190 S.E. 719 | N.C. | 1937
Controversy without action, submitted on an agreed statement of facts.
The defendant, being under contract to lend plaintiff $2,200, to be secured by deed of trust on real estate, has declined to make said loan on the ground that title to the security offered is defective.
The court, being of opinion that plaintiff holds fee simple title to security offered, rendered judgment accordingly, from which the defendant appeals, assigning error. *457 On the hearing, the sufficiency of the title offered was properly made to depend upon whether deed from Mary A. Laughinghouse to T. L. Laughinghouse for the locus in quo conveys a fee simple or only a life estate.
The habendum is "to him, the said party of the second part, for and during the term of his natural life," and at his death "said lands shall descend to his heirs at law or to such collateral relations as may be entitled to same upon failure of issue." We agree with the trial court that by virtue of the operation of the rule in Shelley's case, which obtains in this jurisdiction, not only as a rule of law, but also as a rule of property, the grantee in said deed took a fee simple title to the property thereby conveyed. Whitehurst v. Bowers,
It will be observed that the limitation after the death of the grantee 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. In other words, as an heir is one upon whom the law casts an estate at the death of the ancestor (II Blackstone, ch. 14), and as it is necessary to consult the law to find out who the heir of the ancestor is, the law, speaking through the rule in Shelley's case, in substance, says: "He who would thus take in the character of heir must take also in the quality of heir; that is, as heir
by descent under the law and not by purchase under the instrument."Yelverton v. Yelverton,
Affirmed. *458