Court Opinion

ID: 6312089
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 20:16:47.800868+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:06.758031
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Gibson, C. J.
This is a question of intention, not of technical expression. The devise is explicitly to the widow for life in the first instance; and the qualification annexed to it, interpreted by the object, cannot be taken for a conditional limitation. We are to discover the principal intent in order to carry it out by so modifying the estates created, as to give it effect even at the expense of particular provisions which, rigidly interpreted, might seem to stand in its way; and it meets us at the threshold. It was to provide a home for his family which could not be reft from it by the improvidence of a second marriage. The devise is, “ to my dearly beloved wife Mary, for and during her natural life, if she shall so long remain my widow;” and if it had stopped there, the estate would have ceased at her marriage, even without a devise over. But if she should marry, what then ? Why then “ I do order that her husband have no other privilege than his living on the place for and during the natural life of my said wife, as aforesaid, and no longer.” That, and not forfeiture, is the alternative. In other words, she shall have the estate with all the incidents of property, except a power to transfer her dominion over it to a husband. But an attempt to preclude his right to possess it during the coverture would have been absurd, had the testator supposed that after her marriage she would have no estate to possess. Whether, as it was expressed in Hannay v. Smith, 4 Whart. 129, he could engraft on an absolute gift, not by way of cesser or donation over, a present disability to transfer the dominion over it by marriage, is not the matter in hand: it is sufficient for the question of intention that he thought he could, and the words “if she shall remain a widow,” indicate an intent, not that the estate should cease at her marriage, but that she should not have it on terms which enable her husband to encumber it. But again, if her estate ceased, what became of *500it? It was not devised over; for the children were directed to take what the law gave them, and consequently by descent, which, however, was expressly suspended till her death; and the fee could not be in abeyance in the meantime. To give effect not only to the intention therefore, but the requisitions of the law, we must say, that it remained in her. And this result is entirely consistent with, as well as the executor’s express power to lease which, being a contingent provision for a particular application of the gift, did not propose to vary the interests carved out of it; as his implied power to sell which could not consistently be exercised in her lifetime, nor even at her death unless the youngest child had come of age. The intention then was, that the widow’s marriage should preclude the exercise of a power over the property by her husband, not that it should work a forfeiture of it; and so far as the law will allow us to do, we are bound to give effect to it.
Judgment affirmed.