138 S.E. 25 | N.C. | 1927
Controversy without action submitted on an agreed statement of facts.
Plaintiffs, being under contract to convey a certain lot of land to the defendant, Charles Gibson, duly executed and tendered a deed therefor and demanded payment of the purchase price as agreed, but the said defendant declines to accept the deed and refuses to make payment of the balance of the purchase price, claiming that the title offered is defective.
It was agreed that if, in the opinion of the court, under the facts submitted, the plaintiffs were able to convey a good and indefeasible fee-simple title to the lot in question, judgment should be entered for the plaintiffs, otherwise for the defendant.
The court, being of opinion that the plaintiffs were not able to convey a good and sufficient fee-simple title, gave judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiffs appeal, assigning error. On the hearing the sufficiency of the title offered was properly made to depend upon the construction of the following provision in the will of Mary M. Kennedy:
"I will and bequeath to my daughter, Garnette Jones Welch, all of my property, both personal and real, for the term of her natural life, and at the death of my said daughter, Mrs. Welch, all this property so devised shall go to the bodily heirs of Mrs. Welch, and to go as entailed property for succeeding generations; all living children at the death of the said Mrs. Welch are to have an equal share in this property during the term of their lives, and shall go to the heirs of these said legatees from generation to generation forever. No wood shall be sold off this place, and only such wood shall be cut during the lifetime of the said Mrs. Welch, or the minority of her youngest children, only so much as may be necessary for firewood for the house and for the cooking stove."
The fact situation is that Mary M. Kennedy died testate in 1914, leaving an only daughter, Mrs. Garnett Jones Welch, coplaintiff with her husband herein, who now has seven living children, four of whom are infants, and none of whom are parties to this controversy, save the defendant, Mary S. Hager, who was made a party at her own request, and who claims an interest in the land under her grandmother's will.
The plaintiffs claim that Mrs. Garnett Jones Welch acquired a fee-simple title to all her mother's real estate under the above provision of her will, and that the deed tendered is sufficient to convey a good and indefeasible fee-simple title to the lot described therein, while the defendant, Charles Gibson, as well as his codefendant, Mary S. Hager, contends that the feme plaintiff, under the above provision of her mother's will, takes only a life estate in the property so devised.
It is conceded that the relative merits of the controversy depend upon whether or not the limitations in the above clause of the will of Mary M. Kennedy to the heirs or heirs of the body of her daughter, Mrs. Garnett Jones Welch, are so framed as to attract the rule announced in the celebrated English case of Wolfe v. Shelley, 1 Coke, 93b, commonly known as the rule in Shelley's case, which, with us, has become a rule of property as well as a rule of law, and is stated by Mr. Preston, an eminent English authority, as abridged by Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries (4 Kent Com., 215), as follows: "When a person takes an estate of freehold, legally or equitably, under a deed, will, or other writing, and in the same instrument there is a limitation by way of remainder, either with or without the interposition of another estate, of an interest of the same legal or equitable quality, to his heirs or heirs of his body, as a class of persons to take in succession from generation to generation, the limitation to the heirs entitles the ancestor to the *686
whole estate." 1 Prest. Est., 263. This definition was quoted with approval in Smith v. Proctor,
The origin of the rule, as well as the wisdom of its adoption, has been the subject of much curious and learned speculation. Though found among the remains of feudality, it is neither a relic of barbarism nor a part of the rubbish of the dark ages, but rather a Gothic column, as it were, which has been preserved to aid in sustaining the fabric of our modern social system.Nicholson v. Gladden,
The effect of the rule, when it applies, is simply this: By force of the limitation to the ancestor's heirs, general or special, the rule inShelley's case operates to give to the first taker, who already has an estate of freehold in the land, the inheritance also, by conferring the remainder on him, as the stock from which alone the heirs can inherit, and the source alone from which their inheritable blood can spring. Hampton v.Griggs,
It is said by many writers on the subject that the limitation to the heirs unites and coalesces with the limitation of the freehold in the ancestor, and thus operates to vest in the first taker a fee simple or a fee tail, as the case may be, divided or split by intervening limitations, where there are any. Benton v. Baucom,
A donor or grantor is no more competent to make a tenancy for life a source of inheritable succession than he is competent to create a perpetuity, or a new canon of descent; and the rule is too intimately connected with the doctrine of estates to be separated from it without breaking the ligaments of property. Benton v. Baucom,
Mr. Tiffany, in his valuable treatise on Real Property, vol. 1 (2 ed.), 529, gives a practical statement of the rule, and discusses its application to various illustrative cases, citing numerous authorities in support of the text, as follows:
"If, after the limitation of a particular estate of freehold in favor of a person, a remainder is limited in favor of his heirs, or the heirs of his body, such person will take an estate in remainder in fee simple or fee tail, according as the limitation in remainder is in favor of his heirs or the heirs of his body, and the particular estate will merge therein, unless another estate be interposed between the particular estate and the remainder.
"In the case of a limitation to A. for life, with remainder to his heirs or to the heirs of his body, which is the typical form calling for an application of the rule in Shelley's case, the effect of the rule, it would seem, as above indicated, is not to operate directly upon the life estate in A., but to give to the remainder the effect of a gift to A., the whole limitation taking effect as if it were to A. for life, with remainder to A. and his heirs, or to A. and the heirs of his body. In the remainder in fee or in tail thus vested in A., the estate limited to him for life will merge, and he will consequently take a fee simple or fee tail in possession, while the heirs or heirs of the body will take nothing.
