Opinion
S92A1555.
DECIDED FEBRUARY 5, 1993.
Wills. Fayette Superior Court. Before Judge Miller.
Hishon Burbage, James G. Killough, for appellant.
Glover Davis, Delia T. Crouch, for appellees.
This appeal involves the construction of the will and codicil thereto of Mary G. Thornton. John H. Thornton, the testator's stepson, and a beneficiary under her will, appeals the trial court's order construing his bequest as limited to $10,000, without interest.
Under the will, and codicil executed the following year, Thornton, and the testator's two daughters received equal shares of the testator's "personal property." Thornton contends the trial court erroneously construed "personal property" to exclude the estate's major asset: a note secured by a deed to secure debt which the testator received in 1980, four years after she executed her will, and which she held at her death in 1982. We pretermit the issue, argued by the parties, of how the term "personal property" should be construed under the principles of Cannon v. First Nat. Bank, 237 Ga. 562, 564 ( 229 S.E.2d 361) (1976). Rather, we look, as we must, to the intent of the testator. OCGA § 53-2-91; Collier v. First Nat. Bank, 262 Ga. 338, 339 (1) ( 417 S.E.2d 653) (1992). A review of the four corners of the will, and the codicil, shows the testator's unambiguous intent to include the note in question as part of the property to be divided among Thornton and the testator's two daughters. Thus, regardless of the legal meaning of the term "personal property" in this instance, the testator's intent governs, and the trial court erroneously construed the will to limit Thornton's bequest. Accordingly, the trial court's judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded to the trial court with direction that summary judgment be granted to Thornton. See Buffington v. Childers, 259 Ga. 179 ( 378 S.E.2d 122) (1989).
Judgment reversed and remanded. Clarke, C. J., Benham, Fletcher, Sears-Collins and Hunstein, JJ., concur.