93 N.C. 183 | N.C. | 1885

A legacy is specific when the thing bequeathed is personal property specified and so designated as that particular thing, and no other in its stead must pass to the legatee. The legacies referred to were specific. The money designated by definite terms was itself bequeathed — that identical money and no other; they were not each for a sum fixed, to be paid out of the fund called "the purchase money of my old home plantation," etc., but they give and embrace that, and only that, money. *175

Specific legacies are said to be adeemed when in the lifetime of the testator the particular thing bequeathed is lost, destroyed, or disposed of, or it is changed in substance or form, so that it does not remain at the time the will goes into effect in specie, to pass to the legatees. If the subject matter of such legacies ceases to belong to the testator, or is so changed as that it cannot be identified as the same subject matter during his lifetime, then they are adeemed — gone — and never become operative. This is so because the thing given is gone, and nothing remains in that respect upon which the will can operate. Snowden v. Banks,31 N.C. 373; Tayloe v. Bond, 45 N.C. 5; Anthony v. Smith, 45 N.C. 188;Walton v. Walton, 7 John Ch. R., 258; Williams on Exrs., 1132; Redfield on Wills, Pt. 2, 528.

There has been much diversity of judicial decision as to what disposition of or change or modification of the substance or form of the subject matter of a specific legacy will work its ademption; but (186) applying to this case any reasonable views of the rule pertinent, we think the legacies in question were adeemed.

There is nothing in the will of the testator that can be construed as indicating any intention on his part that it should take effect at any time before his death. It therefore took effect just as if it had been executed immediately before he died. The Code, sec. 2141.

Obviously, at the time of his death, the testator did not have "the purchase money of my (his) old home plantation," or any part of it, "on hand"; on the contrary he had received the whole of it years before his death, had at first deposited it and other moneys in a bank, without designating it as arising from any particular source, and afterwards, in 1879, he withdrew it from the bank and purchased with it United States bonds; and afterwards he sold the bonds and with the proceeds, or, perhaps, with the bonds themselves, purchased the bank stock. It may be that the mere deposit of the money at first intended to be bequeathed would not of itself work the ademption of the legacies, as the exact sum of money might be received from the bank on demand, according to the course of business; but if this be so, the withdrawal and use of it in the purchase of the United States bonds, disposed of, exchanged it for another species of property, as certainly as if the testator had purchased with it a tract of land, a stock of goods, a horse, or any other property; by such a purchase he ceased to have the money — he parted with it absolutely. The bonds were not money; they were evidence of the current public indebtedness of the government, put upon the market to be bought and sold, sometimes at one price, sometimes at another, just as any other species of property might be.

The same may be said of the bank stock. It did not represent so much money — it was evidence of the right of the owner to share in the *176 dividends that might from time to time be declared by the bank, and to share in its assets when it should expire or be dissolved, and its business affairs would up — it was bought and sold like other property.

Money is not so bought and sold; its sole office as money is to (187) serve the purpose of making exchanges of value — it is useful as the representative of value. The bonds and bank stock are useful as articles of trade in the course of business.

It was insisted on the argument that the testator intended that the bonds and the bank stock should represent and stand in the place of the money intended to be given, and that the clause of the codicil to the will above quoted was evidence of such intent. The plain answer to this contention is he did not say so, nor did he say so in a subsequent codicil executed on 12 February, 1880, in which he merely excluded one of his sons from sharing at all in his estate. He may or may not have so intended. But it is not sufficient that a testator intended to make a particular bequest; he must have done so according to the established rules of law, else his purpose must fail. We must construe the will as it comes to us. We have no authority to add to, take from, or modify it by conjecture founded on remote and vague inference as to the testator's intention; it must be interpreted by what is said and appears in it, according to well settled rules of construction.

The counsel for the appellees relied upon the case of Nooe v. Vannoy,59 N.C. 185. That case is essentially different from the present one. There the language employed by the testator was very broad and comprehensive, and embraced within its compass the fund specifically bequeathed, although it might undergo considerable alteration. The decision is based upon the comprehensiveness of the language used. The testator gave the "proceeds of the sale of his town property," etc., that is, whether the same be money or notes taken and remaining at the time of his death. In view of the wide compass of the words, the notes taken were treated as preserving the corpus of the subject matter of the bequest. In the present case, simply the money designated was given; it was received by the testator in his lifetime and used in the purchase of other property, and hence the legacies were adeemed. Snowden v. Banks, supra.

(188) The judgment of the Superior Court must be so modified as to conform to this opinion. To that end let it be certified to that court according to law.

Error. Reversed.

Cited: Eller v. Lillard, 107 N.C. 490; King v. Sellers, 194 N.C. 535. *177

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