56 N.C. 236 | N.C. | 1857
The main question in this case arose upon the construction of the will of Thomas Allison; the 5th clause of which is as follows:
"5th. I will and bequeath to my son John G. Allison, the negro boy named Nat, one horse named Jim, and one colt, Sam."
The 12th clause is as follows:
"12. The balance of my property not herein devised, I will to be divided equally between my four children, John G. Allison, Robert W. Allison, Silas Y. Allison and Elizabeth Allison."
John G. Allison died in the life-time of the testator, and there arose a question whether his share should be included *237 in the residuary clause, or whether it should go as undisposed of property to the next of kin according to the statute of distributions.
The cause was set down for hearing on the bill and answers, and sent to this Court. The residuary clause in the will now under consideration is of the most comprehensive character. It embraces the balance of the testator's property of every kind not otherwise bequeathed. It must, therefore, comprehend, as was said, by the Court in Sorrey v. Bright, 1 Dev. and Bat. Eq. Rep. 113, "all the personality which is not otherwise effectually disposed of by the will, whether it be acquired after the making of the will, or whether it fall in by the lapse of a legacy, or by the particular gift of the thing being illegal and void." This settles the question in the present case, unless there be something in the will to make it an exception to the general rule. We will proceed to consider whether such an exception can be established. In the same case of Sorrey v. Bright, it is said that the extent of the rule may be restricted by the special wording of the will. If the residue given is partial, that is, of a particular fund, the rule has no application. So, where it is clear from the residuary clause itself, or other parts of the will, that the testator had in fact a contrary intention, namely, "that the residue should not be general, and that things given away, or which the will professed to give away, should not fall into the residue." The cases cited by the plaintiffs' counsel of Kirkpatrick v.Rogers, 6 Ire. Eq. Rep. 135; Hudson v. Pierce, 8 Ire. Eq. Rep. 126, and Lea v. Brown, decided at the last term, (ante, 141,) all recognize the general rule, but are held to be exceptions from it, on account of the special circumstances of intent apparent in the will. In the case before us, the only circumstance that can possibly be relied on to take it out of the general rule, is, that the legatee whose legacy lapsed by *238 his death in the life-time of the testator, was himself one of the residuary legatees. Had the legacy given to him been void on account of its being contrary to law, and had he survived the testator, then it might have been contended, perhaps, with success, that the legatee could not have taken as a residuary legatee, or as one of the residuary legatees, what had been declared void when given to him as a specific or general legacy. SeeHudson v. Pierce, ubi supra. But there is no such inconsistency in the other residuary legatees taking under a general and unrestricted clause, what turns out to be otherwise undisposed of, by reason of the death of a legatee before the will took effect. The law favors the construction that a lapsed legacy of the latter kind falls into the residue, more readily than it does one which lapses because it is void. The reason for the distinction is stated in Lea v. Brown, and need not be here repeated. Our opinion then is, that the legacy to John G. Allison, which lapsed by his death in the testator's life-time, fell into the residue, and must be equally divided between the other residuary legatees, and a decree may be drawn accordingly.
PER CURIAM, Decree accordingly.