47 S.E.2d 703 | N.C. | 1948
This was an action to recover on a contract for the purchase of land. Payment was resisted on the ground of defect in plaintiffs' title. From judgment holding plaintiffs' title good, defendants appealed. The land which defendants contracted to purchase from the plaintiffs was devised to plaintiff W. A. Ratley "for his natural life, and at his death to his nearest heirs."
Under the rule in Shelley's case the language in which this devise was expressed must be given the effect of vesting a fee simple title to the land in the plaintiff Ratley. It is suggested by the defendants that the word "nearest" used by the testator limits the scope and meaning of the word heirs and prevents the application of the rule. It is argued that the phrase "nearest heirs," instead of describing the extent and quality of the estate conveyed to the first taker, and denoting those to take in indefinite succession, should be regarded as designation or description of the persons who are to take otherwise than by descent. But defendants' contention on this point seems to have been determined against them by the *121
adjudications of this Court in Crisp v. Biggs,
In Crisp v. Biggs, supra, it was held that "The words `nearest heirs' means simply heirs and do not take the case out of the rule"; and in Cox v.Heath, supra, it was said, "The `nearest heirs' are all those persons upon whom the law would cast the inheritance — Those who are heirs are therefore necessarily nearest heirs."
The cases cited by defendants wherein the words "nearest blood relative"(Miller v. Harding,
The rule in Shelley's case is a rule of law and of property. Rawls v.Roebuck,
As illustrating this principle, it was pointed out by Justice Brown inDaniel v. Harrison,
The ruling of the court below is correct and the judgment is
Affirmed. *122