25 S.C. 358 | S.C. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
John Paysinger died in 1844, leaving a will, by which he provided as follows: “I wish my executors to hold the legal title (which is hereby vested in them) to the tract of land on which my sister, Christina Mills, lives, purchased from Moses Riley, to the sole and separate use of my said sister during her life, and at her death to the use of all her five children, and those she may hereafter have, and rvho may be then living, in fee simple, the legal title to vest in said surviving children, without any act on the part of my executors,” &c. At the time the will was written, and also at the death of the testator, Christina Mills had five children, but in 1848 one of them, Martin Paysinger, died, leaving a widow and one child, Mary J. Shanks. The life tenant, Christina Mills, died in 1881, leaving only three surviving children, Arcby B. Mills, Mary Nichols, and Juliana Taylor, but one grandchild, Mary J. Shanks, daughter of Martin, the predeceased son, who instituted this action for the double purpose of requiring the executors of the will of Christina Mills to account for her estate, and also to partition the tract of land given as aforesaid by the will of John Paysinger to the said Christina for life with limitation over; claiming that, although her father, Martin, died during the life of the said Christina, she is entitled as tenant in common with her surviving uncle and aunts to the share her father, Martin, would have been entitled to, had he survived Christina, the life tenant.
The plaintiff appeals to this court, both from Judge Pressley’s order sustaining the demurrer and requiring the plaintiff to elect upon which cause of action she would proceed; and also from Judge Cothran’s decree dismissing the complaint: “I. Because Judge Pressley erred in sustaining defendants’ demurrer, and compelling the plaintiff thereby to elect the branch of the case yet to be determined. II. Because Judge Cothran erred in dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint. III. Because the judge erred in construing the will of John Paysinger to mean only those children of Christina Mills who should be living at her death. IY. Because the judge erred in construing that the will gave to Christina Mills not a conditional estate, but an estate for life, the title to remain until her death in/the executors, and that the title was to vest in the surviving children, to the exclusion of the grandchildren of Christina Mills, who survived her grandparent. V. Because the judge erred in not holding that, under the will, the plaintiff, through her father, Martin, with the defendants, took a vested remainder in the land described in the will,” &c.
First, as to the demurrer. The argument of the appellant’s counsel proceeds on the assumption that the land belonged to Christina in fee, and after her death descended to her heirs as such. If this were true, the argument would be unanswerable, but the fact is otherwise. Christina had only a life estate in the land, and that of course ended at her death. It ivas not a case for the application of the rule in Shelley’s case. None of the parties held as the heirs of Christina, but, on the contrary, as
Second. The plaintiff’s claim for partition of the land must be determined by. the construction of the will of John Paysinger. What did the testator mean by the words: “And at her death (Christina) to the use of all her five children, and those she may hereafter have and who may be then living, in fee,” &c. ? Although the children of Christina living at the time the will was executed were numbered (5), they were not named or described, and those were added who might be afterwards born; so that we take it this Was a limitation over to a particular class of'persons at a particular time. In this view the rule is, that while any of the class remain, they take the whole interest, excluding the representatives of any of the class who may have died before the time indicated for distribution. Clark v. Clark, 19 S. C., 350. Besides, ordinarily, the word “children” means the immediate offspring, and does not include “grandchildren.” Bannister v. Bull, 16 S. C., 220, and authorities there cited. But in addition to these general rules of construction, the devise over in this case, by its express terms, was to take effect at the time of the death of Christina, and was limited to her children “who may be then living, the legal title to vest in said surviving children without any act on the part of the executors,” &c.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgments of the Circuit Court be affirmed.