12 S.E.2d 688 | N.C. | 1941
Controversy without action submitted on an agreed statement of facts.
Plaintiff, being under contract to convey a 79-acre tract of land to defendant, duly executed and tendered deed sufficient in form to invest the defendant with a fee-simple title to the property, and demanded payment of the purchase price as agreed, but the defendant declined to accept the deed and refuses to make payment of the purchase price on the ground that the title offered is defective.
The court, being of opinion that upon the facts agreed, the deed tendered was sufficient to convey a fee-simple title to the locus in quo, gave judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals, assigning error. The question in difference arises out of the construction of the following item in the will of J. C. Rose:
"5. I give and bequeath to my son, W. W. Rose, the Pierce place where he now lives . . . his lifetime, then to his wife, Sarah, her life time or widowhood but in case said W. W. Rose have any heirs said land go to said heirs."
It is conceded that if W. W. Rose take a fee simple in the land devised to him under the above clause in his father's will, the deed tendered is sufficient, and the judgment in favor of the plaintiff is correct, but the defendant questions the devise as vesting in W. W. Rose a fee-simple estate.
The record states that plaintiff's wife, mentioned as Sarah in the will, died in 1937, leaving her surviving the plaintiff, her husband, and no children, as none was born to their marriage. The plaintiff has not remarried, and he has no children. The intervening life estate of plaintiff's wife, Sarah, is therefore at an end, she having predeceased her husband.
It would seem that according to what was said in Cooper, Ex parte,
A very satisfactory statement of the rule by Lord Macnaghten will be found in Van Grutten v. Foxwell, Appeal Cases, Law Reports (1897), at p. 658: "It is a rule in law when the ancestor by any gift or conveyance takes an estate of freehold, and in the same gift or conveyance an estate is limited either mediately or immediately to his heirs in fee or in tail, that always in such cases `the heirs' are words of limitation of the estate and not words of purchase."
It is hardly necessary to observe that every part of this statement is deserving of attention, from the opening words, which declare it to be "a rule in law," to the last clause, which says that "the heirs" can never take by purchase when the rule applies. "In determining whether the rule inShelley's case shall apply, it is not material to inquire what the intention of the testator was as to the quantity of estate that should vest in the first taker. The material inquiry is, What is taken under the second devise? If those who take under the second devise take the same estate, they would take as heirs or heirs of his body, the rule applies" —Perley, C. J., in Crockett v. Robinson,
It will be noted that the limitation to the heirs of W. W. Rose does not change the course of descent. "The law will not treat that as an estate for life which is essentially an estate of inheritance, nor permit anyone to take in the character of heir unless he takes also in the quality of heir."Steacy v. Rice, 27 Pa. St., 95, 65 Am. Dec., 447.
Reduced to its simplest terms, the devise in question is one to W. W. Rose for life, remainder to his wife Sarah for life, remainder to his heirs. Rowland v. Building Loan Assn.,
The suggestion that the limitation to the heirs of W. W. Rose was intended as a shifting devise, or as a substitute for the limitation to his wife Sarah, even though arguable, when reduced to its final analysis, seems to lead to the same conclusion, or at least to no different result.Whitfield v. Garris,
Here, there is no reverter and no limitation over in case the first taker should "die without heirs," Willis v. Trust Co.,
The conclusion is reached that the judgment should be upheld.
Affirmed.