing with the requirement of the law, in the event of their becoming unable to support themselves. Tongue vs. Negro Crissy, 7 Md. Rep., 453. It is certain that their being devisees of real estate, will not give them any rights not enjoyed by others, but as long as they are allowed to remain in the State, why may they not have land of their own? if set free without any such devise in their favor, they might hold land acquired in any other-way, and if they remove, the title to the land would remain in them.
But, since the case of Monica vs. Mitchell, the chancellor and this court have recognized a trust of this description by giving effect to a will in which land was devised to trustees for the purpose of being rented out, and the proceeds applied for the use of negroes manumitted by the will. If, as we think, this will created a trust by implication for like purposes, its provisions no more infringed the policy of the law than did that of the testator in the cases of Robinson vs. Robinson, 4
Upon a careful examination of the will before us, and of many adjudged cases bearing upon the points urged in argument on the part of the appellants, we are of opinion that the case was properly decided below, and affirm the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Joseph Brown and others' Lessee v. Rebecca Brown
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- Published