A testator created a testamentary disposition in favor of a broad class composed of the children of specified relatives and, critically, extended the benefit to the children of those children. In other words, the will contemplated distribution not only to the children of persons who were alive when the will took effect, but also to the grandchildren through those children. Some of the potential parents identified in the will were advanced in age; evidence indicated that at least one prospective mother was around 70 years old and her husband approximately 77. The executor and interested parties sought the court's guidance on whether the limitations were valid, given that the class could include the children of persons who had not yet been born when the will took effect. The plaintiffs urged the court to consider the practical improbability that additional issue would be born to elderly potential parents, while the opposing view stressed that the gift, by its terms, allowed for vesting in persons who might not be identified until far beyond a life in being plus twenty-one years.
Does a testamentary class gift that includes potential takers who are the children of unborn persons violate the Rule Against Perpetuities, and may a court rely on the practical improbability of further births to save such a disposition?
At common law, no future interest is valid unless it must vest, if at all, not later than twenty-one years after some life in being at the creation of the interest. For class gifts, the all-or-nothing rule applies: if the interest would be invalid as to any possible member of the class, the entire class gift fails. For RAP purposes, a person alive at the relevant time is conclusively presumed capable of having issue regardless of age (the fertile octogenarian presumption). Limitations in favor of the children of unborn persons are void for remoteness.
The court held the disposition invalid insofar as it purported to include the children of the children of living persons, because such interests could vest beyond the perpetuities period. The court refused to consider the improbability of further births due to advanced age; for RAP analysis, the possibility of issue is conclusively presumed. As a result, the class gift failed under the all-or-nothing rule.
The Master of the Rolls applied the RAP by testing logical possibilities rather than weighing probabilities. Because the gift as drafted extended benefits to the children of persons who might not be in being when the testator died, the gift necessarily contemplated vesting in descendants of unborn parents. Under settled perpetuities doctrine, any limitation to the children of unborn persons is too remote, since such interests might not vest within lives in being plus twenty-one years. The court further rejected arguments based on the practical unlikelihood of further childbearing by the elderly potential parents. For perpetuities purposes, it is conclusively presumed that any living person may have issue, and courts do not engage in probabilistic assessments subject to proof. Given that at least one potential class member could take, if at all, outside the permissible period, the entire class gift was void under the all-or-nothing rule. The court declined to sever or blue-pencil the class to save the portions that might have vested in time, emphasizing that equity cannot rewrite a testator's dispositive scheme to cure remoteness.
Jee v. Audley is a cornerstone of RAP doctrine for three reasons. First, it cements the fertile octogenarian presumption: courts assume perpetual fertility for any living person when applying the RAP, which prevents reliance on real-world improbabilities to save gifts. Second, it reinforces the all-or-nothing rule for class gifts: if the class might include any member whose interest could vest too remotely, the entire class gift fails. Third, it highlights a classic drafting trap—extending gifts to descendants of unborn persons. For law students, the case is an essential reference point for analyzing class gifts, identifying unborn-parent problems, and understanding why modern reforms (wait-and-see, 90-year statutory periods, and saving constructions) evolved to temper the harshness of the common law.
Jee v. Audley endures because it captures the relentless logic of the common-law RAP. By insisting on possible rather than probable scenarios and by presuming that any living person can have issue, the court demonstrates why poorly constrained class gifts are so vulnerable to invalidation. The decision also showcases the unforgiving all-or-nothing rule for class gifts that can doom an entire class because of a single remote possibility.