Court Opinion

ID: 3651215
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:05:49.87654+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:16:22.933836
License: Public Domain

The argument on the part of the defendants is, that under the will a vested interest in Beck passed to the testator's daughter Betsey; and that the issue of Beck, born since the vesting of that interest, accrued to the said daughter by operation of law. That the legacies charged upon that bequest are pecuniary legacies, the amount whereof is to be ascertained when Betsey takes Beck into possession, and that amount is also made dependent on the value at which Beck shall then be appraised; and that, without inserting words in the will which it does not contain, the appraisement must be confined to Beck alone. We do not yield to the force of this argument. The court cannot, indeed, under the pretense of construction, alter a will. They must find enough in it to manifest the intention which they attribute to the testator, but it is not necessary that this intention should be expressed with critical precision. On the will, it is apparent that the testator designed that his five daughters should share equally of his bounty. He makes no mention of the increase of Beck, either in the bequest of her to Betsey or in the appraisement which he directs of her value for the benefit of Betsey's sisters. The appraisement is to be made when Betsey is entitled to the possession of Beck; and what Betsey then obtains by means of this bequest is to be valued so as to give her sisters an equal share thereof. (325) Under the name Beck, she received not Beck alone, but Beck
with her fruits or increase. In the valuation for the purpose of an equal division, not Beck alone, but Beck with her attendant fruits or increase is to be comprehended. It is not the legacy as vested, but as enjoyed, which the testator directed to be appraised. Had Beck died *Page 251 
without increase during the existence of the particular estate, Betsey could not have been called upon for contribution, although her interest in remainder had completely vested, because the charge was upon her legacy after it should come into possession. It should, therefore, be valued such as it then was. Any other construction would do violence to the plan of the testator.
PER CURIAM.                            Decree for the plaintiffs.