17 N.C. 509 | N.C. | 1834
"I give and bequeath to my brother, John Ford, 200 acres of land, including where the said John now lives, during his natural life, and at his death the said land to fall to his heirs, the said John Ford's children.
"I give and bequeath to my nephew, Levi Ward, my sorrel horse called Merlin, and my negro boy named Dick, to him and his heirs forever.
"It is my will, and I do allow, that all the remaining part of my estate, both real and personal, be equally divided amongst the heirs of my brother, John Ford, the heirs of my sister Nancy Stow, the heirs of my sister Sally Ward, and my nephew, Levi Ward."
At the death of the testator, his brother John and his sister Nancy were living — the former having four and the latter having nine children. Sally Ward was dead at the date of the will, having left two children, both of whom survived the testator, and of whom Levi Ward, the plaintiff and the legatee, was one.
A petition for the partition of the land of which the testator died seized was filed in Lincoln, and a final judgment was entered thereon, whereby one-fourth thereof was assigned to each of the families, to be divided among them, excluding Levi Ward from any share of the fourth assigned to the family of his mother, and giving him the remaining fourth. Upon an appeal to the Supreme Court, this judgment was reversed, and a division per capita directed (Stow v. Ward,
The case was frequently argued and held under advertisement for several terms. The inquiries which this case presents are exceedingly unpleasant, but so far as the purposes of justice requires, they must be prosecuted to their legitimate result. The first of these inquiries is, whether the division complained of and sought to be reformed be erroneous or correct. On the part of the complainant it is insisted that the last adjudication of the Court must be regarded as conclusively settling the construction of the will with respect to the real estate, and, by necessary inference, fixing its construction also as to the personal property. It is also insisted that if the interpretation of the will can be considered as open to discussion, the reasons on which that adjudication is founded completely sustain it. Upon this point the argument is briefly this: that where persons come to an estate as heirs, whether by descend by purchase, under that description, they take per(511) stripes and not per capita, in a representative character and not as individuals, and to others must be always considered as an unit, however they may subdivide and parcel out the property among themselves. That if A. dies intestate, seized of lands of inheritance, leaving a daughter and two daughters of a deceased daughter, his lands descend one-half to his daughter and the other half to his granddaughters, and that if a devise should be made to them simply as the heirs of A., they must take the estate in the same proportions; that in the first case the canons of descent ascertain the heirs and directs the disposition of the land, and that in the latter case the will gives to those whom the canons ascertain to be the heirs, and in such proportions as the canons direct. It is thus concluded from the force of the word heirs that the persons indicated in the will as the heirs of John, Nancy, and Sally are to be regarded as the representatives, of, and substitutes for, John, Nancy, and Sally, respectively, and taking the same shares as if the land had been given to these persons, and then transmitted to them as the successors of these ancestors; and that a similar result must take place with respect to the personal property, first, because it was obviously the intent of the testator to give both species of property to the same persons, in the same way, and, secondly, because the word heirs as applied to personal property means heirs quoad that property, that is to say, *407 those whom the statute of distributions directs to succeed to the personal estate of an intestate.
None can be more deeply convinced than we are of the necessity of a steady adherence to the decisions of our predecessors. Carelessness in this respect can scarcely fail to involve us in error and throw the law into confusion. So far as the decisions of these eminent judges concur with each other, they form a law for this Court, which nothing short of what we may reasonably hope cannot happen — a manifest breach of the law of the land — can warrant us to disregard. Where they are found to conflict, which from the imperfections of all human institutions must sometimes be the case, the latest will of course be presumed right, yet not so conclusively right as to forbid examination. In the present singular case, however, it is somewhat difficult to say (512) which of the two opposing decisions has the better claims to be regarded as the precedent; for while the one is the more recent, the other has the advantage of having been unanimous; of having been decided upon argument, and of being a judgment in a case regularly and properly before the Court. Convinced that we ought not to rely authoritatively and exclusively on the last adjudication, we have deemed it an imperious duty deliberately to investigate the argument by which it is supposed to be established.
