41 N.C. 155 | N.C. | 1848
John Phifer, late of the county of Cabarrus died on 18 (156) October, 1845, having previously, on 21 November, 1818, made and published his last will and testament, duly executed to pass both real and personal estate, in which were contained the following clauses, to wit: "I desire that all my just debts be as speedily paid as the circumstances of my estate will render convenient.2d. I will and bequeath the residue of my estate, of every kind and description, to my dearly beloved wife, to manage the same as she may think most advisable, for her own support and for the support and education of our children, as long as she remains a widow, and, should she again intermarry, it is my will that my property should be divided between her and my children, agreeable to the laws of the State of North Carolina.3d. And should she not *120 intermarry until my children become of lawful age, I hereby invest her with full and ample authority to divide my property among them as she may deem most expedient."
Some time in 1840 the testator added a codicil to his will, which does not appear, however, to have been executed in the manner required by law to pass real estate. The testator left surviving him his wife, Esther Phifer, and seven children, to wit: Martin Phifer, John F. Phifer, Caleb Phifer, George L. Phifer, Elizabeth, the wife of E. R. Gibson, Sarah Ann, the wife of Robert W. Allison, all of full age, and Mary B. Phifer, a minor under 21 years of age. He also left a grandson, John Phifer Young, the only child of a daughter named Louisa, who had intermarried with Robert S. Young, and died a few months before her father. Esther Phifer, the widow of John Phifer, and who was the wife whom he mentions in his will, remained unmarried until her death, which occurred in March, 1846. Previously thereto she had made and published a last will and testament, duly executed to pass real and personal estate, wherein, after reciting that she had been empowered by (157) the will of her late husband to divide his property among his children, she proceeded to give to each of the children, by name, certain specified parts of the property, both real and personal. These portions were not of equal value, but valued from $6,000, the smallest, to $15,000, the largest estimated share. She also gave to her grandson, John Phifer Young, six negro slaves estimated to be worth about $2,000. Among the property given in her will was a tract of land devised to her son George L. Phifer, worth about $7,500, which her husband purchased after the publication of his will.
Upon the probate of the will of John Phifer, his sons, John Phifer and Caleb Phifer, took out letters of administration thereon, with the will annexed, and they also took out letters testamentary upon the will of their mother, and, meeting with difficulties in carrying the provisions of said will into effect, they filed this bill, to which all persons interested were made parties, to get advice of the court upon the following questions:
Whether Esther Phifer, the widow, had any power, under the will of her husband, to dispose of and divide any of his property among their children by her last will and testament. (2) And if she had, whether she had the further power to bequeath the slaves, mentioned in her will, to John Phifer Young, their grandson, and whether the executors ought to deliver the said slaves to him. (3) Whether, if the said John Phifer Young is one of the persons among whom the widow was directed to divide the property of her husband, he is bound by the allotment made in her will, or is entitled to demand from the executors a larger portion *121 of the said property. (4) Whether the said devise by the said widow of the tract of land, purchased by her husband after the making of his will, to her son George, vested the said land in him. The answer which we feel bound to give to the (158) first inquiry renders the consideration of the other questions presented in the bill unnecessary. We are of the opinion that the will of John Phifer did not confer upon his widow the power to divide his estate among their children by her last will and testament, much less to divide it among them in unequal portions. The will of the testator was made in 1818, about twenty-seven years before his death, and although the ages of his children are not otherwise stated in the pleadings, than that all of them, except one, were of full age when the bill was filed in the Fall of 1846, yet we may fairly infer that when the will was made all of them who were then born were under age, and most probably infants of very tender years. In that condition of his family he gives to his wife, after the payment of his debts, the whole residue of his estate, real and personal, so long as she might remain a widow. He gives it to her, however, not absolutely for herself and for her own sole use and support, but also for the support and education of his children. While she should remain his widow, the entire confidence which he expressed in her prudence and discretion induced him to confer upon her the exclusive management of the property for those necessary and important purposes. But should she again intermarry, then her situation would be so essentially changed by the new relations which she would contract that he thought it no longer proper to intrust her with the property which he designed for their children. He therefore directs a division of the whole estate between her and the children according to the law of the State. So far there is no difficulty in ascertaining his intentions, for they are clearly expressed and seem reasonable and proper. Then comes the third clause, which, at first view, appears somewhat obscure, but the obscurity vanishes when we consider his intentions respecting his family, previously expressed in the second clause, and (159) apply them to another state of things which he foresaw might possibly occur. His widow might not marry again at all, or, at least, might not do so until after the education of some or perhaps of all of their children might be completed, and they shall have arrived at the proper age to marry and settle, or otherwise engage in the active duties of life. Should such be the case, they would need a portion of that property which had been intrusted to their mother for their benefit. To provide *122 for such exigencies, he gives to her the power to divide the property among them as she might deem most expedient, and this power she might execute from time to time, as the occasion for its exercise might occur. (Sug. on Pow., 278; 1 Law Lib., 341.) He thought, too, that she would know best what kind of property would be most suitable for each one of the children, as he or she might arrive at lawful age, and such kind he leaves it to her discretion to give, keeping in view, however, that equality in the shares of the children indicated in the second clause of his will. Without the power to make such allotments, the children would either be unprovided for or would take and hold what their mother might put in their possession, as hers, and not as their own, which was certainly contrary to the intention of the testator. From this exposition of the testator's intention, as declared in the third clause of his will, it is manifest that the power given to the widow was to be executed by a deed of other instrument, inter vivos, and not by her will. Indeed, in the execution of the power no reference is made to her death, but to her marriage after the children or some of them should have arrived at lawful age. A power given generally may, it is true, be executed either by deed or will, unless the particular mode of execution is prescribed. Sug. on Pow., 207; 1 Law Lib., 250. But the mode of execution, when the power is given by will, depends on the intention (160) of the testator, and that is to be ascertained upon a fair construction of the will, like any other intention, when the terms are not express. Sug. on Pow., 97; 1 Law Lib., 117. Our opinion being that the power given in the will of the testator to his widow has not been executed, the result is that the effect of his will has been to give all the estate therein effectually divised [devised] or bequeathed to his widow for her life, with the remainder to all the children; and as she is now dead, the estate must be equally divided between all the living children, and John Phifer Young, the only heir at law of Mrs. Louisa Young, another child, who died after the making of her father's will, but before his death, John Phifer Young takes the share to which his mother, if living, would have been entitled under the act of 1816, 1 Rev. Stat., ch. 122, sec. 15. The real estate purchased by the testator after the making of the will, whether devised therein or not, by force of the act of 1844, must be divided in the same manner.
PER CURIAM. Declared accordingly.
Cited: Thompson v. Power Co.,
(161)