Mrs. Ruth died on the 16th of June, 1892, having on the first
day of the same month and year executed both a will and a codicil.
After revoking all previous wills and codicils and directing the
payment of debts and funeral expenses, the will bequeathed all the
real, personal or mixed property to the American Security and Trust
Company for the benefit of a granddaughter, Sophia Yuengling
Huston, during her natural life. On the death of the granddaughter,
the will provided that the trust should end, and that it should be
the duty of the trustee to pay over to the Hospital of the
University of Pennsylvania the sum of five thousand dollars for
purposes stated, and to deliver all the "residue and remainder of
the estate of whatever kind" to the Home for Incurables, to which
corporation such residue was bestowed for a stated object. The
codicil was as follows:
"I, Mary Eleanor Ruth, being of sound and disposing mind and
memory and understanding, do make and publish this codicil to my
last will and testament: I hereby revoke and annul the bequest
therein made by me to the Home for Incurables at Fordham, New York
city, in the New York, and I hereby give and bequeath the five
thousand dollars (heretofore in my will bequeathed to said Home for
Incurables) to my friend Emeline Colville, the widow of Samuel
Colville, now living in New York city, said bequest being on
account of her kindness to my son and myself during his and my
illness and my distress."
Held that the effect of the codicil was to revoke the
bequest of five thousand dollars, made by the will in favor of the
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and to substitute
therefor the legatee named in the codicil.
Mary E. Ruth died on the 16th of June, 1892, having, on the
first day of the same month and year, executed both a will
Page 172 U. S. 384
and a codicil. After revoking all previous wills and codicils
and directing the payment of debts and funeral expenses, the will
bequeathed all the real, personal, or mixed property to the
American Security & Trust Company for the benefit of a
granddaughter, Sophia Yuengling Huston, during her natural life. On
the death of the granddaughter, the will provided that the trust
should end, and that it should be the duty of the trustee to pay
over to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania the sum of
five thousand dollars for purposes stated, and to deliver all the
"residue and remainder of the estate, of whatever kind," to the
Home for Incurables, to which corporation such residue was bestowed
for a stated object. The codicil unquestionably gave to Emeline
Colville a bequest of five thousand dollars. The will and codicil
are printed in full in the margin.
*
Page 172 U. S. 385
In October, 1895, the American Security & Trust Company,
alleging the death of the granddaughter and the termination of the
trust, filed a bill to obtain a construction of the will and
codicil to the end that it might be enabled to distribute the
estate, and thus be legally discharged from all
Page 172 U. S. 386
obligations in the premises. The bill charged that, considering
the will and codicil together, there was uncertainty whether the
five thousand dollars given by the codicil to Mrs. Colville revoked
the bequest in favor of the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania, or substituted Mrs. Colville, in whole or only in
part, in the place and stead of the Home for Incurables, as to the
gift in the will to that institution.
The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, the Home for
Incurables, Emeline Colville, and the heirs at law of the decedent
were made parties to the bill. The Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania, by its answer, denied that there was any ambiguity in
the will in regard to the bequest made to it, and averred that such
bequest was in no wise impaired by the codicil. The Home for
Incurables, although conceding by its answer that there was an
ambiguity arising from the will and codicil considered in
juxtaposition, yet alleged that the codicil did not in any respect
diminish the bequest and devise of the residuum made to it by the
will, or, if it did, operated to do so only to the amount of five
thousand dollars. Emeline Colville, by her answer, while admitting
that there was ambiguity in the will and codicil considered
together, averred that such ambiguity was patent, and was
resolvable by settled rules of construction. She averred that,
applying such rules, it was clear that the codicil operated to
revoke the bequest and devise of the residuum of the estate made in
favor of the Home for Incurables, and
Page 172 U. S. 387
had substituted Mrs. Colville as the residuary devisee after the
payment of the amount of the bequest in favor of the Pennsylvania
institution. The heirs at law, by their answer, while admitting
that the codicil gave Emeline Colville five thousand dollars, also
asserted that the gift of the residue made by the will, in favor of
the Home for Incurables, was revoked by the codicil, and therefore
that, after payment of the legacy of five thousand dollars given to
the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and a like amount
due to Mrs. Colville under the codicil, the remainder of the estate
passed to them, since as to such remainder the decedent was
intestate.
