Salter v. Howell
Salter v. Howell
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Two questions arise on the will of this testatrix:— The first is, was the power given to Mary Beveridge well executed? If it was not, then who on its non-execution are entitled to take, according to the provisions of the will?
The apportionment of three thousand dollars of the fund to Margaret Howell, if she survived Mary Beveridge, is clearly void. There is, a strictness required' in the execution of powers which frequently appears to be harsh; but if once a latitude was allowed, and the direction of the testator as to the appointment was departed from, there would be no rule to go by; and if an implied or presumed intention, even in hard cases, was permitted, and the broad rule of strict adherence to be broken in upon by a minute inquiry into the circumstances of families, it would be highly mischievous, and render the judge the distributor of favours, instead of deciding on the words of the testator, or his clear and declared intention. A power to appoint to the children of A. will not therefore authorize an appointment to the mother, whom the testator had passed by. The appointment to Mary Howell is therefore invalid. This likewise defeats the appointment to Samuel E. Howell in contingency; and here, where the contingency did not happen, he cannot take. It is given on a contingency, on which Mary Beveridge had no right to give it. The appointment of one thousand dollars to Eliza Smith, a grandchild of Margaret Howell, cannot be supported; for it is now well settled, that a power to appoint to children is not well executed by an appointment to grandchildren. Sugdenon Powers, 501. . If, indeed, this power could not otherwise be- executed, or if there were no children, then it might be valid, because the intention would be manifest to show that by children the testator meant grandchildren; the power not being well executed.
If Mary Beveridge did not so appoint, then. it was to be divided among all Margaret Howell’s children, share and share alike. When she speaks of her daughter, Ann Mifflin, she calls her her deceased daughter; when of Margaret Howell, she calls her her daughter,—“my daughter, my daughter’s childz’en;” and when she speaks of them in relation to Mrs. Beveridge, it is her daughter’s children. It is not a power to give to the children of “any one of my daughters,” but “to any one of my daughter’s children,” her whom before she had described as her daughter; that is, she may select any one of my said daughter’s children, not any child of any of any of my daughters. This may at first appear ambiguod's, but a careful attention to the whole structuz’e of the will, and the phraseology of the testatrix, will satisfy the mind that this bounty was intended for the children of her living daughter, Margaret, the children of the living sister of Mary Beveridge. That she never intended the children of her deceased daughter, Ann Mifflin, because for these childz’en she had made the same exact provision, and her son’s children were to get nothing, in any event. On the death of Ann Mifflin’s children, without leav
The four thousand dollars is to be divided among the eleven^ children of Margaret Howell. Judgment is therefore to be entered for one eleventh part for the plaintiffs, the amount by agreement to be settled by the attornies of the parties.
Judgment for the plaintiff.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.