96 S.E. 957 | N.C. | 1918
Controversy submitted without action under Revisal, 803. The plaintiff contracted to deliver to the defendant a good and sufficient deed in fee simple, with the usual covenants, to the tract of land therein described. The defendant refused to accept said deed upon the ground that the plaintiff could not convey a fee-simple deed to said tract. The court adjudged in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed. The question presented depends upon the construction of the following words in a deed executed by James Williams 24 May, 1847, to the plaintiff, his grandson, who was then four months of age, which conveyed to his "grandson, David Williams, and his lawful heirs, children, if any; if not, to his brothers and sisters, respectively, a certain tract of land in the county of Duplin and State aforesaid" (describing the same), with habendum, "to him, the said David Williams, and his lawful heirs, children, if any; if not, to his brothers and sisters as aforesaid, to his and their own proper use and behoof in fee simple forever," etc., with warranty clause, again repeating the same words of limitation.
The deed is inartificially drawn. The words, "David Williams, and his lawful heirs, children, if any; if not, to his brothers and sisters, respectively," are thrice repeated, i. e., in the conveying clause, in the habendum, and in the warranty. We understand therefrom that the grantor had a well-defined and clear intention to convey this property to his grandson and his lawful heirs, if he left children. In such contingency a deed by him to the defendant would convey a fee simple under the Rule in Shelley's Case. But if there should be a defeasance by his leaving no children as his heirs (improbable as such contingency is on the facts in this case), then the property is to go to his brothers and sisters. It was to prevent his disposing of the property by devise or deed to others in such case that the defeasance was put into the deed. Otherwise, this thrice repeated limitation in the deed is entirely meaningless. The evident intent was to hedge the conveyance with a restriction by which the property should go to the grantee's brothers and sisters notwithstanding any deed or devise by him should he leave no children as his heirs.
The words used are contradictory of the purpose to convey the property to David Williams and his heirs generally. The use of words "children, if any; if not, to his brothers and sisters, respectively" bring *148
the case, we think, under the rule laid down in Whitfield v. Garris,
The provisions in this deed are a conditional limitation. Smith v.Brisson,
This was not an estate in the plaintiff and his children which would have made them tenants in common, as in Health v. Health,
It appears in the agreement that the defendant admits that the plaintiff has twelve living children, and that one or more of them will survive the plaintiff, but this, however, is an admission of a future event which the Court cannot act upon. While it is extremely improbable as a matter of fact that David Williams shall leave no children as his heirs, it is not an impossibility as a matter of law. The defendant evidently will run no appreciable risk, but, as we construe the instrument, David Williams cannot convey a fee simple, indefeasible, but it will be defeasible only upon the contingency of his leaving no children as his heirs, for in that event the property would go to his brothers and sisters by the express terms thrice repeated in the conveyance to him.
Reversed. *149