The whole of the reasoning is founded on the effect which the word heirs is supposed to produce in the devising and bequeathing clause. An heir is he who succeeds by descent to the inheritance of an ancestor, and in this, its appropriate sense, the word comprehends all heirs, and the heir of heirs ad infinitum, as they are called by law, to the inheritance. This succession is regulated by the canons of descent. According to one of these, the lineal descendants of any person deceased represented their ancestor, or stand in the place in which such ancestor would have stood if living at the time of the descent cast, and it is this taking by a right of representation which is termed a succession per stripes or by stocks, the branches taking the same share which their stock would have taken. From this definition it would seem to follow that in strictness none can come to an estate as heirs otherwise than by descent. Thus Lord Thurlow says inJones v. Morgan, 1 Brown, 209: "All heirs taking as heirs must take by descent." Upon this ground he holds the rule inflexible which requires that when a freehold is given to one and a remainder is so limited as to go in succession to the heirs of the first taker, these shall take by descent, because "taking in the character of heirs, they must take with the quality of heirs" — that is to say, must take by descent and not by purchase. But an inheritance may be limited in remainder to the heirs of him to whom a precedent freehold is not given, or it may be originally limited to the heirs of a deceased person. Here the *408 (513) donees do not take by descent, for their ancestor has no estate which the word "heirs" can expand into an estate of inheritance. They do not, therefore, take as heirs, but take simply as purchasers.
But it is insisted for the plaintiff that, nevertheless, they aredescribed as "heirs"; that the law of descents is necessarily referred to for the understanding of that term, and the ascertainment of the persons thereby intended; and, therefore, this law is to regulate also the shares in which the thing given is to be enjoyed by those on whom it is bestowed.
With the highest respect for those who have drawn this inference, we are compelled to say that we do not feel its force. Every voluntary disposition of property takes effect according to the agreement of the contracting parties. Their intentions, properly expressed, give the mode and the form that constitute the law of the conveyance. The regulations of the State for the transmission of inheritances left vacant by death do not, proprio vigore, operate on the subject-matter of such conveyances, and can apply to them only so far as the parties have adopted them and directed them to be so applied. When a technical phrase is deliberately used, it is reasonable to suppose that it is employed in the sense appropriated to it in the science or art from which it has been taken, and that science or art is very properly consulted for its interpretation. "Heirs" is a well-known term in the law of descents, and when donees or devisees are not otherwise described than as heirs, the law is implied referred to for the meaning of the term. But whether these donees or devisees are to take much or little, for a long or a short time, all together or by moities [moieties] in equal or unequal portions, the law of descents can give no information; for it has made no provision in relation to these matters, but has left all these to be regulated by the law which the parties may have themselves made in their conveyance. Is it, then, a reasonable inference that the conveyance refers to the law of descents for any such purposes? If there be, indeed, a settled rule of construction to this effect, it will most cheerfully be followed; but after diligent inquiry, I have been unable to find any traces of its existence. There are, indeed, some anomalous cases in which the (514) words "heirs male of the body," and the like, although operating to a certain extent as words of pure description or purchase, have also been allowed to operate as if they were words of limitation and according to the canons of descent. Thus it has been said that where a limitation is made to the heirs male of the body of B., where no estate is in or is given to B. himself, though the limitation originally attaches in his heir male under that special description, yet on failure of his issue male it will go in succession to the other heirs male of the body of B. as if the estate had descended from B. himself. Here the word heirs has a double meaning and a *409 mixed effect. The individuals who first take under this term, take as purchasers, designated by the relation which they bear to a deceased ancestor; but they take an estate which, by the form of the donation, is to pursue the same course of succession to the same extent of duration, and through the same persons, as if it had attached to and descended from such ancestor. Such a limitation is of an intermediate description betwixt a descent and a purchase, in point of acquisition having the quality of the latter, as not being derived from or through the ancestor, but in regard to its devolution referable to the former. This and such like cases are considered as quasi entails, in regard to which the law is settled, but the principles on which it is settled are not easily