Court Opinion

ID: 5446717
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:12:01.060514+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:13.049323
License: Public Domain

McFarland, J.
Breton died on the 4th of August, 1890, leaving a will, of which the following are the material parts necessary to be here considered:
“First. I direct that all my just debts, the expenses of my last sickness, and my funeral expenses be paid from the first money that shall come to the hands of my executrix hereinafter named.
“ Secondly. I will, bequeath, and devise to my beloved wife, Bertha Breton, all of the remainder of my property, real, personal, and mixed, and wherever the same may be situated, to have, use, and expend as she may see fit during her lifetime, with full power to sell, transfer, or dispose of the whole or any portion thereof as she may deem proper, hereby granting, giving, and devising to her full power to convey a fee-simple title to any of the real estate which I may own at the time of my death, and to convey all the right, title, and interest which I may have at the time of my death of, in, and to all the property which may be hereby willed, bequeathed, and devised to her.
“After the death of my said wife, I direct that from any money remaining to my estate the following named legacies be paid.” Then follow several legacies to different persons; and by the will his said wife, Bertha Breton, was made executrix without bonds.
The widow, the said Bertha Breton, qualified as executrix, and such proceedings in the administration of the estate were duly had that on October 31, 1891, a final decree of distribution of the estate of Charles Breton, deceased, was regularly entered in the superior court in which said administration was pending, distributing said estate in the words of said will; and on November 7, 1891, a further decree was entered dis*197charging the said Bertha Breton from all further liability as executrix, and adjudging that the estate was “ fully distributed, and the trust settled and closed.”
The said Bertha Breton took possession of all the property under said decree of distribution; and after-wards, on February 21, 1892, she made, executed, acknowledged, and delivered to the defendants, Edward M. Walbank and William Bisbee, an instrument in writing by which she conveyed and transferred to said defendants all the property mentioned in said decree of distribution, and in said will remaining undisposed of by her at that time; and the said defendants thereupon immediately took possession of all of said property. This instrument provided that the defendants should execute certain trusts therein expressly declared. After-wards the said Bertha Breton died, and the plaintiff herein, who was public administrator, procured himself to be appointed administrator with the will annexed of the estate of said Charles Breton, deceased. As such administrator he commenced this action against said defendants Walbank and Bisbee to recover possession of all the property in their hands which had belonged to said Charles Breton, deceased, at the date of his death. The defendants answered, claiming ownership of said property under said conveyance from said Bertha Breton. At the trial—the evidence and admissions of the parties having shown substantially the above facts—the court granted a nonsuit, and entered judgment for the defendants. From the judgment plaintiff appeals.
Respondents contend in the first place that the judgment should be affirmed without reference to the construction of the will, because it appears that the estate of Charles Breton was fully and finally distributed, and the administration closed; that there was nothing further to be administered on in said estate, and that if those who claim to be legatees under the will after the death of Bertha Breton have any rights in the premises, such rights could be asserted only in actions brought directly by said legatees against the defendants. We *198are disposed to think that respondents are right in this contention, but we do not deem, it necessary to definitely determine this point, because, in our opinion, said legatees, under the facts, took no interest in any of said property.
It is not necessary to determine accurately and to a nicety into what category of estates the interest which Bertha Breton took under the will should be placed. Under some authorities such an absolute power of disposition of property as this will contains is held to substantially and necessarily create an estate in fee, notwithstanding the fact that such a phrase-as “lifetime” may also have been used. In Ramsdell v. Ramsdell, 21 Me. 288, the court say: “ If estates be devised to a person with or without words of inheritance, and with an absolute right to sell and appropriate the proceeds at pleasure to his own use, it is not perceived how there can be a vested interest imparted to another in the same estate or property. Such full dominion in the devisee or legatee is inconsistent with and destructive of all other rights.” But however that maybe, it is certainly true that where in such a case the devisee has actually disposed of all the property, there cannot afterwards be “ a vested interest imparted to another” therein. In none of the cases cited by appellant was the language of the will the same as that used in the will here in question. In the present case the devisee was not confined by the words of the will to the mere use of the property during her life. She was not limited merely to such disposition or such change of form of the property as would enable her to better enjoy it. It was given to her to “ expend as she may see fit;” and “with full power to sell, transfer, or dispose of the whole or any portion thereof as she may deem proper,” and she was given “ full power to convey a fee simple title to any of the real estate,” and “to convey all the right, title, and interest which I may have at the time of my death, of, in, and to all the property” mentioned in the will. It is admitted that by the said instrument in writing ex*199ecuted and delivered to the defendant, she did, in express terms, convey, transfer, and dispose of all of said property to said defendants; and having done so, there was not “ any money remaining” to which the subsequent legacies named in the will could attach.
The judgment and orders appealed, from are affirmed.
Fitzgerald, J., and De Haven, J., concurred.