16 S.C. 316 | S.C. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Christopher Griffin, late of Newberry county, died in 1832 or 1833, leaving a last will and testament, in which, among other things, he devised his real estate to his widow for life, and at her death to his son, William B. Griffin, with the further provision that if his son, William B. Gi’iffin, should die without issue, “that all the interest he has in my estate is to go to my son, Hillary R. Mangum (or Griffin); and in case the above-mentioned William B. Griffin and Hillary R. Mangum (or Griffin) should die without issue, then all my estate, real and personal, to be equally divided between my four sisters, Emily Elizabeth Pitts, Sarah Griffin, Martha Barksdale and Lucinda Griffin.”
Mrs. Phoebe Griffin, who afterwards intermarried with Bennett Wallace, conveyed her life-estate in the land in January, 1854, to W. B. Griffin, who, on the same day, for valuable con
Piester died in 1873, leaving a will, in which he directed his executors to sell any portion of his estate, real or personal, sufficient to pay debts; and after the payment of his debts he gave the whole estate to his wife and children. Under this will his family have remained in possession. W. B. Griffin died in November, 1861, his mother, the life-tenant, surviving him until January 24th, 1864, when she died. Hillary E. Mangum died in February, 1874.
This action was commenced June 21st, 1874, by the children of Hillary E. Mangum, claiming the land in question on the ground that William B. Griffin, having died without issue living at his death, their father became entitled to' said land, and their father having since died, the land descended to them as his heirs-at-law. The claim of the plaintiffs was resisted below on several grounds:
First. It being admitted that Hillary E. Mangum was a natural son of Christopher Griffin, the testator, the defendants relied upon the act of 1795 prohibiting a father, having a lawful wife or child, giving by deed or will more than one-fourth of the clear value of his estate to a concubine or to his illegitimate child. Second. They relied on the doctrine of estoppel, insisting that Hillary E. Mangum, having stood by and silently permitted Piester, after his purchase, to put up valuable improvements on his land, he and those claiming under him were thereby estopped from now setting up claim to the land. Third. They set up the remoteness of the limitation to Mangum, and claim, on that account, that it was void; and, Fourth, They interposed the Statute of Limitations. Judge Wallace, who heard the case below, overruled the two first grounds of defense, but sustained the two last.
The plaintiffs have appealed, their exceptions involving the
The first point made in the argument in behalf of the appellants is: That the event fixed for the limitation to Mangum was the death of W. B. Griffin during the life of the life-tenant, Mrs. Phosbe Griffin. And W. B. Griffin, having died during the life of the life-tenant, it is contended that this limitation took effect at his death, and the cases of Evans v. Godbold, 6 Rich. Eq. 26 ; Schoppert v. Gillam, Id. 83; Anderson v. Smoot, Spears Eq. 312; Vidal v. Verdier, Id. 402, and Mum v. Evans, 10 S. C. 56, are relied on to sustain this proposition.
We do not think that these cases are applicable to the case at bar. In the case of Vidal v. Verdier, supra, which is the strongest case in this direction, it is true that the court did construe the will as intending to fix the death of the first taker in remainder before the death of the life-tenant as the event for the limitation over to take effect, but that case, as will be found upon examination, turned upon the construction of the words “ in case of the death,” which were embraced in the phraseology used. These words do not appear, in the case now before the court, in connection with the limitation to Mangum.
Besides, Vidal v. Verdier was fully discussed afterwards by Chancellor Harper in the case of Yates v. Mitchell, decided in 1845, and found in 1 Rich. Eq. 265, where that able chancellor defines and limits the principle laid down there within its proper boundary, and which excludes its application here. He says that Vidal v. Verdier was decided on the principle “that when a testator, giving in remainder after a life-estate, uses one set of expressions denoting that the remainderman is to take an absolute estate, and another set-of expressions limiting him to an estate for life, with remainder to his issue, and a limitation over in the event of his not having issue, this apparent repugnancy may be reconciled by restricting the dying without issue to the life-time of the tenant for life, thus permitting every part of the will to have its proper effect. If he dies during the life-time oí* the tenant for life, leaving issue, the issue will take as purchasers
So we say here, as to the case now before the court, and for the same reason. Had W. B. Griffin left issue, beyond doubt they would have taken by inheritance, and not by purchase, showing that a fee was conveyed by way of remainder to him, which vested in right at- the death of his father, to be enjoyed in possession at the death of his mother. There is not a word in the will which indicates that the testator intended his son, W. B. Griffin, should take an estate for life with remainder to his issue in any event.
