46 S.C. 262 | S.C. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs bring this action to recover possession of one undivided fourth part of a tract of land described in the complaint, now in the exclusive possession of the defendant, and claimed by him as his exclusive property.
The facts of the case are undisputed, and as the case turned upon a question of law only, a trial by jury was waived, and the case was heard and determined by his honor, Judge Benet. It appears that the land in controversy formerly belonged to one Thomas Robertson, who, by his will, which was admitted to’ probate on the 6th of August, 1849, devised the same as follows: '■'■Second. I gave and bequeath to my daughter, Rocinda R. Robertson, for her and the heirs of her body, * * * if, however, my said daughter, Rocinda, should die without issue, then the above bequeathed property is to revert back unto my estate, and be equally divided among my surviving legatees.”
The testator, after duly executing his will, containing the above copied clause, died, leaving his widow, who subsequently died without having married again, his said daughter, Rocinda, and four sous, Allen, James, Samuel, and the defendant, William. All of these sons, except William, afterwards died — -the plaintiffs being the only children and heirs at law of the said Samuel, who left no will. After the death of her three brothers, the said Rocinda died, in 1891, without ever having had any issue, leaving a will in which she undertook to devise the land in controversy to persons other than the plaintiffs.
The defendant claims that he, as the only “surviving legatee” of the testator, is exclusively entitled to the land
From this judgment defendant appeals, upon the several grounds set out in the record, which impute the following errors to the Circuit Judge: 1st. In holding that Rocinda took more than a life estate. 2d. In holding that Rocinda took a fee conditional, and that the limitation over was void for remoteness. 3d. In holding that the words, “my surviving legatees,” meant surviving the testator, and in not holding that those words meant surviving Rocinda.
It is very obvious that the case turns upon the inquiry as to what is the proper construction of the second clause of the will, which is above set out. That inquiry must be pursued in the light of the cardinal rule, that the intention of the testator, as ascertained from the words which he has used, must govern, unless such intention, as thus ascertained, comes in conflict with some settled rule of law which forbids carrying such supposed intention into effect. So that the inquiry, naturally, divides itself into two questions: 1st. What do the words which the testator used, aside from any arbitrary rule of law, show to have been the intention of testator. 2d. Whether the intention as thus disclosed, is in conflict with any settled rule of law, which forbids that it shall be carried into effect. As to the first question, I do not see how it. can be doubted, that the words which the testator used show plainly that he intended that the property which he gave to his daughter, Rocinda, should be hers — not for her life only, but for the heirs'-of her body — as long as she should have such heirs, and in case of her death without issue, that the property given to
“It has never been doubted, since the introduction of executory devises, that a fee could be limited by executory devise upon a fee simple absolute, where there was no ob*270 jection on the score of remoteness; and it is difficult to find any reason why the same doctrine should not be applied to a fee simple conditional. We have seen that both these classes of fees exhaust the estate, so that no remnant exists for the subject of a remainder; and both equally need the benignant aid of courts, in the interpretation of wills, in giving effect to executory devises. If a fee simple conditional be a less estate than a fee simple absolute, and yet not so reduced as to be a particular estate of freehold, which admits a remainder,' there seems to be stronger reason why courts should recognize the jus disponendi of testators in creating limitations over upon this estate. Littleton says: ‘A man cannot have a more large or greater estate of inheritance than a fee simple.’ And Lord Coke, commenting thereon, says: ‘This doth extend as well to fees simple, conditional, and qualified, as to fees simple, pure, and absolute. For our author speaks of the ampleness and greatness of the estate, and not of the perdurableness of the same; and he that hath a fee simple, conditional, or qualified, hath as ample and great an estate as he that hath a fee simple absolute; so as the diversity appeareth between the quantity and quality of the estate.’ Co. Litt, 18. The prominent distinction between these two classes of fees simple is in the description of the heirs to which the estates respectively descend — rone to the heirs general and the other to particular heirs of the body generally, or restricted as to sex and as to the body that shall bear them. This, of course, effects the duration of the estate in the donee and the reverter to the donor, but both are estates in fee simple of the same quantity. All the rules applying to estates in fee are equally applicable to the estate of fee conditional, as to its creation and limitation and the time of its continuance under the limitation, with the exception of the order of its descent and the right of alienation to bar the donor, 2 Preston on Fstates, 320. * * * A fee conditional during its continuance is the entire fee simple estate, Adams v. Chaplin, 1 Hill Ch., 278, and is as fit a subject*271 for executory devise as a fee absolute.” The opinion concludes with these words: “Upon principle and authority, an executory devise may be limited upon a fee simple conditional, if within' due time fixed by the rule against perpetuities.” The same distinguished chancellor, in the subsequent case of McCorkle v. Black, 7 Rich. Eq., at page 419, took occasion to reiterate these views, and to notice certain cases which had been pteviously “inadvertently omitted.”
It thus appears that while the question, whether a limitation over, after an estate in fee conditional, by way of executory devise, may not be supported, has never been authoritatively decided, yet the weight of numbers, at least — two chancellors and two law judges against one chancellor — -is in favor of such a limitation, if within the time fixed by the rule against perpetuities. It is, also, to be observed that the only chancellor who is distinctly on the record in opposition to that view very plainly intimates, in his decree in Buist v. Dawes, 4 Strob. Eq., at page 48, that if he could have regarded the question as an open one, he would have adopted a different view. But supposing, as he did, that the question was concluded by the cases which he proceeded to consider, he was forced to adopt a different view. Upon this, it may be remarked that the cases upon which Dargan, Ch., based his conclusion manifestly were not regarded by the Court of Appeals as conclusive of the question, for they referred that question to the Court of Errors. To this may be added, that the cases cited by Dargan, Ch., were either cases in which the question was, whether there could be a valid limitation over after a fee conditional, by way of remainder, or were cases in which the limitation over was infected with the vice of remoteness. It is very easy, therefore, to understand why the Court of Appeals did not regard those cases as conclusive of the question whether a limitation over, after a fee conditional, by way of executory devise, could be supported, where such limitation over was in such terms as avoided the vice of remoteness.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed,, and that the complaint be dismissed.