62 N.C. 143 | N.C. | 1867
The paragraph was as follows: "My will and desire is that my dearly beloved son, John A. Rowland, should live with me my lifetime; and if in case he will do so and help me pay all my just debts and demands against me, and treat me and his mother with humanity and kindness, I will and bequeath to him and his heirs and assigns forever all my tracts of land, except that I shall hereafter name; and in case I keep my negro man, Jacob, till my death, I also will and bequeath him to my son, John, with all and everything that I own and possess, of (144) whatever kind and nature named and not named, by his paying my daughter, Luda," etc.; "and now, if in case there should be any dispute about this will being my will and desire, it may be ascertained that it is, as it is, by looking at a deed of conveyance that I made to him some six or eight years ago, that I made to him the said John A. Rowland for three hundred and twenty acres of land, being the same land with some more now added to it." *107
The facts were that the testator died in November, and John A. Rowland in August, 1862; that the testator left surviving him as issue four daughters, besides an infant child of said John A., who is the defendant; also that no deed like the one referred to in the will could be found, and that the administrators with the will annexed had, since the death of the testator, paid off some three hundred dollars of debts that had been due by him for two or three years before his death.
A devise of land upon a condition precedent can never take effect where the condition has become, in any way, impossible to be performed. All the authorities agree in this: "But by the civil law, which on this subject has been adopted by the Court of Equity, when a condition precedent to the vesting of a legacy is impossible, the bequest is single, that is, discharged from the condition, and the legatee will be entitled as if the legacy were unconditional." An exception to this rule in relation to legacies prevails where the condition is the motive, or as some authors say, the sole motive of the bequest. 2 Wms. Ex'rs., 786; 1 Rop. Leg., 505, 506. In Nunnery v. Carter,
It must be declared that the death of the devisee and legatee, John A. Rowland, in the lifetime of the testator, has left the property, both real and personal, intended for him undisposed of, and that the same *108 belongs to the heirs-at-law and next of kin of the testator. There may be a decree for the necessary accounts, etc.
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: McNeely v. McNeely,
(146)