The trial court found that the codicil gave Emeline Colville
five thousand dollars, and substituted her to the bequest made in
favor of the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; hence it
decreed Mrs. Colville entitled to the five thousand dollars, and
that the Pennsylvania corporation took nothing. It further decreed
that the other provision of the will -- that is, the disposition of
the residuary estate in favor of the Home for Incurables -- was
unaffected by the codicil.
The Court of Appeals, to which the controversy was taken, while
agreeing that the codicil gave Mrs. Colville five thousand dollars,
and that she was entitled to this sum, held (the Chief Justice
dissenting) that the effect of the codicil was to revoke the
bequest and devise of the residuum in favor of the Home for
Incurables, and therefore that Mrs. Ruth, as to the entire
remainder of her estate, after paying the legacies to the
University of Pennsylvania and Mrs. Colville, had died intestate;
consequently, that the residue of the estate should be distributed
among the heirs at law. 10 App.D.C. 56.
Page 172 U. S. 388
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It will subserve clearness of understanding to accurately define
at the outset the real contentions which underlie the issues
presented.
It is not gainsaid by either of the beneficiaries under the will
that the plain intention of the testatrix expressed in the codicil
was to give Mrs. Colville the sum of five thousand dollars. Indeed,
assertion that there was doubt on this subject could not reasonably
be made in view of the explicit terms of the codicil. The
uncertainty which it is alleged exists in the codicil is solely as
to which one of the beneficiaries named in the will is to be
affected by the payment of the sum given by the codicil. Each of
those benefited by the will in substance asserts that the codicil
is certain insofar as it manifests the intention of the testatrix
to give, and that it is equally certain as to the fund from which
the payment is to be made, provided such fund is found to be the
provision made by the will in favor of the other. The arguments
hence at once resolve themselves into the single assertion that,
although the gift made by the codicil is certain, its enforcement
may or may not be possible, depending on the particular fountain
from which it may be concluded the testatrix intended the stream of
her benefaction should flow. And although differing in form of
statement, the contentions upon which the legal heirs and Mrs.
Colville base their claim of right to the residuary estate
substantially conduce to a like, although more aggravated, result.
The first (the legal heirs) concede the certainty of the intention
of the testatrix as expressed in the codicil to give a specific sum
to Mrs. Colville, but claim that in the execution of this defined
purpose, the testatrix
Page 172 U. S. 389
brought about uncertainty as to the entire residuum of her
estate, since intestacy, it is claimed, was created in that regard.
The second (Mrs. Colville), while equally granting the clear
purpose of the testatrix, by the codicil, to give her only the sum
of five thousand dollars, yet argues that this purpose has been so
expressed as not only to give the sum intended, but the entire
remainder of the estate besides.
Before approaching the text of the will and codicil, we will
notice an erroneous statement of the rule of law by which it is
claimed the assertion that the codicil is uncertain is to be
tested, and will also state the general scope of the power which
courts of equity will exert to correct mistakes in wills, and the
cardinal rule of construction which they adopt in so doing.
It is strenuously argued that unless it be found that the
codicil takes away from one of the beneficiaries named in the will
the whole or a portion of what the will gives, by language as clear
and as free from ambiguity as that contained in the will, the
codicil is void for uncertainty, and the provisions of the will
remain unaffected. This broad proposition is unsound, and the
authority by which it is apparently supported has been explained or
qualified. Thus, in
Randfield v. Randfield, 8 H.L. 225,
Lord Campbell (pp. 234) stated the rule as follows:
"The
ratio decidendi upon which it is said that the
Vice Chancellor held that no operation is to be given to the
limitation over on the death of the son without issue, '[i]f you
have a clear gift, it shall not be cut down by anything subsequent,
unless it is equally clear,' appears to me to be insufficient. If
there be a clear gift, it is not to be cut down by anything
subsequent which does not with reasonable certainty indicate the
intention of the testator to cut it down, but the maxim cannot mean
that you are to institute a comparison between the two clauses as
to lucidity."
