Dean v. Town of Nutley
Dean v. Town of Nutley
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action, the judgment in which was brought here by this writ of error, was in ejectment, and was tried before the Chief Justice, in the Essex Circuit, without a jury.
The defendants in error,, who were the1 plaintiffs below, claimed title and right of possession to lands included in the third paragraph set out in the prefatory statement, as the surviving heirs of the brother and two sisters of Elizabeth Stager. The town of Nutley claimed title and right of possession by a deed executed by Elizabeth Stager (Shelton) on February 12th, 1891, whereby the lands in question were conveyed to the township of Franklin, which afterward became the town of Nutley. Which of these contentions should prevail evidently required the construction of the will in question with respect to the devise in that clause.
If that clause stood by itself, without anything in the other portions of the will to indicate a contrary intent on the part of the testator, the devise might be open to the construction which has been applied in this state to similar devises. That construction attributes to the testator a design to confer upon the devisee a vested and absolute right if he lives until the happening of the event which gives him a right of 'possession, and the devise over is defeated even if the devisee dies subsequently without issue. Language similar to that úndér consideration has been deemed to indicate an intent on the part of testator that the devise over should be
Language used in one part of a will which, if read by itself, would justify us in attributing to the testator a particular intent, may be so modified by language in other parts of the will as not to permit the inference of such intent. Such we find to be the case in the will before us.
By the clause immediately preceding the clause in question, the testator devised to his daughters, Sarah and Jane, certain real estate, and added these words: “If either of them or both should die before my wife, Jane, their mother, then their share to be given to their heirs.” Here was an express devise over in case of death before the mother. In the next clause, testator devised to his daughter Elizabeth other real estate, with the provision,.that if she should die withoufi lawful heirs her share should be equally divided between her brother and two sisters, or their surviving heirs. Tn the former devise the period at which the devise over was to operate is fixed by references to the death of the mother; in the devise under consideration the period at which the devise over was to operate is fixed, not by reference to the death of the mother, but to Elizabeth’s own death, when, if she died without issue, the lands were to go to persons who might be then surviving.
From the conjunction of these clauses, the indication is deemed to be unmistakable that the testator did not intend that Elizabeth’s share should become absolutely hers at the death of her mother, if Elizabeth was then surviving, and requires us to hold that the estate devised to her was subject to be devested in case she died without lawful heirs — that is, without issue.
There being no error discovered, the judgment must be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.