146 Ga. 498 | Ga. | 1917
(After stating the foregoing facts.) We will first undertake to determine the nature of the e.state conveyed by this deed, according to the accepted rules of construction at common law, as modified by the statutes of this State. In the case of a conditional fee at common law, whereby an estate was given to A and his issue or to A and the heirs of his body, in exclusion of collateral heirs, A took the fee as soon as any issue was born, or it reverted to the donor’s estate if no issue was born. The effect of the statute de donis conditionalibus was to convert a fee conditional into an estate tail. By the act of-1821 (Acts 1821, p. 92) fee tails, whether express or implied, were converted into an absolute estate in the first taker. Craig v. Ambrose, 80 Ga. 134 (4 S. E. 1). The Code of 1863, § 3230 (Code of 1910, § 3661), left express estates tail just as under the act of 1821, but changed an estate tail by implication into a life-estate with remainder over. Ewing v. Shropshire, 80 Ga. 374, 382 (7 S. E. 554). That code section is as follows: “Estates tail are prohibited and abolished in this State. Gifts or grants to one, and the heirs of his body, or his heirs male or heirs female, or his heirs by a particular person,. or his children, or his issue, .convey an absolute fee, Estates tail being illegal, the law will never presume or imply such an estate. Limitations which, by the English rules of construction, would create an estate tail by implication in this State shall give a life-estate to the first taker, with remainder over in fee to his children and their descendants, as above provided; and if none are living at the time of his death, remainder over in fee to the beneficiaries intended by the maker of the instrument.” The precise question for decision is whether the children of the grantor in the deed under consideration took an express fee tail in the premises, converted into a fee simple by the act of 1821, or whether they took a life-estate, either because the words, “and on the demise of either of my aforesaid children, to such child or children he or she may leave,” create a limitation over to the grantor’s grandchildren who take as purchasers, or because of an implication of an estate tail from these words. It is argued that these words
We think that the clause, “Each child to receive an equal share of the above-mentioned property at such time as shall hereinafter be mentioned, to wit, on the arrival at the age of twenty-one years of the living child,” referred to the time each of the immediate grantees was to have possession of his or her respective share of the land, and does not militate with our interpretation of the deed as to the estate granted in the land.
Judgment reversed.