Sharpless's Estate
Sharpless's Estate
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The proposition that a gift to several individuals described by their respective names, may be construed a gift to a class, if it is apparent from the will that the testator so intended, is not open to dispute. It is but a corollary of the larger and more comprehensive rule that subordinates everything in the construction of a will, to the expressed intention of the testator. If the diligence of counsel has not been rewarded by finding a case in our reports where such a gift has been held to be a gift to a class, it only goes to show how convincing to the common understanding the fact that the donees are severally and individually named is, that the testator meant that they should take individually and not as a class. This interpretation results in such case, not because of any technical rule which arbitrarily imposes a definite meaning upon the expression, but because the expression clearly and unequivocally imports this and nothing else. Cases where such a gift may be, and should be, construed to be a gift to a class, may readily be conceived. Following such a gift, an express direction that the parties named should take not individually but as a class, would more than countervail the fact that the gift was to them individually by name. Where there are other but less conclusive expressions or indications in the will, that notwithstanding the gift is to individuals named by the testator, they should take as a class, it becomes simply a question of relative weight of these conflicting expressions and indications. In the present case we have on one side the fact the
The decree is affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Wills — Gift to class or individuals — Intestacy. Testator gave life estates in his residuary estate to his wife and sister. He further directed as follows: “After the decease of both my said wife and sister, I direct my estate to be divided into two equal shares, one of the said shares I give to my uncle [naming him], and my aunt [naming her], absolutely. Should neither of them survive me, I then give said share to my cousins [naming two cousins on the maternal side], and the children of my deceased .cousin [naming another cousin on the maternal side], to be divided per stirpes. The other equal part of my estate after the death of my wife and sister, I give to be equally divided between my first cousins on my father’s side per capita.” The uncle and aunt mentioned were on the maternal side. The uncle and aunt, and one of the cousins named, died in testator’s lifetime. Held, that the cousins on the maternal side took individually, and not as a class, and that there was an intestacy as to the share of the cousin on the maternal side who died in the lifetime of the testator.