discoverable. (See Butler's Ed. of Fearne, 80 to 84.) How far the position may be true that persons called to such an estate as heirs take in a representative character with the shares or the portions which the canons of descent point out may be a very curious subject of inquiry; but it can throw little light upon the investigation in which we are now engaged. The term "heirs" has here but a single meaning, and can produce, as we think, but a single effect. It is not pretended nor assumed to be a word of limitation. It directs nothing as to the devolution or succession of the estate after it is vested in the original devisees or first takers, and its sole purpose seems to be to point them out. An estate not of inheritance, an estate for life, or a term of years, of a chattel, may be limited to persons not otherwise described than as the (515) heirs, or the heirs of the body of a deceased person, and so an intestate of inheritance may be limited to persons thus designated, without any attempt to direct its transmission, as in a course of descent from that ancestor. In the first class of cases the word heirs is necessarily, and in the last case is obviously, one simply of description, whereby the donor or testator declares under a general term, instead of mentioning by their names the persons whom he contemplates as donees or devisees of his property. It is a collective term so far only as is every term which may comprehend within it more individuals than one; but it is not collective as calling in the whole succession of heirs to the deceased person. Whenever a descriptive phrase is used in any conveyance instead of an actual nomination, the import of the phrase must be attended to in order to find out the persons meant by it. If it be seen that by the term "heirs" those are intended who, at the time referred to, where or might be the "heirs" at law of a deceased ancestor, of course the law must be consulted to enable the inquirer to determine who answer to this description, and who, therefore, are these first takers. Foster v. Sierra, 4 Ves., 768. But this determined, the sole purpose of the reference is over; and the persons thus ascertained take simply and purely *410 by virtue of the conveyance in their own persons, not as the representatives of others, precisely as though they had been individually named, or had been described by any other phrase sufficiently explicit to point them out. Thus in Mounsey v. Blamire, 4 Russell, 384, the testatrix by her will inter alia devised her real estate to a person whom she described as her kinsman, and who was not her heir at law, and directed him to assume her name and arms. By a codicil she gave several pecuniary legacies, and amongst others "to my heir," 4,000. At her death this legacy was claimed by three persons who were her coheirs, by her next of kin, and by the devisee of her real estate as the haeres factus. The claim of the devisee was at once rejected by the master of the (516) rolls. In deciding between the next of kind and the coheirs, he remarked that where the word heir is used to denote succession, it may be understood to mean such person or persons as would legally succeed to the property according to its nature and quality; but where it is used not to denote succession, but to describe a legatee, and there is no context to explain it otherwise, it must be taken in its ordinary sense. The coheirs, therefore, took the property, and there being no words of severance in the will, they took it as joint tenants. So if a man makes a gift of gavelkind lands to J. S. and the heirs of his body, and he hath found sons, all these sons shall inherit; but if he make a lease for life to one, remainder to the right heirs of J. S., and J. S. dies, leaving issue four sons, in this case the eldest only shall have the remainder.Shelby's case, 1 Co., 103, Co. Lit., 10 Hob., 31; Dyer, 179 pl., 45. In the first instance, the word heirs of his body are words of limitation and call in all who by law can succeed to an estate tail in those lands; but in the last the words right heirs of J. S. are words of purchase, are descriptive merely, and refer to the law no further than is necessary to explain the description. If the donor, however, had added to these words "in gavelkind — or according to custom," or such like, then all the four sons would have taken, because all would have been included in the description. (Hargrave's Note to Co. Lit., 10 Newcomen v. Barker, 2 Ves., 732.) So if one seized of lands in Borough English devise to his "heir," the eldest son and not the youngest would take; but if he devise to his heir in Borough English, the lands will descend to such youngest son. (14 Viner's Ab., 528, 529; Heir C. 5 pl., 1, 8.)
I am forced to conclude, therefore, that when the term "heirs" is altogether a word of purchase, and simply descriptive of the first takers; where it is not used to denote succession, but to designate persons, those who come under that description take as individuals, and not in a representative character, and of course take per capita, unless there be an intent to the contrary apparent on or to be collected (517) from the instrument itself. *411
But it is manifest in this case not only that the word "heirs" does not denote succession, but that it is not used to designate those whom the law calls "heirs at law."
