This сontroversy involves the determination of whether a particular instrument is a deed or will, and of its effect if valid as either. On October 28, 1889, B. R. Inman executed an instrument, the original of which has been lost, but it was recorded on the same day in the land deed records of "Wilkinson County, as follows:
“In consideration of natural love and affection which I bear my wife, L. A. Inman, and my daughter Inez In-man, I give, grant and convey to my said wife and daughter, as joint tenants, with the right of survivorship, to take effеct at my death and not sooner, the following described land, to-wit: * * * (here follows a description of property) * * *. But if both of said Grantees shall die without heirs, descendants of mine, living at the death of the last of said Grantees, then the remainder of said estate after such death of the survivor of said grantee, shall go to my lawful heirs in fee simple.
“Witness by hand this 28th day of October, A. D. 1889.
“Witness B. R. Inman
W. E. Cooper
W. G. Huff
“State of Mississippi 1
“Wilkinson County j
Personally appeared before me the undersigned clerk of the Chancery Court in and for said County, the within named B. R. Inman, whо acknowledged that he signed and delivered the foregoing instrument on the day and year therein mentioned.
“Given under my hand and seal of said court this 20th day of October 1889.
“R. W. P. Huff, Clerk
“Filed for record by L. A. Inman, October 28th, 1889 at 11 o ’clock A.M.
“R. W. P. Huff, Clerk.”
L. A. Inman, one of the joint grantees in that instrument and the second wife of B. R. Inman, died in 1892. B. R. Inman died in 1899. At the time of his death his surviving children were Inez Inman, his daughter by his second wife, and five children by his first wife, namely, R. M. Inman, Lilia Inman White, Susie Inman Stewart, W. L. Inman and B. W. Inman.
Immediately after the death of B. R. Inman in 1899, Inez Inman, later Inez Inman MacLeod, went into pos
Shortly after the death of Inez in 1948, Jesse Hunter Inman, a grandson of B. R. Inman, filed a petition in chancery court in common form requesting that the above quoted instrument be admitted to probate as the last will and testament of B. R. Inman. On August 21, 1948, the chancery court executed a decree admitting the will to probate аs that of B. R. Inman. In November 1948, five grandchildren and three great grandchildren of B. R. Inman filed the pesent bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of Wilkinson County against Lee I. White, a maternal grandson of B. R. Inman, and sole heir of his mother, and also the sole devisee of his aunt, Susie Inman Stewart, a daughter of B. R. Inman, and three great grandsons of B. R Inman. The bill charged that B. R. Inman left a last will and testament, the above quoted instrument, which had been duly admitted to probate, that under that, instrument he left the described property to Inez for her life, and that at her death the lands descended to the lawful heirs of B. R. Inman living at the time of the death of Inez in 1948. Listing thirteen parties as grandchildren and great grandchildren of B. R. Inman, and charging that these parties took interests under the above instrument per capita, individually, and not per stirpes as a class, the bill asked that the court adjudicate that the thirteen stated grandchildren and great grandchildren of B. R.
Defendants and appellants Lee I. White and R. I. Lessley (Lessley intervened as a defendant) pleaded that the instrument was a valid deed; that the lawful heirs of B. R. Inman must be determined as of the date of his death; that Inez did not take under the ulterior limitation to the lawful heirs of B. R. Inman because by that phrase B. R. Inman meant heirs other than Inez Inman; that White was the owner of a one-fifth interest as the sole heir оf his mother, Lilia Inman, and another one-fifth interest as the sole devisee of his Aunt Susie, also a daughter of B. R. Inman; that Lessley was the owner of a one-fifth interest as the sole devisee of W. L. Inman, son of B. R. Inman. The three great grandsons made defendants admitted the averment of the bill.
Appellant Carrie Y. Harris was admitted as a party defendant, and by answer and cross-bill averred that she was the sole devisee of Inez Inman MacLeod; that the instrument was invalid as either а will or deed and that B. R. Inman died intestate, which is now res judicata; that B. R. Inman died intestate owning the lands in question, which descended to his six children in equal shares, and that Inez acquired the entire fee title to the land by adverse possession against her co-tenants; that Inez fulfilled the conditions of the instrument, if valid, by having heirs who are descendants of B. R. Inman living at her death; that if the instrument is valid as a deed or will, the lawful heirs are determined as of the date of testator’s death, and Inеz received an undivided one-sixth interest, which she devised to appellant Harris.
The foregoing is a brief summary of the major contentions of the parties. There was a hearing before the chancery court with witnesses testifying concerning whether Inez had possessed the land adversely to the other heirs. The chancery court adopted in full the theory of complainants’ bill. It held that the instrument was the duly probated will of B. R. Inman; that
We think that the instrument dated October 28, 1889, must be considered as testamentary in character and as a will rather than a deed. The controlling question is whether the maker intended to convey any interest before his death, or whether he intended that all of the interest should vest and take effect after his death. B. B. Inman expressly said that the instrument was “to take effect at my death and not sooner.” Such a provision, which is stronger than that in Gaston v. Mitchell, 1942,
The general rule is well established that a grant of intestate administration is not a conclusive adjudication of intestacy.
