60 So. 157 | Ala. | 1912
In this case the ownership of land is in controversy between a daughter of Margaret Clarissa King and a purchaser from her. The result depends upon the meaning and effect to be ascribed to the will of Elias King, who died in 1852. So much of the will as affects the property is as folows: “I give to my son Edwin W. King, in trust for my beloved granddaughter, Margaret Clarissa King, the following described land, viz.: (Describing the land in controversy.) The property above given to my son Edwin, in trust for my granddaughter Margaret Clarissa King, is given for the sole and separate use and benefit of my said granddaughter and the heirs born of her body free from any control or liability for the debts of any husband she may hereafter have, and should my said granddaughter die without having issue unto her born and living, then I wash the property above given to her equally divided among the sister's of my said granddaughter, the sisters alluded to being begotten by my son Edwin; the proceeds arising from working the land and negroes' above given I give to my wife and son Edwin, after defraying all the expenses of my said granddaugh
The question propounded to the court in the agreed case submitted to it was, in substance, this: Bid Margaret Clarissa King take a life estate with remainder to the heirs of her body living at the time of her death, as plaintiff (appellee) contended, or did she take a fee tail which was converted into an absolute fee by the statute of 1812 or a fee under the rule in Shelley Case, of force in this state at the time of testator’s death, as defendant contended?
After consulting the arguments of counsel and the authorities cited in their briefs, and many adjudicated cases besides, our conclusion that Margaret Clarissa (King) Huey’s deed under the statute conveyed the entire fee to those grantees under whom the defendant claims has been determined on considerations which will be briefly stated.
The will created a trust estate for the benefit of Margaret Clarissa; but the trust was executed, not executory — that is, no conveyances were to be executed to put it into effect — and in the case of an executed trust
The language of the will purports to give the property to Margaret Clarissa King “and the heirs born of her.body.” :There seems to be no question but that at the common law, in the circumstances which have been stated, this gift, unaffected by any' inferences of a different testamentary intent to be drawn from the context, would have created a base, conditional, or qualified fee, giving the whole estate to the donee and only limiting the line of descent to the general heirs of the donee’s body, a fee tail general, and that under the statute of 1812 (section 3397 of the Code of 1907) it vested in her the same power over the whole estate as in cases of pure and absolute fees. “All the modern cases contain one uniform language, and declare that the words ‘heirs of the body,’ whether in deeds or wills, are construed as words of limitation, unless it clearly and unequivocally appears that they are used to designate certain individuals answering the description of heirs at the death of the party.” — 4 Kent, 228; Young v. Kinnebrew, supra; Smith v. Greer, 88 Ala. 414, 6 South. 911; Slayton v. Blount, 93 Ala. 575, 9 South. 241. Appellee concedes this, but seeks an affirmance on the ground that other parts of the will explain that the testator intended that Margaret Clarissa took a life estate only with remainder to her children living at the time of her death.
“The words ‘heirs of the body’ will indeed yield to a clear particular intent that the estate shall be only for life, and that may be from the effect of superadded words, or any expressions showing the particular intent of the testator; but that must be clearly intelligible and unequivocal.” — Jesson v. Wright, 2 Bli. 50; 10 Eng.
Here the language used is the technical language of limitation. The will is not artificially drawn, nor is there any indication that the testator was ignorant of the meaning of the terms he used. The word “born” neither added to nor detracted from “the heirs of her body,” for “the ancestor during his life beareth in his body, in judgment of law, all his heirs; and therefore it is truly said that ‘Hseres est pars antecessoras’ ” (2 Coke, Litt. 146), and “Expressio eorum quae tacite insunt nihil operatur.” There is a limitation over, but it is not to the heirs or heirs of the body of the first donee;
If the testator had said, “I give this property to my granddaughter and her children,” without more, such a devise, in the circumstances of this case, would have vested in her, under our statute, an absolute fee. Since Coke’s time the rule has been that where lands are devised to a person and his children, and he has no children at the time of the devise, the parent takes an estate tail. And the reason assigned for this doctrine is that: “The intent of the devisor is manifest and certain that his children or issues (the children or issues of the devisee) should take, and as immediate devisees they cannot take, because they are not in rerum natura, and by way of remainder they cannot take, for that was not his intent, for the gift is immediate; therefore such words shall be taken as words of limitation.” — Wild's Case, 6 Co. Rep. 17; 10 Eng. Rul. Cas. 773. This rule has been frequently recognized in our own cases. Thus in Vanzant v. Morris, 25 Ala. 285, the court said: “There can be no doubt that a testator by his will can limit property, whether real or personal, to one and to his children then born; but a bequest to A. and his children, if A. has no children either at the time the will was made, or when it takes effect by the death of
In order to sustain appellee’s- recovery in this case, it is necessary not only to hold that testator meant “children” where he said “heirs born of her body,” but that by the terms of an immediate gift, without more, he intended a gift over after the termination of an estate for the life of another. But the conception of either notion, or of their concurrence, can rest only upon wanton assumption. So far as mere language goes, there is no indication of such intention. It follows that the will of Elias King vested an absolute fee in his granddaughter Margaret Clarissa King, which has passed by mesne conveyances to defendants in the court below, appellants here.
Appellee relies upon Powell v. Glenn, 21 Ala. 458. That case is distinguishable from this at a number of points. It admits, however, everything contended for by appellant in the case at hand. For the purposes of this case we need only refer to comments' upon it in the later case of Young v. Kinnebrew, supra, where McVay v. Ijams, 27 Ala. 238, is cited by the court.
In Williams v. McConnico, 36 Ala. 22, also urged by appellee, the court expressed some dissatisfaction Avith the doctrine of Wild’s Gase, now that the statute converts' estates tail into unqualified fees, but recognized it as still of force in this state. In that case the-grantor, “wishing to make permanent support for her and
In Wilson v. Alston, 122 Ala. 630, 25 South. 225, the grant was to Grace E. Wilson “and to the heirs of her body after her death.” It was held that the conveyance imported the creation of an interest for life and a remainder in tail — a clear case without influence here.
Appellee seems to- rely most confidently upon the case of Campbell v. Noble, 110 Ala. 382, 19 South. 28. That case differed from this in two material respects: (1) In
Beversed and remanded.