40 N.C. 392 | N.C. | 1848
James Simms made his will and therein made a number of specific bequests of slaves and other things, among which were the following: "I give to my wife six negroes, Champion, Tony, Chany, Venus, Anaka, and Aaron. Item. I give to my youngest son, Benjamin, eight negroes, Amos, George, Peter, Turner, Pike, Creecy, Rose, and Jack. Item. I give to my daughter Martha, wife of John Dew, a tract of land, called the Bridge and Robinson tract, to her and her heirs forever; also seven negroes, Olive and child, Edy, Hardy, Clarke, Bridget, and Hannah; also one mule; also what stock she is in possession of; also (393) $1,000. Also it is my desire that the negroes I have left her shall work on the tract of land that I gave her, for the support of her and her children; and if the negroes don't make a support, rent out the land and hire out the negroes. I also reserve two negroes to wait upon her; and if she and child should die without any heir, they shall come into the old stock again. Item. My will is that all the residue of my estate, if any, after taking out the devises and legacies above mentioned, shall be sold and the debts owing to me collected, and, if there should be any surplus over and above the payment of debts and expenses, that such surplus shall be equally divided between my wife and all my children."
The bill is filed by the executor against Mrs. Simms, the son Benjamin, Dew and wife, and their child, and the other residuary legatees, to have the rights of those several parties declared. It is stated in the bill *274
that the testator had no slaves by the names of Aaron orPike; but that he had two by the names of Lamon andPite, and that Lamon was the child of the woman Anaka, bequeathed to Mrs. Simms, and a small boy at the making of the will. It appears upon the will and pleadings that the testator professes to dispose specially of forty-eight slaves among his wife and children, of whom Aaron andPike are two; that he had in fact four others, who are not mentioned in the will, namely, Lamon and Pite, before mentioned, and two other young children, born recently before the making of the will. He had, therefore, in fact, fifty negroes when he made the will. It is contended by the widow and the son Benjamin that the testator intended to give to the former the boy Lamon and to the latter the negro Pite, and that by a mistake of the writer of the will — who was somewhat deaf and did not distinctly hear the testator's directions — the name of Aaron was written for Lamon, and that of Pike for Pite; and the (394) executor states that he believes such to be the truth, and that he is willing to dispose of those two slaves accordingly, if upon the construction of the will he is authorized to do so.
It is extremely probable from the admissions of the parties and the circumstances of the case that the alleged mistake really took place in writing this will; and the Court would gladly correct it if it could be done consistently with the law. But it is manifestly impossible to do so upon the basis of any guide furnished by the will; and, therefore, that, if done at all, it must be exclusively on intrinsic evidence of an intention to give a negro who is not given by any words in the will. That would in truth be to strike one word out of the will and insert another in the place of it by parol proof, which cannot be done without introducing a multitude of mischiefs, with which the private hardship and inconvenience sustained by these parties can bear no comparison. It has long been settled that written instruments, whether deeds or wills, are to be construed upon their own terms. At least, there must be enough in them, in respect both to the person to take and the subject to pass, to enable the Court to say that the person does take and the thing does pass by the instrument itself. There are, indeed, cases of ambiguity of description in which resort may be had to evidence in aid of the will: for example, to show which person or thing is meant, when there is in the will a sufficient description to which the evidence may fit the person or thing. That is the case when two things or persons come completely within the description: as two white acres, or two cousin Johns. So it *275
is, also, if the person or thing be described in more particulars than one, some of which are true and some false; then, if enough remains, after rejecting the parts that prove to be false, to identify the (395) donee or the subject, the instrument shall be effectuated. In all those cases there is upon the face of the will no ambiguity, and it arises only when the description comes to be applied; then it is found that there is an uncertainty, which of two persons or things was meant, which are within the words, or whether a thing or person was meant who is correctly described in some particulars, but not in others. But, clearly, if a will describe a person or thing by many particulars, and one is shown who comes up to the description in every particular, it would not be competent to prove by witnesses that the testator did not mean that, but another, though the latter be not within the description, and to give effect to the will as if the description were altered in the instrument itself. That would be to make the will upon the evidence. So, in like manner, when the will fully describes a person or thing, whether by many or few particulars, it cannot be competent to receive such evidence, though nothing be found to answer the description; for, to pass another thing, or to pass the thing to another person, than that described in the will, would be to give operation to the will over a thing or in favor of a person not mentioned in the will at all — in effect, to fill a blank in it, or, rather, to make a blank by striking out and