Barksdale v. Macbeth
Barksdale v. Macbeth
Opinion of the Court
If this will were for adjudication in Westminster Hall it may be conceded that the construction would not be regarded as doubtful. The testator declares that, on the decease of the life tenant without leaving a child, “ the premises bequeathed shall be the absolute property of such of my children as may be then living, and the issue of such as may be dead, to be equally divided between them, and their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns.” The rule in England as stated by the elementary writers, is this : “ Where a bequest is made to a person described as standing in a certain relation to the testator, and the children of another person standing in the same relation, as to my brother (A) and the children of my brother (B), the distribution is made per capita, and not per stirpes, in which case A takes only a share equal to that of one of the children of B.” Of course it is immaterial, and the distribution is the same where the objects of the testator’s bounty are his own children and grand-children. See 2 Jarm. on Wills, 111, whose positions are fully sustained by the authorities cited. Well settled as the rule seems to be, it has not been regarded as quite satisfactory, or as giving effect to the probable intention of the testator. It has accordingly been held that this mode of construction will yield to a very faint glimpse of a different intention in the context. Jarm. ut supra.
With some qualifications the rule has been recognized in this State. Cole vs. Creyon, 1 Hill, Ch. 311, was a case in which the balance of the testator’s estate, after the determination of a life estate therein in his widow, was directed to be “ equally divided between Henry and Elizabeth Cole’s children and Alexander Creyón, viz., the offspring of Elizabeth Cole’s body, and no other, to be retained in the hands of my executors, until the age of twenty-one years, or days of marriage.” The widow being dead, the children of Henry and Elizabeth
In Templeton vs. Walker, 3 Rich. Eq. 543, and Collier vs. Collier, id. 555, while the general rule was recognized, a modification or exception was adopted. It was held by the Court of Errors that “wherever the Court is compelled, by the terms of description in a devise or grant, to resort to our Statute of Distributions for the purpose of ascertaining the objects of a gift, we must also resort to the statute to ascertain the proportions in which the donees shall take, unless the instrument making the gift indicates the intention of the donor that a different rule of distribution should be pursued.”
It remains only to inquire whether this case falls within the
Nor do the terms of description of the objects of testator’s bounty require the Court, as in Templeton vs. Walker, to resort to the Statute of Distributions to ascertain those objects. The terms are to “ such of my children as may be then living and the issue of such as may be dead.” This description demands no reference to the statute, nor would the statute shed any light upon the subject if the terms of the gift were of doubtful interpretation. See Perdriau vs. Wells, 5 Rich. Eq. 20.
It was not contended that the context of the will afforded any evidence of a different intention in the mind of the testator from that which the terms of the bequest itself, technically, or legally, import. Of course the Court is not at liberty to travel out of the will and speculate upon the probable intention of the testator as deduced from the ordinary motives or feelings, which would influence mankind in the case presented. The testator has spoken, and the Court has no other province than to interpret his language. If the testator had contemplated the contingency which has occurred, and had intended a different distribution, he might have declared that in such event the issue of any deceased child should represent their parent, and take among them the parent’s share; but if, on the other hand, he
In reciting the names of the parties in the Circuit decree some inaccuracy occurred, not important in the discussion of the principle, but which it is proper to correct.
It is ordered and decreed that the Circuit decree be reformed so that, in the partition therein directed, the property be equally divided between Mary Barksdale, Mary Y. Macbeth, James R. Macbeth, William L. Macbeth, Catharine Macbeth, Mary Lee Macbeth, Sabina Macbeth, Edward Macbeth, Alexander Macbeth, Adelaide Huguenin, Anna Huguenin, Thomas Huguenin, Ella Huguenin, Cornelius Huguenin, Emma Julia Edwards, George Edwards, George Edwards, Jr., Charles L. 0. Hammond and Elizabeth Hammond, so that each one of the said parties shall take an equal share of the said estate, according to the principles of this decree. In all other respects the decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Decree modified.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.