64 S.E. 372 | N.C. | 1909
Demurrer sustained. Plaintiff appealed.
The pertinent facts are stated in the opinion.
This is an action for the partition of land. In March, 1879, Jesse Price, Sr., who was then the owner of the land in controversy, conveyed the same by deed to his son, John C. Price, during the term of his lifetime, and at his death to his surviving heirs, reserving to Jesse Price, Sr., the grantor, an estate for life in the land. Jesse Price, Sr., died in 1879, and John C. Price, on 15 January, 1883, conveyed the land by deed to W. P. Price in fee simple. John C. Price died on 6 April, 1906, leaving as his heirs four children, B. A. (524) Price, E. H. Price, A. B. Price and Bettie Pearsall, who are the plaintiffs, and W. P. Price, Lewis H. Price, John T. Price and C. D. Price. The defendant G. O. Griffin has acquired the interest of W. P. Price and C. D. Price by deeds duly executed to him in 1884, before this proceeding was commenced. If the deed from Jesse Price, Sr., to John C. Price conveyed a fee-simple estate to the latter, the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover; so that the only question in the case is whether it conveyed a fee or only a life estate, with remainder, to his children surviving him. The difficulty presented in the case arises from the use of the word "surviving," prefixed to the word "heirs," but we do not think this is sufficient to render inapplicable the rule inShelley's case to this limitation. It is said that as one of the principal reasons for establishing this rule was to prevent the abeyance or suspension of the inheritance, it only applied to those limitations in which the word "heirs" (or some equivalent word of inheritance) is used, on account of the maxim, nemo est haeres viventis. As, under this maxim, no one can be heir to a living person, the word "heirs" must necessarily refer to those who survive the ancestor, and the word "surviving," therefore, is mere surplusage, just as we have held that the word "lawful," in a limitation to the "lawful heirs" of a person, has no significance and does not restrict the ordinary meaning of the word "heirs." Woolv. Fleetwood,
We believe our conclusion to be supported by recent decisions of this Court as to the application of the rule in Shelley's case. Leathers v.Gray,
As John C. Price acquired by the deed from his father a fee simple estate, he conveyed the same estate to the defendant G. O. Griffin by the deeds executed in 1884, and the plaintiffs consequently have no interest in the land as tenants in common with the defendants. The ruling of the court was therefore correct.
No error.
Cited: Cotten v. Moseley,