And in the same case, Lord Wensleydale, at p. 237, said:
"The gift, being in terms absolute, cannot be cut down, unless
there is a sufficiently clear indication of an interest [intent?]
to defeat it by the subsequent clause. I quite agree with the lord
Chancellor in the construction of those words
Page 172 U. S. 390
to which he referred, that you need not have a clause equally
clear, but it must be reasonably clear, and the clause to which
that effect is attributed by the respondents is capable of a
construction confining its effect to the real estates only."
And this rule of reasonableness is applicable with peculiar
potency to a case like the one now before us, where the effect of
defeating the codicil for uncertainty will confessedly frustrate
the clear intention of the testatrix. In this connection, the
language of Lord Brougham, concurred in by the House of Lords in
Winter v. Perratt, 6 Man. & Gr. 314, 359, is
pertinent:
"We ought not, without absolute necessity, to let ourselves
embrace the alternative of holding a devise void for uncertainty.
Where it is possible to give a meaning, we should give it, that the
will of the testator may be operative, and where two or more
meanings are presented for consideration, we must be well assured
that there is no sort of argument in favor of one view rather than
another before we reject the whole. It is true the heir at law
shall only be disinherited by clear intention, but if there be ever
so little reason in favor of one construction of a devise, rather
than any other, we are at least sure that this is nearer the
intention of the testator than that the whole should be void and
the heir let in."
"The cases where courts have refused to give a devise any effect
on the ground of uncertainty are those where it was quite
impossible to say what was intended, or where no intention at all
had been expressed, rather than cases where several meanings were
suggested and seemed equally entitled to the preference. . . . On
this head it may further be observed that the difficulty of
arriving at a conclusion, even the grave doubt which may hang
around it, certainly the diversity and the conflict of opinions
respecting it, and the circumstances of different persons having
attached different meanings to the same words, form no ground
whatever of holding a devise void for uncertainty. The difficulty
must be so great that it amounts to an impossibility; the doubt so
great that there is not even an inclination of the scales one way,
before we are entitled to adopt the conclusion. Nor have we any
right to
Page 172 U. S. 391
regard the discrepancy of opinions as any evidence of the
uncertainty while there remains any reasonable ground of preferring
one solution to all the rest. The books are full of cases where
every shift, if I may so speak, has been resorted to rather than
hold the gift void for uncertainty."
No less clearly marked out is the conceded authority of a court
of equity to correct mistakes in wills and to enforce the real
intention of the testator by giving that construction which
accomplishes such purpose. Story, 1 Eq.Jur., 12th ed., p. 174,
says:
"SEC 179: In regard to mistakes in wills, there is no doubt that
courts of equity have jurisdiction to correct them, when they are
apparent upon the face of the will or may be made out by a due
construction of its terms, for in cases of wills, the intention
will prevail over the words. But then the mistake must be apparent
on the face of the will, otherwise there can be no relief, for at
least since the statute of frauds, which requires wills to be in
writing (whatever may have been the case before the statute), parol
evidence, or evidence
dehors the will, is not admissible
to vary or control the terms of the will, although it is admissible
to remove a latent ambiguity."
"SEC 180: But the mistake, in order to lead to relief, must be a
clear mistake, or a clear omission, demonstrable from the structure
and scope of the will. Thus if in a will there is a mistake in the
computation of a legacy, it will be rectified in equity. So, if
there is a mistake in a name, or description, or number of the
legatees, intended to take, or in the property intended to be
bequeathed, equity will correct it."
In
Hardenbergh v. Ray, 151 U.
S. 112, at page
151 U. S. 126, the Court, through Mr. Justice Jackson,
thus stated the doctrine:
"The cardinal rule for the construction of wills, to which all
other rules must bend, as stated by Chief Justice Marshall in
Smith v.
Bell, 6 Pet. 68,
31 U. S.
75, is that"
"the intention of the testator expressed in his will shall
prevail, provided it be consistent with the rules of law. . . .