The testator makes a devise of land to his brother John, and thereby recognizes that John was alive at the date of the will. By the phrase "heirs of his brother John" he must, then, contemplate persons other than those who are in law his heirs, and to give effect to this disposition we are obliged to understand the word heirs in some sense different from its ordinary and legal meaning. It may mean heirs apparent or heirs presumptive. But in the same sentence we meet with the expression "heirs of my sister Sally, deceased"; and here it may mean heirs at law, but cannot mean heirs presumptive or heirs apparent. We find the same term used in the same sentence to designate persons standing in a certain relation to living persons, and also to dead persons. It cannot be interpreted in what is called its technical sense to mean those who have succeeded by law to the inheritance of their ancestor, because so interpreted it would exclude the heirs of his brother John and sister Nancy. Nemo esthaeres viventis,. It cannot be interpreted in the sense sanctioned by custom, of heirs apparent or heirs presumptive; that is to say, of those who will probably inherit from a living ancestor, for then it would not embrace the heirs of his sister Sally. Besides, the term is used in reference to the gift of personal as well as the real property. Heirs, heirs apparent, heirs presumptive, ordinarily indicate those who have or expect a claim on the lands of another by reason of their connection with him; but those who acquire personal property on the death of its possessor, or look forward to its acquisition upon his death, are generally termed his relations or his next of kin. The word is used in some sense sufficiently comprehensive to take in all the objects of his bounty, and employed in relation to both species of property. Individually, I am quite satisfied that the testator means by it "children," and I think we have this exposition given by himself in the preceding sentence, where he directs the land devised to his brother John for life, to go upon his death "to his brother (518) John's children." But the Court does not decide this to be its meaning. We decide only that it does not mean heirs, properly speaking, nor heirs apparent, nor heirs presumptive. It is unnecessary to determine whether it means children or issue, for upon either interpretation the same result will follow. There is no reference expressly or impliedly to the canons of descent, to the statute of distributions, not even for the purpose of ascertaining the first takers of the property, and still less for fixing the proportions in which they shall take it.
An improper term has been used by the testator, and in order to effectuate his intention we are bound to give the will the same *412 construction as though he had used the appropriate expression. If by "heirs" he meant children or issue, we are to read the will as if it were written children or issue.
It may not be amiss to quote a strong case in illustration of this doctrine, although it seems reasonable enough to stand without authority.
In Hallen v. Ironmonger, 3 East, 533, lands were devised to a trustee to receive and pay the rents for the maintenance of Sarah Hallen, afeme covert, and the issue of her body, during her life, and after her decease, for the use of the heirs of her body, and their heirs and assigns forever, without regard to seniority of age or priority of birth, and in default of such, to the right heirs of the testatrix. Sarah Hallen enjoyed the premises during life, and had issue one son and two daughters. The son died before the mother, leaving the lessor of the plaintiff his son and heir at law, and also four other children. On her death this ejectment was brought against her surviving daughters, and the question was whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover any, and if any, what part of the premises. It was admitted that no estate of inheritance passed to Sarah Hallen, for that the legal estate during her life was in the trustees; but it was insisted, first, that the legal contingent remainder was limited to such person or persons as should be the heir or heirs of her body at the time of her death, under which description the eldest son was (519) entitled to the whole; and, secondly, if the Court thought that heirs of the body meant children, then such children would take as tenants in common, and the lessor of the plaintiff was entitled to a third. It was urged, upon the last point, that the qualifying expressions, "without regard to seniority of age, or priority of birth," meant only that all the children should take equal portions; those who came in esse last as well as first; that the word "heirs" was sufficient to sever the estate; and that it was plain that all were meant to take alike, which could not be without taking as tenants in common. But the Court, stopping the counsel for the defendants, held that the phrase, "without respect to seniority of age, or priority of birth," annexed to the words heirs of the body, conclusively indicated that these were words of purchase, and meant children; and, secondly, that as there were no words of severance used, they took as joint tenants, and the father of the lessor of the plaintiff having died before severance, the whole vested in the surviving children, the defendants.
We are brought, then, irresistibly to the conclusion that the word "heirs" as used in this will has not the peculiar operation which has been attributed to it, and that the persons whom the testator designated by this expression must take the shares, whatever they may be, which the will assigns to them, in the same manner as if they had been pointed out by any other and more appropriate terms. The will declares that the *413
property given to these persons shall be equally divided, and the only question that remains is, Between whom is this equality directed? Is it between the classes, or is it between the individuals of which the classes are composed? Adopting the language of Chief JusticeTaylor upon the first adjudication (Ward v. Stow,
The result of our inquiries is a full conviction that the last adjudication of the Court upon this will (Stow v. Ward,
PER CURIAM. Order accordingly.
Cited: Brant v. Scott,