It is also argued that the will was not probated in compliance with the statutes, because its due execution was not proved as required by Code Sec. 498. The separate probate proceeding of 1948 was in common form, upon petition of Jesse Hunter Inman, and thеre were no parties defendant. The decree admitting the will to probate found that B. E. Inman had executed the instrument, witnessed by two competent witnesses and acknowledged before the Chancery Clerk of Wilkinson County, “as appears from the allegations in said-petition, which are sworn to, and which petition is taken and accepted and considered by the court as affidavits of the proof of the execution of said instrument * * The court then аdjudicated that it was the will of B. E. Inman and admitted it to probate. The final decree in the present suit contained a somewhat similar finding by the court, and also that the instrument had “been offered for probate as an ancient document which was executed October 28, 1889, placed of record the same day, and has remained of record ever since * * *.” It further found that the witnesses and the chancery clerk who took the acknowledgment “have been dead for a long period of time and that the original of said document has been lost or mislaid and could not be found after diligent search * * *.”
Moreover, the evidential exception as to ancient wills is applicable. 57 Am. Jur., Wills, Sec. 921, defines it as follows: “The exceрtion to the rule that documents must be authenticated by the testimony of subscribing witnesses or otherwise, which is recognized in the case of writings which are thirty years or more old, applies to wills, so that it is not necessary to call the attesting witnesses to prove a will which is more than thirty years old reckoned from the death of the testator; even though such witnesses are living, at least if possession has been held under the will for thirty years. Although it is sometimes stated broadly that an ancient will proves itself, it should be observed that the exception of ancient documents from the rule which requires proof of their authenticity is subject to conditions the fulfilment of which dispels suspicion as to the trustworthiness of the
Appellant Harris argues that if the instrument is valid as a will, Inez, her predecessor in title, was a life tenant, that Inez’s entire possession from 1899 to 1948 was hostile and adverse to the title of the remaindermen, and that she acquired title by adversе possession against them as to the entire estate, which she in turn devised to Harris. With the possible exception of sales of timber, upon which there was conflicting evidence as to whether such sales were permissive, the possession of Inez was consistent with that of a life tenant, or the holder of a determinable fee. The chancellor found against appellant on this point. That finding is amply supported by the record: The burden of proof was upon Harris to establish the unequivocal ouster required of her as against her remaindermen or the owners of the executory interest, and she failed to meet this burden. Thomasson v. Kinard, 1929,
What is the proper interpretation of the limitation upon the estate of Inez Inman MacLeod? The first problem in this major issue is the meaning of the requirement that the grantee Inez “shall die without heirs, descendants of mine, living at the death of the last of said grantees * * We think that this phrase refers to Inez dying without living children of her own. The dominant purpose of testator was to keep his property in his own family and this would be the only construction which would fully effectuate that purpose. Hence the condition that if the two grantees should die without heirs, the property was to go to his “lawful heirs”. To describe this requirement further, appellant added the phrase ‘ ‘ descendants of mine ’ ’. In the popular sense, the word ‘ ‘ descendants ’ ’ is often used аs meaning the issue from a living person. 26 C. J. S. Descend-Descendant, p. 984. , It sometimes has been held to be synonomous with the word “children”. Schmaunz v. Goss, 1882,
With reference to the second question under this issue, we think that the chancery court erred in holding that the “lawful heirs” of B. R. Inman under this will were to be determined as of the date of the death of Inez. Code Sec. 837 has no application here. It does not determine the time at which the “lawful heirs” of B. R. Inman are ascertained for the purpose of taking under this executory estate. It applies to the situation at common law where there would be construed to еxist an indefinite failure of issue, and thus a void fee tail estate. The statute would make the limitation over take effect at the person’s death without issue at that time. Chief Justice Whitfield discussed this statute in a definitive manner in Middlesex Banking Co. v. Field, 1904,
There is a division of the courts upon this issue of the time as to which words of survivorship relate. Annotation 114 A. L. R. 4 (1938);
In Alexander v. Richardson, 1913,
Elizа Gray died without children, so the court held: “The ascertainment of who were the heirs of the donor must be referred to the time of his death, and not to the time of the death of the life tenant. No contrary intention appears in this case. When their father died the three sons took, as his heirs, an interest in his estate. This was subject to be defeated by the death of Mrs. Baker, the life tenant, leaving issue. This did not happen. The estate which they received upon the death of their father was never defeated or changed. Appellants were not heirs of the donor, Amos Alexander, when he died. Their fathers, the donor’s heirs, were heirs. ’ ’
See also Baker v. Richardson, 1911,
The “lawful heirs” who are to take under the executory limitation in the will refers to the children of testator living at the time of his death. The same phrase was construed in this manner in Alexander v. Richardson, supra. To the same effect is Russell v. Woodson, 1927,
Nor does this exclude Inez Inman MacLeod as one of the owners of this executory interest. It is argued that the fact that she was a life tenant and a holder of a prior estate, on the determination of which the executory interest vested, prevented her from also inheriting’ a share of it, and that the testator by using the phrase “lawful heirs” meant heirs other than Inez. But the fact that the holder of the prior estate is a- member of the class to which the executory interest is given does not
The final question requiring consideration is whether the interest which was received by the six children of B. R. Inman living at his death was alienable or transferrable by deed, will, and dеscent and distribution. The final decree erroneously held that it was not. Code Sec. 831 recognizes the right to create and convey such executory limitations. Alexander v. Richardson, supra, is decisive on the question of whether that interest is alienable or transferrable by deed, will or intestate succession. There the Court said: “*■ * * it appears to us that the three sons of the donor, upon the death of their father, owned right, title, and interest in the-.land which they cоuld transmit by deed .during the lifetime
In accord is Ricks v. Riddell, 1946,
Reversed and decree rendered here in accordance with this opinion.
PER CURIAM.
The above opinion is adopted as the opinion of the court, and for the reasons therein indicated, the judgment of the court below is reversed and decree rendered here in accordance with this opinion.