This principle is generally asserted in the construction of every
testamentary disposition. It is emphatically the
will of
the person who makes it, and is
Page 172 U. S. 392
defined to be 'the legal declaration of a man's intentions,
which he wills to be performed after his death.' These intentions
are to be collected from his words, and ought to be carried into
effect if they be consistent with law."
See also Colton v. Colton, 127 U.
S. 300.
We come, then, to the text of the will and codicil, in order to
consider first whether the bequest and devise of the remainder
which the will makes is in whole or in part affected by the
codicil, and second, if not, whether the codicil substitutes Mrs.
Colville to the bequest in favor of the Hospital of the University
of Pennsylvania, thereby revoking the gift of five thousand dollars
made to the said hospital and conferring that sum upon Mrs.
Colville.
The language of that portion of the will with which we are now
concerned is as follows:
"Third. In the event of the death of my said granddaughter,
Sophia Yuengling Huston, or of the occurrence of the prior
contingency for the determination of said trust hereinbefore
provided in item two, then the trust hereinbefore created and
vested in the American Security and Trust Company shall cease and
be determined, and so much of my said estate shall thereupon be
conveyed and delivered over by said American Security and Trust
Company to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania as
amounts to five thousand dollars; said five thousand dollars to be
used by said hospital to endow and forever maintain a first-class
perpetual bed in said hospital in the City of Philadelphia, said
bed to be in the name and memory of my beloved son, Malancthon Love
Ruth."
"All the residue and remainder of my said estate, of whatever
kind, after the payment of said five thousand dollars for the
establishment of said perpetual bed in said hospital, I give,
devise, and bequeath to the 'Home for Incurables,' at Fordham, New
York City, in the State of New York, its successors and assigns,
forever, to be used by said Home for Incurables to endow and
forever maintain one or more beds in said home in the name and
memory of my beloved son, Malancthon Love Ruth."
The codicil says:
Page 172 U. S. 393
"I, Mary Eleanor Ruth, being of sound and disposing mind and
memory and understanding, do make and publish this codicil to my
last will and testament. I hereby revoke and annul the bequest
therein made by me to the Home for Incurables at Fordham, New York
City, in the State of New York, and I hereby give and bequeath the
five thousand dollars (heretofore in my will bequeathed to said
Home for Incurables) to my friend Emeline Colville, the widow of
Samuel Colville, now living in New York City, said bequest being on
account of her kindness to my son and myself during his and my
illness and my distress."
"In witness whereof, I have hereto affixed my name this first
day of June, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and
ninety-two, and I in all other things ratify and affirm my said
will."
It is apparent that the portions of the will which are in
question contain but two provisions: first, a bequest of five
thousand dollars to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania,
and second a bequest and devise of the entire remainder of the
estate to the Home for Incurables. This is so self-evident as to
require nothing but statement. The codicil, it is obvious, makes
one bequest only -- that is, five thousand dollars to Mrs.
Colville. It points out the source whence this sum is to be taken
by designating the particular fund created by the will from which
the same is to be obtained. This designation is made in a two-fold
way: first by naming the person in whose favor the will gives a
right, thereby pointing out that it is the fund given to such
person which is to be drawn on in order to execute the gift in
favor of Mrs. Colville; second, it also designates the source
whence the five thousand dollars is to be taken, by describing the
character of the bequest in the will which is to be used to pay the
legacy created by the codicil. As a result, the codicil revokes the
bequest in the will upon which it operates, and substitutes the
beneficiary named in the codicil for the beneficiary under the
will. The controversy arises from the fact that there is conflict
between the two designations made by the codicil, the name on the
one hand, and the character of the thing given, on the other.
Page 172 U. S. 394
This conflict plainly appears from a consideration of the text
of the codicil:
"I hereby revoke and annul the bequest therein [that is, in the
will] made by me to the Home for Incurables at Fordham, New York
City, in the State of New York, and I hereby give and bequeath the
five thousand dollars (heretofore in my will bequeathed to said
Home for Incurables) to my friend Emeline Colville."