then filling it in another manner. That cannot be done upon any safe principle. In this case there are two terms of description, and two only, of the subject of the bequest. He is said to be named "Aaron" and to be a "negro." The latter is so indefinite as to designate no one in particular. A gift of eight negroes would, indeed, be good as a general legacy of eight slaves. But the present is a specific gift, and the question is, Who are the very negroes given? In such a case the term "negro," designating merely thestatus personae, cannot be construed to be a gift of any individual negro, and therefore cannot be applied to one by evidence. That, (396) then, is the case of a description by a single particular, that of the name; and there is no negro of that name. One would think that there is but one principle applicable to such a case, which is that the gift must fail because there is nothing for it to operate on. It is no case of ambiguity. It would be if there were two Aarons; and, then, it would be admissible to show which of the two was the Aaron. But the attempt is to prove that the testator did not mean to give anyAaron at all, but a different person altogether, namely,Lamon. There is an old case, Beaumont v. Fell, 2 Pr. Wms., 140, that seems to go far to support the proposition, if it be law. A legacy was given to Catharine Earnley, and, there being no such person, it was decreed to Gertrude Yardly, upon evidence that she was the person intended, and that the testator frequently *276
called her by the nickname of Gatty, which the writer of the will mistook for Katty. It is to be observed, in the first place, that the master of the rolls put the decision upon the right to receive such evidence by the civil law, in respect to personal legacies, and admitted, in terms, that it could not be heard, by the common law or the statute of frauds, as a devise of land; because, said he, a devise must be in writing, and there would be no writing to entitle Gertrude Yardly, had this been a devise of land." That admission must be sufficient at this day to destroy the authority of the case, as a decision upon the construction of the will, since it is certain that now the terms of a bequest can no more be altered by parol than those of a devise. Then it is to be observed that the report is explicit, and that the judgment was put upon the ground that there was no writing to entitle the person to whom the legacy was bequeathed; and, therefore, she took it by force of the extrinsic proof entirely, saving only that the will showed that the testator meant to give it to some person. That is a proposition opposed to every principle (397) for the construction of writings, or establishing their superiority in the scale of evidence over the testimony of witnesses. It has, moreover, not been followed by any similar decision; but there have been many directly opposed in principle to it. There is, indeed, a single case in this country which, upon the authority of Beaumont v.Fell, ruled the point in accordance with it, in a case somewhat like that before the Court. A person, owning a considerable number of slaves, bequeathed in his will by name exactly the number he had, and among the bequests there was one of fifteen slaves to his wife, and two of the number were designated by the name of Phillis, whereas the testator had but one Phillis, and he had a man, Phillip, not mentioned in the will. It was held that the wife took Phillip in the place of one of the women named Phillis. Tudor v. Terrell, 2 Dana (Ky.), 47. That case, indeed, differs from ours in this, that here there were two negroes in number more than are named in it; and the Court in Kentucky greatly relied on the coincidence in the number. Certainly, that was a strong circumstance, if one person or subject can be substituted for another, which is fully described to show that the Court could in that case probably hit on the right one to be substituted. But the difficulty is to lay down any principle on which the terms of the will can be thus dealt with and one description of the thing substituted for another. The Court thinks it cannot be done. In all the cases hitherto decided in this State there was enough on the face of the will to identify the subject after leaving out every part of the description which was inappropriate. It was so in Proctor v. Pool,
The Court, therefore, holds that the slaves Lamon and Pite are not specially disposed of in the will, but, with the two others not named, fall into the residue. *278
Two points are made upon the dispositions in favor of Mrs. Dew, which are, first, whether the dispositions are to the separate use of the wife, and, secondly, whether the gift is exclusively to Mrs. Dew or to her and her children. Upon the first, the Court is of opinion in the negative. It may be inferred from the will that the testator had not much confidence in the prudence or capacity of Dew for managing the property, and that he had a vague purpose not to trust the property in his hands, but secure it in some way for his daughter. But there is not enough in the will to amount to the plain exclusion of the husband, which the law requires before he can be deprived of his marital rights.Rudisill v. Watson,
The defendants Dew and wife set up a claim to Lamon and Pite under the reservation of two negroes to wait on her, suggesting that the two thus reserved are those two, and that for that reason they were not mentioned by name in the will. But it is clear that the negroes thus reserved are two of those just before specially bequeathed to Mrs. Dew, and are excepted out of the direction for hiring out the negroes, because they would, at all events, be needed by her as domestic servants.
PER CURIAM. Declared accordingly.
Cited: Stowe v. Davis,
Dist.: Miller v. Cherry,