45 So. 193 | Miss. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the court.
Laughlin, the surviving executor of the will of John R. M. O’Reiley, seeks partition of part of the real estate of the testa
Of course, an executor, merely as such, has primarily nothing to do with the real estate, and cannot under ordinary circumstances maintain a bill to partite land. The question is whether he can under this will. The will of O’Reiley is made an exhibit to the bill. This will in its second item makes special legacies to seventeen different persons, aggregating about $54,000. Item 3 of it is in the following words, viz.: “I hereby nominate, constitute and appoint J. D. Laughlin and H. C. McCabe, of Yicksburg, Mississippi, as the executors of this my last will and testament and charge upon them the legal and moral duty of carrying out my wishes, as I have directed, and to that end I convey them in fee all property of which I shall die seized and possessed, real, personal and mixed, and authorize them to sell the same and all and every part thereof as soon after my death as practicable, either for cash or on credit and to pay all the legacies named above. But should the proceeds of such sale be insufficient to pay all of said legacies in full, then such proceeds shall be prorated between all the legatees named above, each legatee to have such portion of the proceeds as the amount devised to him or her bears to such proceeds, except that Claudia Brooks, Fannie Slocumb and Annie Slocumb shall each have the five hundred dollars devised to them in any event.” Item 4 is in these words, viz.: “In the event of the death of either of my executors named above, then I authorize and empower the other to act alone and to execute this will and with the same force and effect that the two could jointly.” Item 6 is in the following words, viz.: “All the rest and residue of my estate not hereinbefore devised I give to my executors in fee share and share alike.”
The will was executed March 29, 1900. The bill shows that Laughlin is the surviving executor, -McCabe having died, and that John E. M. O’Reiley, the testator, died February 8, 1905, leaving no children or descendants of children;
The authorities pro and con will be found in the briefs of counsel respectively, and we need only state our conclusions from a careful examination. On the facts we think it plain that the widow, on renunciation, became a tenant in common with the executors, and survivor of them, of all the property. The executors were vested with title in fee expressly to carry out the design and object of the testator. It is true that, when O’Reiley, executed the will, he had neither wife nor children. If he had died without either,, the powers of the executors would have been, as would have been their duty, to sell the land to> pay the debts and legacies. But he married shortly before he died, and therefore the executors had not the same power over the undivided interest which the widow took as statutory heir, and the power of the executor, in order to comply with the order of the will, was limited to the other undivided half interest. The will expressly conveys to the executor the fee simple for the very purpose of sale for distribution, and this requirement applied to all of the land and personal property which the testator owned. It would be curious, indeed, if courts of equity were powerless to-require partition and prevent the sacrifice of the rights of the legatees.
The executors have possession as tenants in common. Unity of possession is all that is needed to constitute tenancy in common, regardless of the time of its commencement, quantum of interest, or source of title. Here the widow took one-half as heir and the executors took under the will. She, of course, co-uld sue the executor, under this particular will, for partition, and so can the executor sue her for it. The demurrer to the bill should have been overruled.
Reversed and remanded, with thirty days to answer, if desired, from date of the filing of the mandate below.
Reversed and remanded.