That these words show a change of purpose as to a gift of five
thousand dollars found in the will and a substitution of the new
beneficiary for the one mentioned in the will is beyond reasonable
doubt demonstrated by the text. The revocation made by the codicil
is but consequent on the gift to the new legatee of "the" sum
"heretofore in my will bequeathed," and thus makes it patent that
the revocation and the gift are truly one and the same act of
volition, and that they arise from and depend one on the other.
Which, then, of the two designations in the codicil contained, is
the controlling one? -- or, otherwise stated, which was mistakenly
used by the testatrix?
The language revoking and annulling in the codicil is "the
bequest therein [that is, in the will] made by me." The gift by the
codicil is a bequest of "the five thousand dollars heretofore in my
will bequeathed." Now the only clause in the will to which this
description can possibly apply is the single and only specific
bequest found in the will -- that is, the five thousand dollars
given by the will to the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania. It follows that the only possible subject to which
the codicil can apply is the only one found in the will to which
the description can possibly relate, and which it defines with
certainty and clearness. To adopt the designation which the codicil
gives when it states the name of the beneficiary of the provision
in the will would absolutely destroy the description of the
character of the thing stated in the codicil, since there is
nothing given by the will to the Home for Incurables which comes
under or can possibly be embraced within the specific description
contained in the codicil of the object of gift to be affected. Now
as it is manifest from the codicil that the purpose of the
testatrix was but, in making the codicil, to change the benefit by
her
Page 172 U. S. 395
conferred under the will only to the extent of the bequest found
in the will of five thousand dollars, and that her sole intent was
to confer this gift on a new person, it would follow, if the
mention by the codicil of the name of the supposed recipient of the
gift were allowed to control, that the thing revoked would be
dominated by the mere name, the representative would be greater
than the thing it stood for, and the plain intent and purpose of
the testatrix, apparent on the face of the codicil, would be
frustrated. Moreover a yet more serious departure from the words
and intention of the testatrix would result. It is plain from the
will that the fixed design of the testatrix was to provide for the
disposition of her entire estate -- that is, that she assiduously
sought to avoid intestacy as to any portion thereof. But if the
name mentioned in the codicil be allowed to destroy the accurate
description of the nature of the thing upon which the codicil
operates, intestacy as to the remainder of the estate would arise,
since such result must flow from the assumption that the revocation
made by the codicil relates to the devise of the remainder of the
estate made by the will. To hold that the name in the codicil
controlled the description would be tantamount to saying that
although the testatrix intended, and had stated such intention in
clear language, to dispose of all her estate, yet by writing the
codicil, she had become intestate to the full limit of all the
remainder. Besides, to thus construe the will would be to declare
that the greater portion of the codicil was wholly unnecessary and
meaningless, for if the intention had been that the sum given
should be paid by diminishing the remainder, then all reference to
the particular gift which was to be operated upon was
superfluous.
The intention of the testatrix as shown by the entire codicil is
greatly fortified by considering that the context of the will and
codicil establish beyond cavil that they were written by one
familiar with the technical legal terms, and hence that the
provisions found in both instruments were carefully made to conform
to legal phraseology. Now the thing revoked is called in the
codicil "the bequest" made in the will, which contradistinguishes
it from the bequest and devise of "all
Page 172 U. S. 396
the residue and remainder" of the estate of the testatrix "of
whatever kind," which the will contains.
