56 S.E. 793 | N.C. | 1907
The plaintiffs' right to recover depends upon the construction placed upon the eighth item of the will of William Faison, dated 18 May, 1855, and which, relieved of unnecessary surplusage, reads as follows: "I give, devise, and bequeath unto my son, Matthew J. Faison, and his heirs, in trust for the use and benefit of my son Edward, during his life, my Chestnut lands on the west side of the Six Runs, etc., and after the death of my said son Edward, to his issue forever; and in case of his death without leaving issue, I give, devise, and bequeath the lands devised in trust to him unto his surviving brothers and their heirs; and in case of their death before him and leaving children, to such issue and their heirs."
In this will the testator devises an equitable estate for life to Edward Faison and an equitable estate in fee "to his issue forever." The limitation over to the surviving brothers would not prevent the application of the rule, had the first devise been to Edward Faison and his heirs or the heirs of his body.
There have been cases where it was the manifest intention of the testator that the second taker should take, not from him, but from the first taker; then the words "children," "issue," etc., as well as the word "heirs," have been construed in some jurisdictions as words of limitation, and the Rule in Shelley's case applied. Brinton v. Martin, 197 Pa. St., 618. In the will under consideration there is no manifest intention that Edward Faison should be the root of a new succession and that those in remainder should take as his heirs. In order to bring the rule into operation, the limitation must be to the "heirs qua heirs" of the first taker. "It must be given to the heirs or heirs of the body as an entire class or denomination of persons, and not merely to individuals embraced within such class." 25 A. E., 650, and (109) cases cited.
When the devise is to one for life and after his death to his children or issue, the rule has no application unless it manifestly appears that such words are used in the sense of heirs generally. 25 A. E., supra, 651, and cases cited.
In this will the word "issue" is evidently used in no such sense, but as a correlative term for children, and this word is not sufficient to indicate a purpose to create an estate of inheritance in Edward Faison.Hauser v. Craft,
We are of opinion that Edward Faison took a life estate only in the lands in controversy, and that the plaintiffs, his children, take the land in fee, and their father being now dead, they are entitled to possession, unless the defendants can show some other and better title of defense.
New trial.
Cited: Faison v. Kelly,
(110)