56 N.C. 387 | N.C. | 1857
James Holmes, on the 22d of February, 1847, executed to defendant Duncan King a deed of trust, conveying to him and his heirs, several tracts of land and two female slaves, with their three children and future increase, and some other personal property, upon the following trust, viz: "In trust, nevertheless, that the said Duncan King will retain the aforesaid described land, and other property, for the sole support and maintenance of my wife, Elizabeth L. Holmes, and my daughter Sarah J. Holmes, and any child or children that the aforesaid Elizabeth L. Holmes may hereafter have, so that the same shall not be liable for the debts of the said James Holmes, or in any manner responsible to his creditors, either at law or in equity."
James Holmes died during that year, his widow, Elizabeth L. Holmes, and his daughter, him surviving.
In May, 1850, the widow intermarried with the plaintiff Thomas S. Evans, and having had issue of that marriage, the other plaintiff, Henry S. Evans, she died in 1855, leaving her husband, said Thomas S., and her two children, Sarah J. and Henry S., her surviving. Thomas S., the husband, administered on the estate of his deceased wife, and brought this suit in behalf of himself and his son Henry S., against the trustee, King, and daughter, Sarah J. Holmes, claiming, jure mariti, his wife's interest in the property conveyed in the deed of *388 trust, and a share for his son Henry, by force of the words of that instrument.
The defendants, King, the trustee, and Sarah J. Holmes, answered, admitting the facts as above stated, but contesting the plaintiffs' right to recover any thing under the deed of trust.
Cause set down for hearing on the bill and answer, and sent to this Court. This is an executed trust, i. e., a trust of which the scheme has, in the outset, been completely declared, as distinguished from an executory trust, of which the scheme has been imperfectly declared in the outset, and the creator of the trust has merely denoted his ultimate object, imposing on the trustee, or on the court, the duty of effectuating it in the most convenient way. The terms in which an executed trust is declared, are interpreted by the ordinary rules of law. The terms in which it is declared in this deed, are, "for the sole support and maintenance of my wife, Elizabeth L. Holmes, and my daughter, Sarah J. Holmes, and any child orchildren that the aforesaid Elizabeth L. Holmes may hereafter have."
The question is, does the defendant Henry, a child of Elizabeth L. Holmes by a second husband, take under this deed. He fully answers the description, and we can see no sufficient ground upon which to exclude him.
It is certainly unusual for a man to convey property, with an intent to provide for a child that his wife may have by another husband; but he may do so if he chooses, and the fact, that it is unusual, will not, of itself, justify a court in departing from the ordinary meaning of the terms used in the deed. There is nothing whatever in the deed to qualify or explain the words "and any child or children that the aforesaid Elizabeth L. Holmes may hereafter have." He does not even say "my wife." In Good v. Harris, 2 Ire. Eq. Rep. 630, *389 where a trust was declared for the wife and her children, the Court thought that the recital, that he was embarrassed and made the conveyance for the purpose of paying his debts and to secure a maintenance for his family, taken in connection with the consideration, that it was unusual and against the common sense of self-preservation, for an embarrassed man to stint his own children in order to provide for the children of his wife by two former husbands, justified a departure from the ordinary meaning of the words in which the trust was declared. So, that case supports the position, that where there is nothing in the deed to qualify or explain, the words must be taken in their ordinary acceptation. We are of opinion, that the defendant Henry takes under the deed.
2nd. The deed conveys slaves and other personal property, and also land, and there are no words of limitation. In respect to the personalty, an absolute estate vested in Elizabeth and Sarah Holmes, subject to open and let in any after-born child, which can be done by means of a trust as well as a will; and as the deed gives the wife a separate estate, so as to exclude her husband, it follows that Sarah Holmes takes one third, the plaintiff Henry one third, and the plaintiff Thomas S. Evans the other third, jure mariti.
In respect to the land, as the conveyance is by deed, and no words of inheritance are used, if it was of the legal estate, it is clear that only a life-estate would pass; and we think, that in regard to an executed trust, the same rules of construction must apply. Adams, in his learned treatise on Equity, treats the subject as settled: "It was at one time suggested, that the language of a trust might be construed with greater license than that of a gift at law; but this notion is now at an end, and it is clear that the declaration of an executed trust, will have exactly the same construction, as if it had been a conveyance of the legal estate:" page 41. Equitas sequitur legem, is the maxim in regard to trusts. Under the doctrine of uses, before the statute of 27 Hen. 8, the word heirs was not considered by the Chancellors, who were ecclesiastics, as necessary to create an estate of inheritance; *390 but after that date, the Chancellors were lawyers, and adopted the above maxim in order to make the rules of their court conform to the rules of the common law, unless there was something to warrant a departure. In the case of deeds, there is nothing to dispense with the use of technical terms. The parties are not inopes consilii, which is the ground upon which technical terms are not required in devises, provided the intention to give an estate in fee is otherwise expressed. Elizabeth and Sarah, at the creation of the trust, took an estate for life as tenants in common; upon the birth of Henry, the trust opened and let him in as to one-third part for life, leaving a resulting trust in the grantor, in fee; upon his death it descended to the defendant Sarah as his heir-at-law; and upon the death of Elizabeth, Sarah became entitled to two thirds of the land in fee in possession, and to the reversion in fee of the other third, expectant upon the life estate of the plaintiff Henry.
It is said the intention clearly was to give the same estate in both species of property, and as Henry takes an absolute estate in the personalty, it seems to be a strange result that he only takes a life estate in the land! That may be so, and the reason of the difference is, that, in respect to the personalty, there is nothing to defeat the intention, whereas, in respect to to the land, a fee simple cannot be created by deed without the word heir, no matter how clearly the intention may be expressed.
PER CURIAM, There will be a decree declaring the rights of the parties according to this opinion.