The reasoning by which it is contended that the designation by
name found in the codicil must be held as dominant, and must be
construed as obliterating the clear and legally precise indication
of the thing intended to be revoked, which the codicil itself
affords, does not commend itself to our approval. That reasoning
thus proceeds: the codicil contains a revocation and a gift. The
two are wholly distinct, the one from the other. As, therefore, the
revocation refers by name to the bequest made to the Home for
Incurables and revokes it, therefore the provision made by the will
for testacy as to the entire remainder is destroyed, even although
the gift made by the codicil is only of five thousand dollars, and
despite the fact that it plainly, by its terms, refers solely to a
bequest of that amount made in the will. But to adopt this view
compels a distortion of the language of the codicil, a mutilation
of its context, and a division of its provisions into two distinct
and substantive matters, when in fact on the face of the codicil it
contains but one provision, a revocation and a gift, the one
dependent upon the other, the one caused by the other -- that is to
say, a revocation made in order to give, and a gift made solely of
the thing revoked. Indeed, to support the view that because the
name of the Home for Incurables is stated in the codicil, that
instrument had reference to the bequest and devise of the remainder
of the estate made by the will requires not only the arbitrary
division of a single sentence in the codicil into two parts,
although they are indissolubly connected, but also necessitates a
misconstruction of another portion of the will. This follows from
the fact that even although the revoking part of the sentence be
alone taken into view, dissevered from that with which it is
connected in the codicil by a union of thoughts and of words which
cannot be disassociated, the codicil cannot be said to apply to the
gift of the remainder without destroying the signification of its
language. The thing annulled and revoked by the codicil is not the
bequest and devise of the remainder, but the bequest by the will
made. The language of the codicil
Page 172 U. S. 397
is: "I hereby revoke and annul the bequest therein made by me."
But only one "bequest" -- that is, the one for five thousand
dollars -- existed in the will. To cause the word "bequest" to
refer to the remainder is to enlarge its scope and significance
beyond its legal import. True, to justify the construction that the
word "bequest" is synonymous with a bequest and devise of the
remainder, it is said that the testatrix, by her will, "directed"
the trustee to sell the real property and to convert all the estate
into personal property, and therefore that it might well have been
contemplated by her that when the time arrived for a distribution
of the estate, the remainder would consist solely of personal
property, and therefore, in mental contemplation, the testatrix may
naturally have assumed that the transmission of the remainder would
be but a bequest exclusively of personal property. This overlooks
the fact that the will and codicil were written on the same day;
that the period when the life estate was to cease and the gifts
made by the will were to become operative was necessarily wholly
uncertain, and that the terms of the will and codicil evidently
relate to the condition of the estate at the time that they were
made, and not to that which might exist at a subsequent and
uncertain period. The reasoning, moreover, must rest on a
self-evident disregard of the terms of the will, which does not, as
is expressly asserted to be the case, "
direct" the trustee
to convert the real estate into personal property, but simply
"
authorized" it to so do.
And this analysis, which demonstrates that the terms of the
codicil do not apply to the bequest and devise of the remainder so
as to bring about intestacy, also with equal conclusiveness shows
that the codicil cannot be construed as reducing the bequest and
devise of the remainder to the extent of the five thousand dollars
which the codicil gives. To so construe would be to obliterate the
words "the five thousand dollars heretofore in my will bequeathed."
It would be to assume that a revocation of a gift in the will had
been made by the codicil when there was no necessity for so doing,
for, if the testatrix had intended simply to give five thousand
dollars out of the residue, the mere expression of an intention to
give
Page 172 U. S. 398
five thousand dollars would have been entirely sufficient in law
to effect such purpose, without the slightest necessity of any
revocatory clause whatever. This is but to state in another form
the abounding reason we have already mentioned that the express
result of the words of the codicil was not alone to revoke a
provision of the will, but to do so solely to the extent and for
the purpose of executing the new intention conceived by the
testatrix, by dedicating a particular and named bequest made by the
will to the new purpose, and hence that the thing selected for
revocation and substitution was accurately described in the
codicil, omitting the name of the beneficiary thereof, as
"
the bequest . . . of five thousand dollars heretofore in
my will bequeathed." Considered in its ultimate aspect, the
proposition that the codicil gave five thousand dollars to the
legatee named therein out of the remainder necessarily affirms that
the codicil relates to the remainder, and therefore asserts that
the testatrix intended not simply to revoke, in order to substitute
the new beneficiary to the specific sum revoked, but to create an
independent provision wholly disconnected from the bequest made by
the will. But this cannot be maintained without striking out the
major part of the codicil, and thus frustrating the plain intention
of the testatrix unambiguously expressed in the letter and
obviously within the spirit of the instrument.
As, then, the codicil does not, in whole or in part, refer to
the bequest and devise of all the residue and remainder made by the
will in favor of the Home for Incurables, it remains only to
consider whether it operates upon the bequest of five thousand
dollars made by the will in favor of the Hospital of the University
of Pennsylvania. If it does, it substituted the legatee named in
the codicil for the institution in question. If it does not, the
codicil is void for uncertainty, since there is no other source
from which the sum to execute the gift which it makes can be taken.
