23 S.E. 459 | N.C. | 1895
"STATE OF ALABAMA, Benton County.
"Whereas, I, Joseph Gladden, of the county of Benton and State of Alabama, have two sons living in the county of Cleveland and State of North Carolina, viz.: Harvy I. Gladden and Rufus C. Gladden, and *342 being desirous to secure to them a home, and land for their occupation and support during the term of their natural lives, have thought proper and do by these presents give, grant, convey, release, enfeoff and confirm unto the said Harvy I. and Rufus C. Gladden all that tract of land lying and being in the county of Cleveland and State of North Carolina, to-wit: Commencing on two chestnuts and running thence S. 26 W. 50 poles to a post oak, thence S. 40 W. 50 poles to a small black oak, thence S. 51 W. 66 poles to a stake, thence N. 29 poles to a stake in the field, thence W. 136 poles to a small dogwood, thence N. 158 poles to a pine, rotten down, thence E. 42 poles to a black oak and hickory, thence N. 76 poles to a stake, thence E. 86 poles to a post oak, thence S. 15 poles to a pine, thence E. 98 poles to a pine on the road, Wm. Lackey's and Jno. M. Patterson's corner, thence to the beginning, to have and to hold the same to their use during the term of their natural lives and then to their heirs after them, and for the confirmation of the above I do hereby bind myself, my heirs and assigns, and will warrant and defend the same from myself, my heirs and from every person lawfully claiming the same, guaranteeing in law and equity unto the said Harvy I. and Rufus C. Gladden the right to the free use and occupation of the same during the term of their natural lives, and after their deaths I do hereby give, grant and convey the land above described unto the heirs of the said Harvy I. and Rufus C. Gladden, their (499) heirs and assigns forever in fee simple.
"As witness my hand and seal this 11 August, 1854. "JOSEPH GLADDEN."
His Honor, being of opinion that the rule in Shelley's case did not apply, gave judgment for the plaintiffs, and defendants appealed. It was agreed by the parties in the trial below that if the rule inShelley's case was applicable to the provisions of the deed before the court, judgment should be rendered for the defendants, but that if the rule was not applicable, then judgment should be entered for the plaintiffs. His Honor was of the opinion that the rule did not apply, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs. The defendants appealed from the judgment.
The law known as the rule in Shelley's case, Mr. Fearne in his work on Remainders says, was adopted in the reign of Edward II., and had prevailed in England through the years down to the time when he wrote. It is still the law in England. It is the law in North Carolina, *343
although in our own reports in the cases of Mills v. Thorne,
The authorities on these propositions are numerous. In Daniel v.Whartonby, 17 Wall., 639, the learned Judge who delivered the opinion of the Court, in speaking of the general rule that the intention of the testator must be fully carried out so far as it can be done consistently with the rules of law, but no further, said: "A declaration, however positive, that the rule shall not apply or that the estate of the ancestor shall not continue beyond the primary expressed limitation, or (502) that his heirs shall take by purchase and not by descent, will be unavailing to exclude the rule. . . . The rule is one of property and not of construction."
In 2 Washburn, R. P., 273, it is written: "Wherever the rule does apply it is as a rule of the common law so imperative that, though there be an expressed declaration that the ancestor shall only have a life estate, it will not defeat its union with the subsequent limitation to his heirs. It was said in Baker v. Scott,
Reversed.
Cited: Dawson v. Quinnerly,