Freeman v. . Knight

37 N.C. 72 | N.C. | 1841

This bill was filed by the plaintiffs claiming to be entitled, under the will of Josiah Freeman, deceased, to the testator's personal estate, against the defendant, who is administrator with the will annexed, for an account. The defendant put in his answer, and the cause was set down to be heard on bill and answer, and then transferred to this Court for hearing. There is no objection made to the taking of an account, but the directions of the Court are prayed for in relation to sundry questions presented by the pleadings, and which should be settled before the account is taken.

The testator gives a pecuniary legacy to his son-in-law, Willie Summerlen, and his daughter Elizabeth, wife of the said Summerlen, in these words: "I give to my son-in-law, Willie Summerlen, and to my daughter Elizabeth, his wife, twenty-seven hundred dollars and notes. Twenty-six hundred and seventy-six dollars of the money and notes embraced in this (74) item have been paid to him; balance due, eighty-four dollars, to be paid to the said Willie Summerlen at my death." The question arises, What is the sum to be paid under this bequest? Is it the $84 therein stated as the balance, or $24, which would appear to be the balance after deducting from the gross amount of the legacy what had been advanced in payment thereof? We cannot say with any confidence where the mistake lies — whether in stating the sum already paid or the sum directed to be paid. There is an error somewhere, which it is not in our power to correct, and we hold that the sum which he finally and explicitly directs to be paid must be regarded as the legacy thereby bequeathed.

The testator bequeathes sundry negroes to his son-in-law, James Bridges, and his daughter Millicent, the wife of the said Bridges, for life, with limitations over to their children. Among these negroes is a girl Franky, who, at the time of making the will, had an infant child. It is stated as a fact that Franky had been put into the possession of Bridges by the testator some time before the birth of this child, and the question is raised, In whom is the property of this infant? It is very clear that *50 the bequest does not, per se, carry the child, because the bequest operates from the death of the testator, and then Franky and her child were two distinct subjects of property, and a disposition of one is necessarily confined to that one. We also hold that the bequest cannot be extended in its operation by any extrinsic matter not therein referred to, for the effect of such extension would be to make that pass by parol which the law will not permit to pass otherwise than by writing. We have held that where a testator gives by his will a negro, which he therein states to have been previously given by parol or to have been put into possession of one of his children, the bequest operates as a confirmation of the antecedent imperfect donation, and makes it valid ab initio. But this is a construction founded upon the language of the will. The extrinsic facts are noticed by the Court so far, and so far only, as they are referred to in the will, as explanatory of the testator's intention. It also seems to us that this child is not included in any other disposition (75) made by the will. The eleventh clause, which is set up as a general residuary clause, is not such. It directs a sale of all the testator's perishable property and a disposition of its proceeds, and we are satisfied from the context of the will this term, perishable, was used in the sense in which it is generally employed in common parlance and frequently used in legislative acts to designate such goods as are likely "to perish, consume or be the worse for keeping." See Rev. Stat., ch. 46, sec. 11, and ch. 54, sec. 13. The consequence must be that in regard to this negro child there is a partial intestacy, and it is to be disposed of under our statute of distributions. If there had been no disposition in the will of the mother of the child, the question would have arisen whether, under the act of 1806, Bridges and his wife might not have claimed both mother and child as an advancement. The late Chief Justice of this Court has decidedly expressed an opinion that the provision in the third section of the act, that when a person has put a slave in the possession of his child and shall suffer it to remain in such possession until his death, "he dying intestate," the slave shall be considered as an advancement to the child, applies not only in cases of intestacy properly so called, but also where he dies intestate in regard to that slave. However this may be, on which we explicitly decline to express our opinion, we hold that there is no room in this case for claiming the infant slave as an advancement, because the will does make a disposition of the slave so put into the possession of his son-in-law. The testator has not died intestate in regard to that slave.

