Defendant argues that the trial court erred in declaring that her interest in the apartment was limited to a license to occupy. She contends that the provision grants her a life estate. We agree and reverse the judgment of the trial court.
The relevant portion of the will reads as follows:
The real estate property located at and known as 1015 Caroline Avenue, Winston-Salem, North Cаrolina, shall become the property of Gary L. Brinkley and any and all income derived from the operation of these apartments shall be the income of Gary L. Brinkley. Helen W. Brinkley, my wife, is to live in the apartment presently occupied by her now for her
*103 lifetime rent free, tax free, fire insurance and maintance [sic] free. All expenses of whatsoever kind or of whatsoever nature shall be paid from the apartment income of this property so that Helen W. Brinkley bears no expense of any kind including the apartment in which she is to occupy for her lifetime.
The intention of the testator, as gleaned from the four corners of the will, must be the “polar star” that guides courts in interpreting the provisions of a will.
Wing v. Trust Co.,
The trial court erred in classifying defendant’s interest as a mere license to occupy the apartment. A license is not an estate and creates no substantial interest in land.
Sanders v. Wilkerson,
Unlike a license, a life estate is an estate in land, vesting the holder with the right to use and possess the property during his lifetime.
See
Restatement of Property, section 117 (1936). Technical words of conveyance are not necessary.
Keener v. Korn,
In addition to the language of the provision itself, other parts of the will reveal an intent that defendant take a life estate. Except for a 1976 Pontiaс automobile, a half interest in a savings and checking account, and another half interest in the balance of another account after payment of $15,000 in speсific bequests, the interest in the apartment, together with a devise of all the personal property remaining in the apartment, was all that defendant received under the will. Absent a specific manifestation to the contrary, a will should be construed in favor of the surviving spouse and children.
Coffield v. Peele,
As plaintiff correctly points out, the first sentence of the provision, by itself, undoubtedly gives plaintiff a fee in all the property, including the apartment. Ordinarily, a devise of real property must be construed to be in fee simple unless the other parts of the will plainly show an intent to create a lesser estate.
Welch v. Schmidt,
We are cognizant of other authority in North Carolina designating language similar to thаt which we have here as an “exclusive right to occupy,”
Anders v. Anderson,
*105
denied,
As the court noted in
Thompson v. Ward, supra,
language that a devisee is to have the рremises free of rent and the expense of taxes, insurance, and maintenance, belies its classification as a life estate. A life tenant, of course, has no оbligation to pay rent. Moreover, a life tenant owes certain duties to the re-maindermen regarding payment for taxes and insurance and the prevention of waste.
See Thompson v. Watkins,
Ordinarily, the sentence that defendant “is to live in the apartment . . . rent free, tax free, fire insurance free, and maintance [sic] free” might be disregarded as indicating only a wish or desire that plaintiff provide for the apartment’s maintenance out of income from the other apartments.
See Y.W.C.A. v. Morgan, Attorney General,
An equitable lien on real property is an equitable encumbrance,
Falcone v. Juda,
The remaining question regarding defendant’s life estate in the аpartment is whether it is defeasible, terminating upon her ceasing to live there. Like a fee, a life estate may be defeasible if its continued existence is conditional.
See Blackwood v. Black-wood,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. This case is remanded for a declaration that plaintiff took all the real property devised under the will in fee, subject to defendant’s life estate in the apartment and a lien for its maintenance in accordance with the terms of the will.
Reversed.