Conversely, it results that all the reasoning by which it has
become manifest that the codicil did not either apply to the gift
of the remainder establishes that it does so apply to the gift made
by the will in favor of the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania. In
Page 172 U. S. 399
the first place, the gift to that corporation is the only
specific bequest found in the will, and in the second place, it is
of the same amount as that named in the codicil. It is therefore
embraced within the strictest letter of the description given by
that instrument, "the bequest therein [in the will] made by me" and
"the five thousand dollars heretofore in my will bequeathed." And a
consideration of the whole scope of the will strengthens the force
of the language of the codicil. The bequest of five thousand
dollars given by the will to the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania was to be used by it
"to endow and forever maintain a first-class perpetual bed in
said hospital in the City of Philadelphia, said bed to be in the
name and memory of my beloved son, Malancthon Love Ruth."
The bequest and devise of "all the residue and remainder of my
said estate of whatever kind" in favor of the Home for Incurables
was "to endow and forever maintain one or more beds in said home in
the name and memory of my beloved son, Malancthon Love Ruth." The
purpose, then, of both gifts was the same. Now the declared motive
generating the making of the codicil in favor of Mrs. Colville was
"on account of her kindness to my son and myself during his and my
illness and my distress." The natural interpretation of the
intention upon which the three provisions rests is reasonably as
follows: having provided for the perpetuation of the memory of the
son by the execution of works of charity of substantially the same
nature by two different institutions, the one by the use of five
thousand dollars to support one bed, and the other and more
important by the application of all the residue and remainder of
the estate to support one or more beds, when the mind of the
testatrix came to the conclusion that her tenderness to the memory
of her son should be manifested by a gift to one who had befriended
him, the means of executing this thought which she selected was
this: not the revocation or impairment of the greater provision
made by the will for honoring the memory of the son, but the
transfer of the previous and lesser provision of five thousand
dollars to the new legatee. By this means, the general plan
expressed by the will was unaltered,
Page 172 U. S. 400
despite the execution of the conception which the codicil
embodied. It may, in consonance with reason, be considered that the
testatrix, whose mind, as the codicil shows, was charged with the
recollection of the purposes expressed in her will, should have
inadvertently used a wrong name, especially as each of the
beneficiaries under the will were to apply the thing given to a
like good work. It cannot, however, without denying the reason of
things, be successfully asserted that although the testatrix
specifically pointed out the clause in her will which she revoked,
nevertheless, by the mere mistaken use of the name of the person,
she destroyed or intended to destroy the plain and specific
description which she vividly embodied in the very sentence where
the name was inadvertently stated.
From the foregoing, it results that the use of the name "Home
for Incurables" in the codicil was but a mere mistaken designation,
dominated and controlled by the description of the character of the
thing to be affected by the codicil stated therein. Guided by the
principles enunciated in the authorities to which reference at the
outset was made, such mere mistake may be corrected, in construing
the will, by disregarding the error and following the full and
accurate description which will then be contained in the
instrument, and hence that the effect of the codicil was to revoke
the bequest of five thousand dollars made by the will in favor of
the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and to substitute
therefor the legatee named in the codicil.
The decree of the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia must be reversed, and the cause remanded to that court
with directions to affirm the decree of the Supreme Court of the
District, the costs of all parties to be paid out of the estate,
and it is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, not having heard the argument, took no part in
the decision of this case.
*
"I, Mary Eleanor Ruth, residing in the City of Washington and
the District of Columbia, being of sound and disposing mind and
memory, do make and publish and declare this to be my last will and
testament, hereby revoking and making null and void any and all
former wills and codicils by me at any time made."
"First. I direct my executor hereinafter named to first pay out
of my estate my funeral expenses and all just debts."