In the case of Blum v. Evans, 10 S. C. 56, the will was executed after the act of 1853 on the subject of words of limitation, and the last constitutes a wide distinction between that case and this, and no doubt had much to do in controlling the judgment of the court.
We do not think that this point, though earnestly and ably presented by the junior counsel of appellant, can be sustained either upon principle or upon the authorities cited. We will proceed then to the consideration of the case as dependent upon the other questions raised.
First. Is the limitation over to Hillary B. Mangum void for remoteness ? The limitation to Mangum is dependent upoit the event that William B. Griffin should “die without issue.” Do these words import an indefinite failure of issue, or can they be restricted to a certain time competent, within the rules of law, upon which a limitation over can take effect by way of executory devise'? Did the testator use these words indicating that if, at any time in the future, the issue of William B. Griffin should become extinct, then the estate should go over to Mangum? or did he mean only that if, at the death of Griffin, there should be no issue, then the limitation should take effect? These questions must turn upon the construction of the phrase “ dying without issue,” as interposed by their own inherent meaning, or
These words, and words of similar import, have been a prolific source in the past of numerous and bitter legal contests, reaching far back into our judicial history. They have given rise to some of the most profound and abstruse discussions in our books, and they have formed the basis of numerous learned opinions of the law and chancery courts, both of England, and America. Our own reports are full of such opinions, and they are found in the reports of all the States. It would seem, then, that all difficulty surrounding this subject ought to have been dissipated long since, and the way through these words made so clear that no one at this day should err therein; but such is not the fact.- Notwithstanding all the lights afforded by the decisions of the past, and the profound special discussions of this subject by eminent and most -able text writers on real property and estates therein, legal minds still fail frequently to agree as to the true intent and meaning of instruments in which these words are found, and especially in their application to a case in hand, and, as a consequence, almost every paper in which such terms have been employed, even at the present day, sooner or later appears in a court of last resort for adjudication. We are not much surprised, therefore, to see this case before us.
Without referring at this time to the different-text books and numerous decisions which we have examined, and through which we have reached our conclusions, we feel authorized to say, in the beginning, that there are two classes of cases in which these words constitute the pivotal point, and upon the construction of which they depend. The first class embraces all those cases .in which the question arises whether the term “issue,” as used in the instrument, was employed to denote an indefinite line of succession of descendants to take the estate by inheritance, or to denote a class of persons to take as purchasers at a fixed time. In other words, whether the term “issue” is a word of limitation, indicating that the first taker has the whole interest conveyed, descendible to his lineal descendants ad infinitum, or whether it is a word of purchase indicating that the first taker is only entitled to a life-estate with remainder to such persons as may
The second class embraces all those cases in which it is admitted that the fee in the first instance is conveyed to the first taker, but an effort is made to transfer this fee upon the happening of a specified contingency from him to another by way of executory devise. In other words, those cases where the attempt is made to mount a fee upon a fee, which can be done only by executory devise. The difference between the two classes is that the first involves the law of contingent remainders and the second that of executory devises. The case now before the court belongs to the second class; the case of Mendenhall v. Mower, ante p. 303, belongs to the first class. These two cases will fully illustrate the different character of the two classes, and the principles of law applicable to each.
The precise question then, in this case, when brought down to its last analysis, is: Does the will of Christopher Griffin contain a legal executory devise, by which a fee in the land in dispute was devised to Hillary R. Mangum, after a fee already devised to W. B. Griffin — the fee to Hillary R. Mangum to take effect in him upon the defeat of the fee in Griffin upon the contingency specified ? Or, to state it in another and shorter form, Can the will of Christopher Griffin be regarded as an executory devise in favor of Hillary R. Mangum ?
