Summary
In Eidt v. Eidt (supra) in construing a will, the word "and" was supplied to give effect to the intent of the testator, and the Court of Appeals, in declaring the effect to be given to the plain intent of the testator, said; "It overrides the inadequacy or incorrectness of the language or the punctuation, or any crudity of the will.
Summary of this case from Matter of McGeehanOpinion
Argued October 9, 1911
Decided November 21, 1911
Carl A. Hansmann for appellant.
Theodore J. Breitwieser for respondents.
There arises from the language, "I leave to my wife the house and all furnishings at No 326 E. 43 St for the rest of her natural life the interest in the real estate held by me and my brother John C Eidt to be held together for Two years or less in case of death of my wife within two years or date of settlement one third Interest to go to Mrs Anna Deibel," a legitimate doubt as to the will and intention of the testator concerning the devolution of his interest in the real estate owned by him in common with his brother. The prevailing opinion delivered at the Appellate Division held the view that he made no disposition of the interest, but did direct that the real estate should remain unsold for two years or less. Mr. Justice SCOTT in a dissenting opinion expressed the view that he devised absolutely the interest to his wife.
The question certified imposes upon us the duty of declaring, through interpretation, the effect of the will in the particular it specifies. In the judicial interpretation of a will, which is given only when its language under its natural and ordinary meaning is of doubtful and uncertain effect, the intention of the testator may be sought through the entire contents of the will. If, by a careful study of the entire will, the uncertainty is not eliminated or the intention is not perceived, the relevant and competent facts and circumstances surrounding the testator at the time of the execution of the will, and the rules of judicial interpretation should be resorted to as aids in giving the instrument the meaning which it may contain. Whenever the intention is ascertained or is made satisfactorily apparent through the balance of reasons and probabilities, it becomes obligatory to determine whether it is adequately expressed by the language of the will. Courts will not construct a will in order that an inadequately expressed intention may be fulfilled, or thrust into a will a provision which is neither apparent nor necessarily to be implied. But a testamentary intention declared in a lawful manner and having a legal purpose has paramount potency and cannot be thwarted or nullified. It overrides the inadequacy or incorrectness of the language or the punctuation, or any crudity of the will. To effectuate it the courts will transpose or insert or disregard words or phrases. ( Dreyer v. Reisman, 202 N Y 476; DuBois v. Ray, 35 N.Y. 162; Kinkele v. Wilson, 151 N.Y. 269; O'Malley v. Loftus, 220 Penn. St. 424.)
A patient consideration of the brief and imperfect will at bar brings us to the conclusions that the intention of the testator may be gathered with reasonable certainty from it, and that it adequately expresses that intention. The testator when dictating its provisions had evidently two desires, the one to preserve to his brother the hay and grain business in which they were partners and protect it and him against the immediate and injurious winding up of it; the other, to make provision for his wife through the remaining years of her life. The will in its abbreviations, omissions and characters and initial letters in the place of words is in the style and method of merchants. It is businesslike rather than lawyerlike. A communication between merchants by which the one informed the other that he had shipped, as ordered, two designated articles or shipments and omitted the conjunctive "and" between the designations, as for illustration: "We forward this day as ordered 100 doz. eggs 400 bush. potatoes," would be construed as a statement that the two articles or shipments had been forwarded. From the form of the will, it is not unnatural or unwarranted to insert, as Mr. Justice SCOTT did, the conjunction "and" so that the clause would read: "I leave to my wife the house and all furnishings at No. 326 East 43rd street for the rest of her natural life and the interest in the real estate" and plainly devise to Margaret Eidt the one-half interest in the real estate owned by the testator in common with his brother.
The determination that the interest in this real estate was devised to Margaret Eidt has further support. The will is conclusive proof that the testator had a purpose or intention concerning that interest. Under the position taken in the prevailing opinion at the Appellate Division and by the respondents that his purpose was to provide that the real estate should be held together for two years or less, the words "the interest in" are useless and unsuitable. While the will in its entirety is informal, the utility and accuracy of the words used are noteworthy and instructive. It is, moreover, an established rule that the courts should give effect to every word and provision of the will, in so far as they may without violating the intent of the testator or well-settled rules of law. The words "the real estate held by me and my brother John C. Eidt to be held together for two years or less" would have accurately expressed the conclusion of the Appellate Division. Under that conclusion the words "the interest in" make the provision incorrectly expressed. Under the conclusion that the provision is a devise of the interest to the wife, those words are precisely fitting and effective. An exposition of the intention expressed by the will, more clear than that in the will, would be: "I leave to my wife the house and all furnishings at No. 326 East 43rd Street, New York City, for the rest of her natural life. I leave to my wife the interest in the real estate held by me and my brother John C. Eidt, which real estate is to be held together for two years or less. In case of the death of my wife within the two years next after my death or prior to a settlement within that period of the said hay and grain business, I give the one-third interest of that business to Mrs. Anna Diebel."
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the judgment of the Special Term affirmed, with costs in both courts to the appellant, and the question certified should be answered: Jacob Eidt, Jr., by his last will and testament dated March 23rd, 1908, devised in fee simple to his widow Margaret Eidt his one-half interest in the real estate owned by him in common with his brother John C. Eidt.
CULLEN, Ch. J., VANN, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.