Court Opinion

ID: 6580573
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:37:56.926222+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:16.032786
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Ross, J.
The principal if not the only question considered by the County Court was, the effect to be given to the writing given by William and Charlotte E. Buck to the intestate,'February 10, 1863. If that writing operates to bar the appellees from re*291ceiving a distributive share of the estate, the judgment of the County Court must stand, although it did not proceed to make distribution of the estate as it regularly' should have done. Neither has the County Court found sufficient facts to enable this court to make distribution. Hence, we shall confine ourselves to the consideration of the effect of the writing of February 10, 1868. It is conceded that it cannot operate as a release of the expectant heir, Charlotte E. Buck’s expectancy in her father’s estate. A release cannot discharge that which does not exist. Heirship cannot be predicated of a living person. At the date of the writing, Charlotte E. Buck had no right to what in time might prove to be her father’s estate. Her expectancy even might prove but a vain hope, as it did by her decease preceding that of her father. Besides, the writing not being under seal, leaves the consideration open for inquiry, and Jacks the essential requisites of a technical release. But if it operated to release her expectancy, it would not touch the rights of the appellees in the estate. They take as the representatives of Charlotte E. but directly from Jonathan C. Kittle, and not from her. Sedgivick v. Minot, 6 Allen, 171. She never became an heir to the estate, and so took nothing in it, and therefore could not transfer any part of the estate to the appellees, nor release anything which the law gives to them directly from the estate. The same objections lie to giving the writing and the receipt of the consideration expressed therein, effect as an accord and satisfaction of the expectancy. The words, accord and satisfaction, of themselves imply that something exists to accord and satisfy, which, as we have seen, did not exist in this case. But if it did accord and satisfy the expectancy, the expectancy perished without fruition. It is conceded that Charlotte E. could not convey her expectancy, because it was not a thing in existence, and might not, and in this case never did, exist. If it conveyed the expectancy, the expectancy amounted to' nothing. Jonathan C. Kittle could never have reaped the fruition of the expectancy, as that fruition depended upon his demise. Hence, she did not have anything to convey, nor anything he could have ever taken if she could have conveyed it.
As it is not under ■seal, an essential requisite of a covenant, *292binding Charlotte E. and her heirs not to prosecute her expectancy if it ripened into fruition against the estate, is wanting. Besides, Charlotte E„ being at the time of its execution under the disability of coverture, could not, with the consent of her husband even, bind herself by personal covenants ; and if not herself, not her heirs nor representatives. The counsel for the estate attempt to uphold and give it force to defeat the right of the appellees, under ss. 16, 17, c. 56, of the Gen. Sts. Section 16 provides that an advancement made to a child, or other lineal descendant, in case of the decease of the child or other lineal descendant before the decease of the intestate, shall be reckoned towards the share in the estate of the representative of such child or other lineal descendant. But this section makes no provision for such advancement being taken in full for the representative’s share, unless the advancement was of a sum equal to the representative’s share in the estate. The provision that it should be reckoned towards such share, excludes an intention to reckon it in full, if it prove not to be equal in amount to the sharer
Section 17 provides for ascertaining the value of the advancement, that if its value is expressed by the act which evidences the advancement as such, under the statute it shall be reckoned at that value, and if not so expressed, at its true value at the time it was advanced. The counsel for the estate contend that this section authorizes the ancestor and heir expectant to agree upon the value of the thing advanced, and therefore to agree that it Rhall be in full of the expectancy. But receipts and other contracts not under seal, expressed .to be in full for any legal obligation, are usually open to explanation by parol proof, and operate only so far as the thing received satisfies the legal obligation to which it is applied. It is to be noticed that the section is silent as to any agreement for the full satisfaction of the heir’s distributive •share. Besides, it allows the ancestor to fix the value of the advancement, without the concurrence of the heir expectant; and if it is to be taken in full of the heir’s share in his estate when he so expresses it at the time of making the advancement, it allows the ancestor to speak in respect to, and to control, the distribution of his estate by parol, and without complying with the statu*293tory requisites of a will. Such'a construction is directly opposed to the policy of the law in regard to the disposition of property by will. Viewed from any legal standpoint, the claims of the counsel for the estate are unsupported by legal principles, .and are,directly opposed to the decision of this court in Robinson v. Robinson, Brayt, 59, and Robinson v. Swift, admr 3 Vt. 283. Hence, wo think there was error in the proforma judgment of the County Court, giving to the writing of February 10, 1863, the effect to satisfy the share-of the appellees in-the defendant estate. '
The question has been discussed whether the writing of February 10, 1863, is evidence of an advancement. All the- papers executed between the parties, on that day are to be construed as evidencing one transaction. From the peculiar character of what has been denominated the lease, and as no facts have been found by the court whether the intestate paid any money to Buck and wife on that occasion, and if so, how much, we have not thought best to attempt to decide this question.
Judgment reversed ; cause remanded.