67 S.E. 735 | S.C. | 1910
April 8, 1910. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The will of A. Jackson Hall, who died in 1892, contained the following clause: "At, or after the death of my beloved wife, I give and devise unto my beloved son, T.D. Hall, and his heirs fifty-five acres (55), more or less, of land to be run off in a tract broadside next to the lands of J.B. Leverett, also some three (3) acres, more or less woodland on west side of the road leading to Crossroads Church, said land soon to be run off all that is in certain bounds, all this land is of the Ransom tract, and I also after her death give and devise to my other beloved son, John M. Hall and his heirs, the balance land and houses of which I may die seized or possessed of. And if either or both of my said sons die leaving no children I devise that said land herein devised shall fall back to my estate and be *477 equally divided between such of my children as may be then living and the children of any that may be dead, and the children of a deceased son or daughter taking among themselves the amount that would have fallen to their parent if living."
John M. Hall died intestate during the lifetime of the widow of testator, leaving as heirs, his wife, Cora T. Hall, and his infant children, Carl M. Hall, Pearl E. Hall and J. B. Hall. Cora T. Hall, in her own right and as guardianad litem of her infant child, J.B. Hall, brought this action against Carl M. Hall and Pearl E. Hall, children of a former marriage, for the portion of the land devised to John M. Hall by the clause of the will above quoted. The question on which the case depends is: Did John M. Hall take under the will a fee simple, defeasible on his death without leaving children, or a fee conditional, which on his death without alienation passed to his children? If he took a fee defeasible, then on his death, leaving issue, his estate became an absolute fee simple, and the plaintiff, his widow, would inherit as an heir. If he took a fee conditional, then the children would take per formam doni to the exclusion of the widow.
The Circuit Judge thus stated his reasoning and conclusion: "The estate devised is a life estate to Mary Jane Hall, widow of the testator, in the whole of the land and personal property embraced in the will, and the remainder in the land devised to John M. Hall, vested in him a fee simple. An estate to one and his heirs is a fee simple estate. Chitty's Blackstone, volume 1, book 2, page 105. The contention of the defendants is, that in this will the term heirs is synonymous with and used in the sense of children. `Heirs may be construed to mean children, but only when the context demands it.' Hayne v. Irving, 25 S.C.; Archer v.Ellison,
Counsel for appellant has submitted an elaborate argument in the effort to sustain the position that the words "his heirs" in the devise to "John M. Hall and his heirs" should be construed to mean heirs of the body, and that he took a fee conditional and not a fee simple defeasible on his death leaving no children. We think, however, that the point has been so often considered and settled in accordance with the conclusion of the Circuit Court that any extended discussion or even a restatement of the principles of construction involved would be fruitless. In the noted leading case of Carr v. Porter, 1 McC. Chancery, 60, the devise was: "The rest and residue of my estate, both real and personal, to be equally divided between my grandsons, William and Thomas, and delivered to them at the age of twenty-one years; but should they die having no lawful issue, in that case, I give and bequeath the whole of my estate, both real and personal, to Richard, etc." The Court of Errors held that Thomas took the fee and his issue could only take by descent from him and not as purchasers. In Gordon v.Gordon,
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.