Hitchcock v. Clendennin
Hitchcock v. Clendennin
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question arises upon an account originally presented in the St. Louis Probate Court for allowance against the estate of Anna M. Peters. She was the widow of Ralph Peters, a resident here, whose will was admitted to probate in 1853. The material part of the will is as follows: “As to my individual property other than that acquired in right of my wife, in case of my death without leaving any child or children surviving, and no child of mine be born to my wife after my death, then I give, devise, and bequeath all my individual property to my wife, to be held and enjoyed by her for and during her natural life, and at her death it is my will that my said property go to and descend to my
The appellant contends that under the will Mrs. Peters took the entire interest in the property paid to her ; that a bequest of personal property, including money, for life, with remainder over, vests the whole estate in the first legatee. But supposing it to be true that, properly speaking, the term “remainder” is not applicable, and that a man cannot be said to have an “ estate” in a personal chattel, which is what the argument means, it does not follow that the use of a permanent chattel may not be given to one for a time, and the chattel after that time given to another. As money
In the case at bar, the legatee for life did not invest the money in securities, or otherwise keep it separately, and owing to her conduct the respondent’s claim necessarily took the form of a general money-demand against her estate. The share of the respondent was one-third of the amount, and this he became entitled to enjoy upon the death of the life-tenant. As she had only the use of the fund, the respondent was properly allowed interest from the time of her death. The fact that she improperly mingled the money with her own cannot put her in a better position than she would have been had she, as was her duty under the will, kept it in a separate fund. If she had invested it in securities, these securities would at her death have at once passed to the respondent and the other legatees, and accruing interest have been theirs. The appellant has not preserved facts from which it can be made apparent that the court below erred as to interest.
There was no error in admitting the contract signed by Mrs. Peters, as it was offered and admitted to prove that she
The judgment will be affirmed,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.