13 S.E. 174 | N.C. | 1891
Discussion of trust, contingent limitations and dissension by SHEPHERD, J. The parties waived a jury trial, and agreed upon the following facts, upon which the court rendered judgment for defendant, as set out in the record:
The following facts are admitted:
That title is out of the State, and plaintiffs claim under the (697) deed made by Bryant Williams on 25 April, 1863, to R. B. Wood, trustee. Plaintiff next introduced a deed, signed by Isaac W. King and wife Charlotte, to Ann Eliza Orrell, made 4 August, 1869, and mesne conveyances from Orrell to defendant Rhew, the deed to Rhew being made to him by one Chadwick and wife on 16 September, 1880. It is also admitted that Charlotte King died 20 September, 1889, and *485 that the plaintiffs are the only children surviving said Charlotte, born of her intermarriage with Isaac W. King, and that the rental value of the property is $2 per month.
It is admitted that the consideration of the deed to Eliza Orrell, signed by King and wife, was a tract of land conveyed to Charlotte King by deed signed by Orrell and wife, on 4 August, 1869, which land was sold and conveyed by said King and wife to one Petteway in September, 1871. This evidence is objected to by defendant, and its competency or incompetency is to be submitted to the court and passed upon.
It is also admitted that the defendant Rhew has been in the actual and open possession of the said land since the date of deed to him, claiming adversely under said deed, and such possession was adverse to the plaintiffs, unless, in law, it was not adverse.
Upon the foregoing facts, his Honor gave judgment for the defendant, from which judgment the plaintiffs appealed. The land in question was conveyed on 25 April, 1863, to one "Robert Wood, Jr., and his heirs and assigns," in trust "for the sole and separate use, occupation and enjoyment of Charlotte King during her natural life, and at her death to be equally (698) divided between any children she may leave her surviving, born of her intermarriage with her present husband, share and share alike, and to be in no wise liable to be sold or taken for the debts of her said husband." Charlotte King died in 1889, and the plaintiffs are the only children born of her intermarriage with Isaac W. King, her said husband.
The said King, in 1869, conveyed the land, for a valuable consideration, to one Ann Eliza Orrell, and the defendant claims by mesne conveyance from her. Charlotte King executed the deed with her husband, but her name does not appear in it anywhere except in the attestation clause, nor does the deed refer in any way to the trust estate of Wood.
It is admitted that the defendant "has been in the actual and open possession of the said land since the date (16 September, 1880) of the deed to him (by one Chadwick) claiming adversely under said deed, and (that) such possession was adverse to the plaintiffs, unless, in law, it was not adverse."
The first question to be considered is, whether the deed executed by King and wife (the trustee being no party thereto) conveyed any interest of the wife in the said land, so that the trustee would have been prevented in equity from asserting his legal title during the nine years occupancy of the defendant. *486
In Bank v. Rice, 4 How. U.S., 241, it was said that, "in order to convey by grant, the party possessing the right must be grantor and use apt and proper words to convey to the grantee, and merely signing, sealing and acknowledging an instrument in which another person is grantor is not sufficient. The deed in question conveyed the marital interests of the husband in these lands, and nothing more."
"In the following cases the same rule is upheld as to deeds exactly similar to the one in question, where the party signed, sealed and acknowledged it, and was only named in the attestation clause; (699) Luffkin v. Curtis,
In Gray v. Mathis,
Neither did her husband have any interest jure mariti which he could have conveyed, as the property was vested in the trustee for the "sole and separate use" of his wife. Heathman v. Hall,
The estate of the trustee being barred, it is well settled that thecestuis que trustent are barred also. This principle is admirable stated by Smith, C. J., in Clayton v. Cagle,
It is very earnestly insisted, however, that for the purpose of the trust it was unnecessary that the trustee should have taken any greater than a life estate, and therefore, the remaindermen should not be barred. The principle has very generally been applied in cases of devise, where it is held that there is more room for construction to ascertain and carry into effect the intention of the testator, and accordingly the estate of the trustee has in some cases been enlarged, or restricted, to conform to the purposes of the trust. The rule, however, does not seem to be recognized in this State as applicable to limitations by deed. Evans v.King,
Under such a conveyance, however, the wife's estate would have been subjected to the marital rights of the husband, and the contingent limitations over could have been defeated by the destruction of the life estate. For the purpose, therefore, of securing her in the sole and separate enjoyment of her life estate, and presumedly to more effectually preserve the particular estate until the vesting of the remainders, the entire fee was conveyed to Wood and his heirs in trust for the purposes declared. Nothing remained in the grantor, and there being a valuable consideration there could never have been a resulting trust in his favor. Brown v. James, 1 Atkins, 158; Perry on Trusts, 158. In whom, then, was it necessary for the fee to vest? It could not be in the wife, because she took but a life estate; and it could not go to the children, even if in existence at the execution of the deed (and this does not appear) for it is well settled that if the use is contingent, the use is not in esse until the happening of the contingency upon which its vesting depends, and the statute will not execute it until then.Chudleigh's case, 1 Rep. 126; Sanders' Uses, 110; 1 Sugden Powers, 41; 4 Kent Com., 241; 1 Cruise's Digest, 354. It will be observed that the limitation over is not to the children of Mrs. King, "provided" they survive her (in which case they would have taken a vested remainder, subject to have been divested afterwards by their death before that of their mother) but it is to "any children she may leave surviving her." During her life there could be no one to fill the description, and it is, therefore quite clear that the uses were contingent. The fee, then, having passed out of the grantor, the wife taking but a life estate, and the children having but a contingent use, which could not be executed by the statute, it must follow that until the death of Mrs. King it was necessary that it should have abided in the trustee and his heirs, and this is precisely where it was placed by the express terms of the (703) conveyance. *489
In support of this conclusion, in reference to the facts of this particular case, we reproduce the language of Ruffin, C. J., inBattle v. Petway,
Under the view we have taken of the law as settled by this Court, and its application to the present case, it is hardly necessary to review the authorities cited by the plaintiffs from other States. We will remark, however, that Ellis v. Fisher, 65 Am. Dec., 52, related to a trust created by devise, and the same is true of the quotation from Coulton v. Robinson, 57 Am. Dec., 168, cited by counsel. In Nichol v. Walworth, 4 Denio, 385, the estate of the trustee was but for life, and the decision is explained by Danforth, J., in Bennett v. Garlock,
For the reasons given, we are of the opinion that his Honor committed no error in holding that the plaintiffs were barred and could not recover.
Affirmed.
Cited: Culp v. Lee,
(705)