74 S.E. 617 | S.C. | 1912
April 11, 1912. The opinion of the Court was delivered by *293 John Blair died in 1848, leaving a will which contained the following devise: "To my nephew, Samuel Blair, during his natural life, I give and bequeath in trust, and at his decease, I give and bequeath to his surviving issue, * * * my tract of land (describing the lands). But should my said nephew die without any surviving issue of his body, * * * the said lands * * * herein bequeathed to his children, I allow to descend the one-half to my nephew, John B. Lowrey, or to his children; and the other half to the children of my half cousin, James Blair, senr."
Samuel Blair, the devisee, married in January, 1848, and his first child was born in July, 1849, after the death of the testator. Two children of Samuel Blair, Martha C. Guy and John C. Blair, survived their father, who died in October, 1907; another child, Mary Agnes Patrick, predeceased her father, leaving children. The questions submitted to the Circuit Court and brought by appeal to this Court are: Did Samuel Blair take a fee conditional? If not, did the expression, "surviving issue," refer to issue generally, so that after the death of Samuel Blair the land passed to his surviving children, and the children of his predeceased daughter, or did testator so limit the meaning of the expression as to exclude all issue of Samuel except his children living at the time of his death. The Circuit Court held that at the death of Samuel his two surviving children each took one-third of the land, and the children of the deceased child, Mary Agnes Patrick, the remaining third.
The testator, by limiting the devise in remainder to the surviving issue of Samuel Blair instead of to his issue in indefinite succession, gave Samuel a life estate and not a fee conditional. McCorkle v. Black, 7 Rich. Eq. 407; Gadsden
v. DesPortes,
It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed.
MR. JUSTICE WATTS disqualified.