"Second. I give, devise, and bequeath all of my estate, real,
personal, or mixed, whether, in possession, reversion, or
remainder, now acquired or hereafter to be acquired, and
wheresoever situate, to the 'American Security and Trust Company'
of Washington City, District of Columbia, its successors and
assigns, in trust, nevertheless, for the following uses and
purposes only, that is to say:"
"To invest and to reinvest the proceeds of my said estate in its
discretion, from time to time, in any of the following classes of
securities -- that is, either in United States bonds, or in
municipal or state bonds, or in first mortgage bonds of dividend
paying railroads, or in loans secured by first trusts upon real
estate in the District of Columbia, said loans not to exceed
three-fourths market value of said real estate, and to pay over so
much of the annual income from said investments and reinvestments
to the guardian or guardians of my granddaughter, Sophia Yuengling
Huston, as may be sufficient to provide for her maintenance,
education, and support until she becomes of the full age of
twenty-one years, after which period the entire income so annually
received from said investments and reinvestments shall be paid over
by said trustee to my said granddaughter, for her sole use and
benefit for and during the period of her natural life: Provided,
however, that the income thus provided for my said granddaughter
for and during the term of her natural life shall sooner cease and
determine at any time when it is ascertained by my said trustee
that any part of my said income shall have been given by said
granddaughter, or in any wise expended by or through her, for the
use or benefit or Robert J. Huston, from whom her mother, my
daughter, obtained a divorce, with custody of said Sophia Yuengling
Huston given absolutely to her said mother. In case the income
shall so cease and determine before the death of my said
granddaughter, then said income, and all accumulations thereof, and
the entire principal of said trust estate, shall be disposed of as
provided in the next succeeding item of this my last will and
testament."
I further authorize my aforesaid trustee to sell any portion of
the estate herein conveyed to it in trust as aforesaid, and to
invest and reinvest the proceeds as hereinbefore provided, giving
to purchasers good and sufficient deeds or other evidences of
title, without obligation upon the part of said purchasers to see
to the application of the purchase money.
"Third. In the event of the death of my said granddaughter,
Sophia Yuengling Huston, or of the occurrence of the prior
contingency for the determination of said trust hereinbefore
provided in item two, then the trust hereinbefore created and
vested in the American Security and Trust Company shall cease and
be determined, and so much of my said estate shall thereupon be
conveyed and delivered over by said American Security and Trust
Company to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania as
amounts to five thousand dollars, said five thousand dollars to be
used by said hospital to endow and forever maintain a first-class
perpetual bed in said hospital in the City of Philadelphia, said
bed to be in the name and memory of my beloved son, Malancthon Love
Ruth."
"All the residue and remainder of my said estate, of whatever
kind, after the payment of said five thousand dollars for the
establishment of said perpetual bed in said hospital, I give,
devise, and bequeath to the 'Home for Incurables,' at Fordham, New
York City, in the State of New York, its successors and assigns,
forever, to be used by said Home for Incurables to endow and
forever maintain one or more beds in said home in the name and
memory of my beloved son, Malancthon Love Ruth."
"Fourth. I nominate and appoint Mary Robinson Wright, wife of J.
Hood Wright, of New York City, and Mary Robinson Markle, wife of
John Markle, of Hazleton, Pennsylvania, and the survivors of them,
to be the guardians or guardian of the property and the person of
my said granddaughter, Sophia Yuengling Huston, they and each of
them being my valued friends, and having consented to act in that
behalf."
"Fifth. I hereby nominate and appoint the American Security and
Trust Company of Washington City, District of Columbia, to be the
sole executor of my estate."
"I, Mary Eleanor Ruth, being of sound and disposing mind and
memory and understanding, do make and publish this codicil to my
last will and testament: I hereby revoke and annul the bequest
therein made by me to the Home for Incurables at Fordham, New York
City, in the State of New York, and I hereby give and bequeath the
five thousand dollars (heretofore in my will bequeathed to said
Home for Incurables) to my friend Emeline Colville, the widow of
Samuel Colville, now living in New York City, said bequest being on
account of her kindness to my son and myself during his and my
illness and my distress."
"In witness whereof, I have hereto affixed my name, this first
day of June, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and
ninety-two, and I in all other things ratify and affirm my said
will."