122 S.E. 300 | N.C. | 1924
This is an action to remove a cloud upon title and for that purpose to construe the following section of the will, which is the only portion *540
thereof relating to the land in question: "I bequeath and give to my daughter Laura, children, her heirs and assigns, all my lots of land with the buildings thereon in the town of Hendersonville, N.C." The court below held that plaintiff and defendants, the three children of the plaintiff, were tenants in common of the land in question, and the plaintiff appealed.
In the recent case of Cullens v. Cullens,
In Benbury v. Butts,
The word "children" is not the equivalent of heirs, and where the conveyance or devise is to a parent and children it has always been construed with us that they take as tenants in common.
In Ziegler v. Love,
It is true in this case the devise is to "my daughter Laura, children, her heirs and assigns," and the plaintiff contends that the use of the words "her heirs" after the word "children" gave her a fee simple. But *541 we cannot draw that inference from the word "her" since at the death of the testatrix there might have been no children, and the use of it does not obliterate the word "children" from the devise. The children living at the death of the testatrix as tenants in common with their mother, take under the above well-settled rule of law.
The ruling of the court below is
Affirmed.