Court Opinion

ID: 6414451
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:55:06.802293+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:29.494448
License: Public Domain

Dewey, J.
The demandant asserts his right as a child of George M. Prentiss, deceased, to maintain the present action to recover certain real estate lately belonging to said Prentiss. The defence is, that George M. Prentiss died testate, having duly made his last will and testament, by which he disposed of all his property to other persons, and made his widow, Emily A. L. Prentiss, the residuary devisee of all his estate, real and personal, The fact of the existence and probate of such a will is conceded, and the only inquiry is, whether the case of the demandant falls within the provisions of Gen. Sts. c. 92, § 25, as the case of a child not provided for in the will of the testator. The demandant is the child of the testator, and was of the age of ten days at the time of the decease of his father. No provision was made for him in the will; and the sole inquiry is, whether it is sufficiently made to appear that such omission was intentional, and not occasioned by accident or mistake. The evidence upon this point is here furnished solely upon the face of the will. The testator, contemplating the event that has occurred in the birth of this child as one that might occur, has *49signified his purpose as to such child. All that is necessary to be shown is, that the matter was in the mind of the testator, and by him deliberately acted upon. Where a testator devised his estate to the children of his daughter, describing them as such, but giving no legacy to the daughter, this was held sufficient to exclude her from a distributive share of his estate. Wild v. Brewer, 2 Mass. 570.
Here the language is very significant. It is a direct and expressed exclusion of “ any child born to me before or after my decease,” from setting up a claim to the estate. As was decided in Bancroft v. Ives, 3 Gray, 367, the statute applies to children bora after the making of the will and before the death of the father. But it is the entire statute, with all its limitations, and it is unavailing where it appears that the exclusion of such a child was intentional. This does appear in the present case, and therefore the title of the demandant to the real estate demanded is not sustained.

Judgment for the tenant