An executory devise is a limitation by will of a future contingent interest in lands contrary to the rules of limitation of contingent estates in conveyances at law. If the limitation by will does not depart from those rules prescribed for contingent remainders, it is in that case a contingent remainder and not an executory devise. 4 Kent 265. For instance, among the rules governing contingent remainders is one which forbids an estate to be limited over to another after a fee already granted. In such case there can be no such thing as defeating the fee already granted and transferring it to another by way of' remainder, because a remainder implies something left, which cannot be the case after the whole has once been disposed of. Yet, while this cannot be done by way of contingent remainder, it may be done by an executory devise, which, according to the definition above,
So, too, under the common law conveyances, a freehold interest in real property could not be limited to commence in futuro, because such interests were established under the feudal system, and under that system livery of seizin was necessary to the creation of a freehold, and as livery could not be given infutwro, a future freehold could not be created at common law. Neither at common law could a fee be mounted on a fee. In conveyances at law, it is true, a provision may be made for the defeasance of a fee, but not then for its transfer to another at some future period and upon some specified contingency.
These, and some others, being difficulties which our legal ancestors found surrounding conveyances at common law, which, in their opinion, demanded remedy, the executory devise was intended for that purpose. Hence it allows a freehold to be created in futuro without a particular precedent estate to support it, and by it a fee may be created after a fee. But at the same time the common law abhorred a perpetuity, and to prevent perpetuities in executory devises, to which they would have inevitably led if left unguarded, it was established as a part of the machinery of executory devises that the contingency upon which the limitation intended was to take effect should not be postponed longer than a life or lives in being and twenty-one years and a fraction of another year thereafter. So that in all these cases, involving the validity of an executory devise, the main point to be considered is, has the contingency upon which the limitation is to take effect been fixed within the period of a life or lives in being and twenty-one years and a fraction after ? If so, the executory devise is good and the limitation valid. If not, it is bad, and the limitation void for remoteness.
Now, was the event upon which Christopher Griffin intended the limitation in favor of Hillary R. Mangum should take effect, fixed by him to happen within the prescribed period? The exact language of the will is: “ If the before-mentioned William B. Griffin should die loithout issue, all the interest he has in my
From this language it will be seen that the event upon which the limitation to Hillary E. Mangum was to take effect was the non-existence of William B. Griffin’s issue after his death. This non-existence of William B. Griffin’s issue might be found to be the fact at an indefinite period after his death when the last of his lineal descendants died, or it might be the case at the moment of his death.
If Christopher Griffin intended that the limitation should take effect at either of these periods — whenever it was found that William B. Griffin had no issue living — after his death, this would include an indefinite failure as well as a failure at a definite time, to wit, the death of W. B. The first, having a tendency to perpetuity, would be too remote, aud therefore void, and the second being embraced in the first could not save the limitation. If he, however, intended to restrict this period to the time of the death oí' W. B. Griffin alone, and then the limitation to take effect if there was no issue, this would be within the life or lives in being, and therefore valid.
Which of these did he intend ? This must be determined by the language used, interpreted according to the rules of law. It is well established that the phrase “dying without issue” or “die without issue,” when standing alone, before the act ofJ 1853, denoted an indefinite failure, and a limitation over, upon ¡ such terms unqualified, has ever been held void for remoteness.t There can be no case found contrary to this. See Anderson v. Jackson, 16 Johns. 382, and the numerous cases there discussed. See, also, 2 Fearne 443; Graham v. Moore, 13 S. C. 119, and the cases there cited. But it has also been held, on the other hand, that these terms may be.qualified by subsequent words, and when thus qualified, so as to be restricted to the death of the first taker, the limitation over will be preserved.
The last and precise point, then, in the case is: Are there any qualifying words in this will which restrict the limitation to Mangum to the death of William B. Griffin ? The words most
But it is contended that while this is true, yet, inasmuch as the limitation here is to one in existence, and to him by name, that the testator could not have intended an indefinite failure. On the contrary, he must have intended some period when the party named would probably be in existence, to wit, the death of Griffin, the first taker, without issue then living.
