Allen v. Crosland
Allen v. Crosland
Opinion of the Court
On the questions discussed in the decree, this Court is satisfied with the judgment of the Chancellor. The matter involved in the 2d ground of appeal was not argued at the circuit, probably because the complainant relied on his claim to the corpus of the legacy.
There is no doubt, however, about the principle. In Lupton vs. Lupton, 2 John. Ch. R. 628, Chancellor Kent says: “With respect to the question of interest, it may be proper to observe, that the general rule is, that a legacy payable at a future day, does not carry interest, until after it is payable, unless it be a legacy to a child, payable at a future day, and the child has no other provision, nor any maintenance, in the mean time, allotted by the will. If there be no such provision, the legacy carries in
By the will of Matthew Allen he bequeathed one third of his estate to his wife, and two-thirds to his daughter (the complainant) “at her marriage, or when she attains the full age of twenty-one years.” No provision whatever is made for the maintenance of the daughter in the mean time. Under the authority given by the will, the executor, McConnell, soon after the death of the testator, sold the estate and paid the debts, holding the surplus either in money or securities. The complainant was entitled to interest on two-thirds of this surplus, certainly from January, 1835, when the sale was made. The amount of this interest, deducting any sums which McConnell, the executor, may have paid on account of the complainant, must be regarded as included in the sum paid by Miller, the administrator of Me Connell,
It is ordered and decreed that the order of reference, made by the circuit court, be enlarged, and that the commissioner, in addition to the directions heretofore given, take an account of the amount due to the complainant, on the principles of this decree. In all other matters the decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
In the circuit decree Miller is called the executor of McColmell. R,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.