The ninth clause of the will is in these words: "It is also my *51 will that Big Sam and Isaac should be sold and the proceeds equally divided between my legal heirs." Who are the persons thus designated? Is the wife one? Are the children of a deceased child included in the description? And if they be, dothey take as designated persons per capita, or the share of the parent whom they represent? These inquiries would open a wide field for speculation, in which great ingenuity and learning have been exerted and expended, but that we feel ourselves bound to follow out the construction which in a very similar case was sanctioned by our predecessors in Croom (76)v. Herring, 11 N.C. 393. It was there determined that when a testator makes an immediate gift of personal property to "his heirs," he means a gift to those whom the law has appointed to succeed to the personal estate of dead men, who have made no appointment themselves." If so, it includes the widow, and it includes the children of a deceased child. We consider it as a consequence resulting from the adoption of this rule of construction, that where personal property is given simpliciter to "heirs," the statute of distributions is to be the guide, not only for ascertaining who succeeds and who are "the heirs," buthow they succeed, or in what proportions do they respectively take. But as the donees claim, not under the statute, but under the will, if the will itself directs the manner and the proportions in which they are to take, the directions of the will must be observed and the guidance of the statute is to be followed no further than where the will refers to it — that is to say, for the ascertainment of the persons who answer to the description therein given. The testator has here directed the manner of distribution — the proceeds are to be "equally divided." The division directed by the will must be obeyed, and the children of the deceased child take equal shares with the widow and surviving children. It is needless to refer to authorities on this latter point; they are almost innumerable, and have overloaded the subject. The cases most nearly analogous to the present are in respect to gifts to "relations." Where it is made to themsimpliciter, the persons to take and the proportions are to be determined by the statute. The leading case for this doctrine is Roach v. Hammond, Prac. Chancery, 401. But when the bequest is to relations "to be equally divided between them," it was settled, in Thomas v. Hale, Forrester, 241, the authority of which has been generally recognized ever since, that the distribution must be per capita among the persons included in the statute. Whatever might be thought of these distinctions, were the matter now a new one, to disregard them at this day would be quieta movere. *52

The eleventh item of the will is very inartificially (77) expressed, and we are called upon to declare its true construction. Its words are, "It is my will and desire that all my perishable property be sold at my death and the proceeds thereof I lend to Elizabeth Summerlen, Millicent Bridges, Emmeline Knight, Joseph John Freeman and grandson Augustus Whitehead, to be equally divided amongst them, and at death I give the said proceeds of my perishable property named in this item to the children of the said Elizabeth Summerlen, Millicent Bridges, Emmeline Knight, Joseph John Freeman and grandson Augustus Whitehead, to them, their heirs and assigns forever." Elizabeth died in the lifetime of her father, the testator, and it is asked of us to declare whether her children are entitled under the ultimate limitation in this clause to the share bequeathed to their mother primarily, and if not, what is to be done with it. The first bequest is for life only. This is apparent, not merely from the term "lend," but because of the disposition over made at death generally, which literally means the death of all the objects of that bequest. But these primary legatees take in distinct shares "equally to be divided between them," and there is no disposition of the share of one at his or her death (living the others) to any person else, unless it be found in the general limitation over. These considerations lead almost irresistibly to the conclusion that both where the testator refers to the death of the primary objects of his bounty and where he gives over the residue after death to the children of these same objects he is speaking of them distributively, and is to be understood as though he had added in each instance the term "respectively." We have indeed no right to interpolate a word to make out a meaning for the testator, but we may understand one without its being used, when the whole scope of the disposition shows that the purpose, which by that word would have been appropriately expressed, was entertained by the testator, but imperfectly communicated for want of skill. We hold, therefore, that by the death of Elizabeth Summerlen the bequest to her for life of an undivided share in these proceeds was put out of the way, and the limitation over of that share to her children took effect.

The defendant prays advice whether, with respect to (78) pecuniary legacies which are bequeathed for life with remainder over, he is to pay them to the legatees for life, taking security for those ultimately entitled. This is not the proper course. In pecuniary bequests the legatee for life is entitled to the use only — that is, to the interest of the money; and if the executor pays over the principal money to such legatee, *53 he is accountable therefor to the ulterior legatee. Where there are particular bequests of chattels for life the legatee is entitled to the possession of the chattels themselves upon giving an inventory for the benefit of those ultimately entitled.

Augustus Whitehead and the widow are severally entitled to the crop planted and growing on the lands devised to them by the testator. He is also entitled to the turpentine made on the land devised to him since the testator's death; but each is bound to make compensation to those whose laborers were employed for him or her in tending the crop or making the turpentine. As to the turpentine made on the rented land, if the testator's interest in the land is not bequeathed by the will, it falls into the residue of the testator's perishable property, which is disposed of in the eleventh clause.

These are all the declarations which are called for by the parties in their pleadings. The accounts must be taken, and the cause reserved for further directions upon the coming in of the report.

Declared and ordered accordingly.

PER CURIAM.

Cited: Brown v. Brown, post, 310; Richmond v. Vanhook, 38 N.C. 587;Hill v. Spruill, 39 N.C. 246; Brothers v. Cartwright, 55 N.C. 116;Hackney v. Griffin, 59 N.C. 384; Tuttle v. Pruett, 68 N.C. 545; Newlinv. White, 84 N.C. 545.

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