This is a controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant, administrator of her deceased husband, as to their respective rights in a certain fund of twenty-five hundred dollars, which is a part of the proceeds of the sale of land. It appears that A. A. Isley and W. 0. Isley were seised, as tenants
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in common, share and share alike, of a tract of land, and A. A. Isley conveyed his interest, “the same being one moiety,” to the plaintiff during the lifetime of her husband,
W. G.
Isley. Afterwards
~W.
0. Isley and his wife sold and conveyed a part of the land to the North Carolina Trust Company. The purchaser paid a part of the purchase money and executed a mortgage on the land with a power of sale to the vendors to secure the balance. All of the purchase money, except $2,500, was paid to the husband, W. C. Isley, amounting to $7,450, and since his death the defendant, his administrator, has collected the note for $2,500, which is all that is due from the trust company. The notes were payable to
“W.
C. Isley and Lena H. Isley, his wife.” The court held and adjudged that the plaintiff is entitled to the entire fund in the custody of the administrator, and the defendant appealed. W. C. Isley and his wife acquired their interest in the land by separate deeds, which conveyed to each of them, not an estate of the entirety nor a joint estate, but a moiety or one-half undivided interest in the same. It is said in
Fulper v. Fulper
54 N. L. Eq., 431, that whether a husband and wife take as tenants in common or as tenants of the entirety is to be gathered from the instrument which passes the estate to them, and when the intention appears therefrom that they should take an estate in common, it must prevail, and “such has been the rule from an early period in the history of the English law.” This ruling is sustained by the clear weight of authority. 21 Cyc., 1198;
Miner v. Brown,
But if tbe doctrine as to an estate by entireties bas any application to tbe facts of tbe ease, tbe wife, wbo is tbe plaintiff, survived ber busband and for tbat reason would be entitled to tbe fund.
Motley v. Whitemore,
In any view we can take of tbe facts, we tbinb tbe judgment was correct, tbe busband having received more than bis share.
Affirmed.
