to explain the confusion on the ground that the draughtsman instinctively felt that vesting took place on the death of the testator.
In the second place, the class of issue to take under the clause includes grandchildren alive either at the testator's death or at the period of distribution or at any time between those two events, which seems to point to a policy on the part of the testator of giving transmissible interests.
For the appellant it was pointed out that, if the final residuary (W.A.) LTD.
gift is construed as vesting upon the testator's death, the specific direction as to intermediate income might just as well have been omitted and instead the simple words "subject to the foregoing annuities" might have been written after the words-" I direct that where they last occur.
The fact, as no doubt it is, that the testator relied on the annuities as affording the chief provision for his beneficiaries and as amounting to the substantial distribution of the income of his estate, was used as one of the circumstances explaining his subsequent limitations. To make up the annuities it might be necessary to resort to capital and this he expressly authorized. His daughter, Jean, was a minor and a spinster. Her mother's annuity of £250 and hers of £50 would provide a joint establishment for them, and, upon her mother's death, she would receive £200 a year, if she were a spinster, and that annuity might continue to be payable after her aunts had all died. It was urged that, in view of all these considerations, the testator had no purpose in providing for the distribution of surplus income during the continuance of the annuities to his widow and his sisters, except to dispose of a possibly unexhausted fund of income. He must have contemplated the possibility of his daughters surviving his widow and sisters and of Jean Falconer Boyd being then unmarried with the result that one daughter would be still in receipt of an annuity of £200 and the other one of £50, which must be deducted before income of residue was ascertained.
The foregoing considerations, it was said, all pointed to an intention on the part of the testator that his daughters must be alive and capable of personal enjoyment of the ultimate gifts of residuary corpus and income.
In my opinion all the matters to which I have referred when added together are incapable of controlling the construction of the gift. Nothing can be extracted from them but a highly speculative view of the testator's intentions providing no sound basis for construing his actual language.
It is necessary to remember that it is a residuary disposition that
are called upon to construe. It is to be observed' said Romilly