38 N.C. 323 | N.C. | 1844
The following facts appear from the pleadings:
Kinchen Taylor, the elder, made his will 6 November, 1836, and therein devised and bequeathed as follows:
"It is my will that my negroes and stock shall be kept on the plantation whereon I live, until my son Kinchen attain the age of 21 years.
"I give to my two daughters, Harriet Jane Taylor and Charity D. Taylor, my piney woods tract of land, containing 776 acres.
"I give to my son Joshua, $1000, to be raised from the farm.
"I give to my son, Kinchen, the house and plantation whereon I now live, and the rest of my landed estate. (324)
"I give to my grandson, John M. Guyther, one negro boy named Bob.
"I give and bequeath to my three daughters, Maria A. Guyther, Harriet Jane Taylor and Charity D. Taylor, and my son, Kinchen, to be equally divided between them, my negroes, when my son Kinchen arrives to the age of 21 years.
"It is my will that the residue of my estate of every description belong to my son Kinchen Taylor.
"Lastly, I nominate my son Joshua, and David C. Guyther my executors, and authorize them to keep the negroes and stock on this my mansion plantation, in such manner as they may think best for my heirs."
By a codicil, dated 1 January, 1837, the testator directs that his three younger children, Harriet Jane, Charity D. and Kinchen, should be handsomely supported by the executors, out of his estate; and he gives to his daughter, Eveline B. Jones, five dollars.
Joshua Taylor, alone, took probate of the will, and in 1839 a bill was filed against him by the other children, except Mrs. Jones, upon the grounds of his mismanagement of the estate, and apprehended insolvency, upon which a receiver was appointed, in whose hands the estate has ever since been, *256 under the direction of the Court. It appears that the profits of the plantation, on which the testator resided, and on which his slaves have been kept and worked, since his death, have not been sufficient to educate and maintain the three younger children, and discharge the legacy of $1,000 charged thereon in favor of Joshua Taylor, the executor, but a balance is still due to him.
On 27 April, 1844, Kinchen Taylor, the son, arrived at full age, and the daughter, Charity D., was then living, she having intermarried with William T. Powell. Before that day, however, Mrs. Guyther had died, and her husband, David C. Guyther, administered on her estate, and Harriet Jane had also died, having previously married John H. Dawson, who administered on her estate. Upon the arrival of Kinchen (325) Taylor, the younger, at full age, the parties severally filed petitions in the cause for a division of the slaves; Guyther and Dawson, as administrators respectively of their wives, claiming that they were entitled to one-fourth each, as a vested interest in their wives; and Powell and wife insisting that the gift was contingent to those who might be alive when Kinchen came of age, and claiming that the whole was to be equally divided between those who should then be living, and, therefore, that Mrs. Powell is entitled to one-half, and Kinchen Taylor to the other; while Kinchen Taylor insisting, also, that the gift was contingent, as above, insists further, that neither of the donees can claim more than an equal share or fourth part of the slaves, by virtue of the clause in which the slaves are particularly given, and, therefore, he claims that the shares, which have fallen in by the death of Mrs. Guyther and Mrs. Dawson, belong to him as residuary legatee.
The rights of the parties depend upon the question whether the gift of the negroes was contingent. If the will gives a vested interest, then each of the four children was entitled to a share, and the shares of those dying before Kinchen came of age, were transmissible to their representatives. It is insisted that this was a contingent gift, chiefly on the strength of the word when, which, it is said, as the clause is framed, refers to the gift and not to the division of the negroes. It is no doubt the law, in respect to gifts of personal estate by will, that the word "when," like "at" or "if," is a word of condition, and imports that the time "when" the legatee *257
is to receive the bounty, is of the essence of the donation, Gilesv. Franks,
There are also other provisions in the will, and other considerations, which strike us as fortifying the construction that these are vested interests. In the first place, there is an apparent intention to put all four of these children upon an equality in respect of the negroes. They are to be equally divided between them. Now, it seems difficult to suppose that the testator meant the legacy of Mrs. Guyther to fail by her death, and, indeed, that he did not mean the contrary, as she was then married and had at least one son, to whom his grandfather gives a negro. If the words were clear, it is true that circumstance could not control them; but, upon an ambiguous sentence, it is quite material to aid in fixing upon the one intention of the other. With respect to his unmarried children, he might not have adverted to the probability of their marriage, having issue, and dying before Kinchen came of age. But he could hardly overlooked the probability of Mrs. Guyther's *258 (328) death before that event, and leaving a child or children, or have intended, in case she should, that her family should be altogether unprovided for. But when it is observed, that the gift of the negroes is not to the four children jointly, nor by a general description, under which such of them, as should be living when Kinchen came of age, would be entitled to take the whole, but is to the four, nominatim, equally to be divided between them, so that, in no event, could any one of them receive more than a share, viz: one-fourth, under that clause, Johnson v.Johnson, post, 426, the reasons for holding the legacies to be vested, become much stronger. For the effect of holding otherwise, would be to entitle Kinchen, by virtue of the gift of the residue, to the shares of those thus dying; which would be in opposition to the apparent equality intended between him and his sisters, at least as to this fund. But that is not all. The construction would produce this absurdity; that, if Kinchen should die while an infant, then his own share of the negroes, which, upon the argument for him, the testator intended should be contingent, and not belong to him unless he lived to be 21, would nevertheless fall into the residue, and, as to that no contingency is annexed, would in that form be a vested interest. That would render the gift of Kinchen's fourth part of the negroes, at one and the same time, by one clause in the will contingent, and by another clause, vested; which can not be supposed. He clearly has a vested interest by virtue of the gift of the residue, and, therefore, it must be taken — to avoid the absurdity pointed out — that the testator intended that he should have a vested interest by the clause giving the negroes specifically; and if, by that, he acquired such an interest, then the others must, by the same clause, have a vested interest also; for, in that part of his will, the testator puts the four on the same footing precisely. To those considerations, arising out of the particular provisions of the will, is to be added another important one; which is, that the testator disposes of his negroes until the period at which they are to be divided, and, consequently, the whole subject corpus, is given away for different purposes; so that the interest (329) given to the children are in the nature of remainders, and the term "when," though generally a word of condition, marks in this case only the commencement of the remainder. The cases upon the subject are collected and well explained by 1 Roper Legacies, 392. Here, besides maintaining the children, the sum of $1,000 was to be raised for Joshua Taylor; and, that the testator judged rightly, that it would require at least the whole period to raise that sum out of the profits of *259 the estate, is proved by the event. It is not yet all raised; and we may therefore fairly presume that the sole purpose in not directing an immediate division of the negroes among the four donees, was, by keeping them together, to raise the pecuniary legacy to Joshua, after maintenance to the children; and, if so, the rule is to consider the gift to be immediate, though, being in the nature of a remainder, it is not to be enjoyed until a particular period; by which time the testator expected the purpose he had in view would be effected. Upon the whole, therefore, we are of opinion that we shall best effectuate the testator's intention, though very obscurely expressed, by holding those to be vested interests, and, consequently, that each of the children, or their respective administrators, is entitled to one-fourth part. The decree must be, therefore, that the balance due to Joshua Taylor for his legacy, and the expenses of the estate, including the costs of this suit, be raised out of the negroes, and those that remain, be divided as here directed.
PER CURIAM. DECREED ACCORDINGLY.
Cited: Owen v. Owen,
(330)