There is a class of eases in our reports in which it is held that, where the limitation over can be construed as a personal benefit alone to a party named, then the effect of such construction will operate as a restriction upon the generality of the phrase. And the term “survivor,” when unaccompanied with words indicating a transmissible interest, should the survivor not be in being at the happening of the contingency, will generally have this effect. See case of Mendenhall v. Mower, ante, and the cases there referred to. But where the limitation also embraces a transmissible interest, even the term “survivor” will be impotent to this effect.
Now, have we any reason here to conclude that the limitation to Hillary B. Mangum was intended simply as a personal benefit to him alone, and, in case he had died before Griffin, that all claim as to him would have ended? Is there'anything to show that the testator did not intend to convey to him a transmissible interest, to attach at the falling in of the estate of the first taker, either to Mangum or his heirs, as the facts at that time might require? We see nothing in the case which can demand this construction, except that the limitation is to Mangum by name.
There are numerous cases in the books where the limitation over has been held too remote, although one in esse is named as the party to take. In fact we have found no case where the naming of one as the party provided for has in itself restricted the' generality of the previous words. Lyon & Norwood v. Walker, 8 Rich. 307. There is no reason, therefore, why the well-established meaning of the phrase dying without issue should
Mr. Ferguson, in his very clear argument, made a point on the use of the adverb “then,” which deserves notice. This word, as an adverb, means “at that time,” referring to a time specified, either past or future. It has no power in itself to fix a time. It simply refers to a time already fixed. The question here is: What time do the words “dying without issue” unqualifiedly fix ? Do they fix an indefinite period when there shall be no issue, or do they fix a definite period, to wit, the death of W. B. Griffin? They must have been used with reference to the one or the other, and, having been thus used, the adverb then following them would refer to the one or the other, as their proper construction might indicate as the time intended. To assume that the use of the word would, in itself, fix a certain time, and then refer to it, would be giving it a double significance, of which it is not susceptible.
Our conclusion is, that the testator having used in his will those words which, according to well-established principles found in many decisions bearing expressly upon such words, could, before the act of 1853, have no other meaning but an indefinite failure of issue, and this will having been executed before the passage of that act, the limitation over to Mangum ; is too remote, and, therefore, void. We concur, therefore, in ‘ the decree of Judge Wallace on this branch of the case. 1
Next, as to the Statute of Limitations. Having determined the first question involved against the appellants, which ends all of their interests in this case, it would not be necessary, as a practical question, to consider the exceptions as to the plea of the Statute of Limitations; but this being one of the questions raised in the case, it is perhaps proper that we should decide it.
The Statute of Limitations begins to run at the moment a right of action accrues, and not before. To determine, then, whether the statute is a bar in this case, we must first ascertain when the right of action accrued, if any, to Mangum, and, second, whether the statutory period has elapsed since.
It will be remembered that Mrs. Phoebe Griffin had a life-estate. The life-estate, hoAvever, she conveyed to her son, W.
Under the terms of the will, Hillary R. Mangum’s interest-could not attach until the expiration of both the life-estate to Mrs. Griffin and the estate in remainder to W. B. Griffin. Now, did the purchase by W. B. Griffin of the life-estate of his mother merge this life-estate into his remainder in such way as that it became extinct, wheii his remainder expired upon his death ? or did it continue to exist after the death of W. B. Griffin, in 1861, up to the death of Mrs. Phoebe Griffin, in 1864 ?
Merger, as a general rule, takes place whenever a greater estate and a less coincide and meet in one and the same person without any intermediate estate. In such case the less is immediately annihilated, or, in the law phrase, is said to be merged— that is, sunk or drowned in the greater — but they must come to one and the same person, in one and the same right, else, if a freehold be in his own right, and he has a term in right of another, there is no merger. 2 Bl. Com. *178. Here the greater and the less were united in the person of W. B. Griffin when. he. procured the life-estate of his mother. The two’ then came to one and the same person, in one and the same right, and merger took place.
It follows, then, that at the death of W. B. Griffin, there was no life-estate in the way of Mangum. And if the executory devise to him was a good devise, he could have commenced action at that time. Not having done so, and ten years having elapsed since then up to his death, without action, the statute is a bar.
The judgment of this court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.