59 N.C. 163 | N.C. | 1860
The bill is filed by the executrix of James Scales, deceased, for the purpose of obtaining the advice of this Court as to the construction of the will of her testator, in several specified particulars.
1. The executrix wishes to know whether she has an absolute interest or only a life estate in certain property of a perishable kind, and if the latter, how far she may be responsible for its consumption in the use; and also, how the proceeds of the slaves, given to her for life, and then to be sold, are to be divided. Those are questions which will arise after her death, and she has no interest in having them decided now. We have often said that we will not anticipate and decide questions which can not be attended with any present practical results.
2. The residuary clause of the will does not include the money on hand, or that due on bonds, notes and accounts, because it can not be presumed that the testator intended them to "be sold." Pippin v. (166) Ellison,
3. The legacy of the granddaughter, Mary Ellington, who died before the testator's will was made, was void, and did not become vested in her children, because there was no person in existence to answer the description contained in the will at the time when it was made, or at any other time during the life of the testator. The Revised Code, ch. 119, sec. 28, differs from the Revised Statutes, ch. 122, sec. 15, in using the words "child or other issue," instead of child or children, which would include a grandchild, if such were living and capable of being a legatee at the publication of the will, but we think it can not embrace one then dead. The statute was intended to apply to a lapsed, and not a void, legacy. This legacy being void, does not pass under the residuary clause, for the reason given in the answer to the next preceding question, but is distributable among the next of kin.
4. The slave Alexander does not pass to the widow, because, at the death of the testator, when the will speaks, he was not his mother's youngest child; but he does pass to the testator's youngest son, Hamilton, because he answers the description given in the will in every particular, and there is no room for extrinsic proof, because there is no latent ambiguity. The youngest child of Aggy will, of course, belong to the widow for life.
5. The owners of the several slaves who were employed in the cultivation of the crop, will be entitled, respectively, to their hires. For this, seeHarrell v. Davenport,
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: Hastings v. Earp,
Dist.: Harkness v. Harkey,
(167)