"If, to take another case, the remainder to the heirs or heirs of the body is conditioned on some event, as in the case of a limitation to A. for life, with remainder, if A. shall survive B., to A.'s heirs, or the heirs of his body, A. then has an estate for life, and a remainder in fee or in tail conditioned on his survival of B. In such case, the remainder in favor of A. and his heirs being contingent, the particular estate will not merge therein, but, upon the vesting of the remainder by the death of B. before A., merger will take place, and A. will have, as in the previous case, an estate in fee simple or fee tail in possession.
"If there is an intermediate estate interposed between the life estate in the ancestor and the remainder to the heirs, as in the case of a limitation to A. for life, remainder to B. for life or in tail, remainder to the heirs of A., or to the heirs of A.'s body, A. will then have a remainder in fee or in tail, as in the previous cases. The vested remainder in B., however, interposed between A.'s life estate and his remainder in fee or in tail, will prevent the merger of the life estate in the remainder. In such case, if the remainder in B. should terminate before the end of A.'s life estate, this latter will then merge in the fee simple or fee tail of A. If the remainder interposed in favor of B. is a contingent and not a vested remainder, while A.'s life estate and his remainder in fee or in *688 tail are united in him, the former is not absolutely merged in the latter, and they becomes separated upon the vesting of B.'s estate.
"The application of the rule is not affected by the presence of a power of appointment, the exercise of which would destroy the limitation in favor of the heirs or heirs of the body. For instance, in the case of a devise to A. for life, with power to convey in fee simple, and after A.'s death to A.'s heirs, the rule will apply to the same extent as if no power had been given to A.
"The particular estate in the ancestor and the remainder in favor of the heirs must arise under the same instrument, and so the rule will not apply; for instance, when A., being tenant for life, with remainder to the heirs of B., conveys his life estate to B. The opinion has been expressed that an estate created by the exercise of a power contained in the instrument by which the particular estate is created, is to be regarded as arising under the same instrument for the purposes of this requirement. This opinion has, however, been questioned.
"The rule does not apply, it has been decided, if the limitation by way of remainder is to the heirs of the body of both the donee of the particular estate and of another person, as when there is a gift to a man for life, with remainder to the heirs of the bodies of such man and his present wife. This is not the same as a gift to a man with remainder to the heirs of the body of such man by his present wife, since in the former case the heirs are to be ascertained upon the death of the last survivor of the husband and wife, while in the latter case they are to be ascertained upon the death of the husband. In the latter case the rule would apply.
"The rule has been held to apply in the case if a limitation by devise in favor of the `heir' or `heir male,' in the singular number, of the person first named, as well as when in favor of his heirs or heirs of the body."
In the case at bar, the devise is to the plaintiff for the term of her natural life, and at her death it is provided that all the property so devised "shall go to the bodily heirs of Mrs. Welch, and to go as entailed property for succeeding generations." Had the will stopped here, under all the decisions, a typical case for the application of the rule would have been presented, for, as said by Black, J., in Steacy v. Rice, 27 Pa. St., 95; 67 Am. Dec., 447, "the law will not treat that as an estate for life which is essentially an estate of inheritance, nor permit anyone to take in the character of heir unless he take also in the quality of heir." Hartmanv. Flynn,
It has been held in England, ever since the leading case of Wright v.Jesson, in the House of Lords, 2 Bligh., 2, which overruled Doe v. Wright, in the King's Bench, 5 M. and S., 95, that the words "equally to be divided," or "share and share alike," superadded to the limitation to the heirs, or to heirs of the body, do not prevent the application of the rule, and such was declared to be the law of this State in Ross v. Toms,
The sense in which the words "heirs" or "heirs of the body" are employed, whether technical or other, is the controlling factor in determining the applicability or nonapplicability of the rule in Shelley'scase. Hampton v. Griggs, supra. "In determining whether the rule inShelley's case shall apply, it is not material to inquire what the intention of the testator was as to the quantity of estate that should vest in the first taker. The material inquiry is, What is taken under the second devise? If those who take under the second devise take the same estate they would take as heirs or heirs of his body, the rule applies"; otherwise, not. Crockett v. Robinson,
In the first limitation to the bodily heirs of Mrs. Welch it is provided that the estate shall go as "entailed property," while in the ulterior limitation it is apparently released from its character as entailed property and limited generally to the "heirs of these said legatees." The will was drawn by a justice of the peace, who, it seems, according to the contention of the defendant, "overspoke himself," or got lost in a multiplicity of words. At least, his arrangement of legal expressions has had a puzzling effect upon those who have been asked to find out their meaning, when so arranged, and to advise accordingly. "A little learning is a dangerous thing," says Pope, which properly interpreted means that expert knowledge in the hands of an inexpert is a dangerous thing. And so it is. But in the language of Huxley, "If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is a man who has so much as to be out of danger" when he is dealing with the rule in Shelley's case? Or forsooth did the student answer with a correct guess, when, on being asked the meaning of the rule, he said: "The rule in Shelley's case is very simple if you understand it. It means that the same law which was applied in that case applies equally to every other case just like it."? And so it does. But when is a case "just like it," or so nearly so as to come within the operation of the rule? That is the puzzling question.
Appellees further point out that the will contains a prohibition against selling wood from the place during the lifetime of Mrs. Welch, which, they say, shows a clear intent on the part of the testatrix that the first devise should be limited to a life estate. 2 Minor's Institutes, 400, etseq.
The cases of Rollins v. Keel,
As the judgment appears to be correct, it is approved.
Affirmed.