4 S.E.2d 609 | N.C. | 1939
This was a controversy without action to determine the title to land, the subject of a contract to convey. Defendants refused to accept deed on the ground that plaintiffs could not convey a fee simple title to the land. From judgment for plaintiffs, defendants appealed. The question of title to land presented for decision by this appeal depends upon the proper construction to be given to the following clause in the will of Sallie F. C. Long:
"Item I: I leave to my niece Clarentine F. Clift lot No. 108, in the Town of Plymouth during her natural life, and after her death I give and bequeath the said lot with all improvements and hereditaments to the Methodist Episcopal Church in this place, to be used by the stewards or legal representatives of the said Church in the Town of Plymouth as a parsonage for the minister and for no other purpose, in order to secure *293 the possession of my burying ground to the aforesaid Church and to its keeping and care."
The will was probated in 1881, and on 9 November, 1900, the life tenant conveyed her life estate in the land to T. B. Wolfe, and on 19 November, 1900, the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Plymouth conveyed the remainder in the property in fee simple to the said T. B. Wolfe. The life tenant is now dead. T. B. Wolfe and his wife are dead, and the plaintiffs are his only heirs at law. They have contracted to convey a good and indefeasible title to the land to the defendants. Defendants have refused to accept the deed tendered by plaintiffs and to pay the purchase price on the ground that the title is other than fee simple, due to the provisions in the quoted clause in the will of Sallie F. C. Long.
The language contained in the will, indicating that the property was to be used as a parsonage for the minister of the church in order to secure the possession of the burying ground to the church and to its keeping and care, cannot be held to have the effect of impressing a trust upon the legal title (St. James v. Bagley,
The rule is thus stated in Pomeroy's Equity, sec. 1016: "In order that a trust may arise from the use of precatory words, the court must be satisfied from the words themselves, taken in connection with all the other terms in the disposition, that the testator's intention to create an express trust was as full, complete, settled and sure as though he had given the property to hold upon a trust declared in express terms in the ordinary manner."
In St. James v. Bagley, supra, where the deed conveyed property to the Vestry and Wardens of St. James Church for the purpose of aiding in the establishment of a home for indigent widows or orphans, the *294
Court, in holding that the grantees could convey the property freed of trust or restriction, quoted from 2 Devlin on Deeds, sec. 838, as follows: "A grantor can impose conditions and can make the title conveyed dependent upon their performance. But if he does not make any condition, but simply expresses the motive which induces him to execute the deed, the legal effect of the granting words cannot be controlled by the language indicating the grantor's motive." Springs v. Springs,
In the recent case of Lassiter v. Jones,
In Hall v. Quinn,
"Conditions subsequent are not favored by the law." Church v. Bragaw,
In Tucker v. Smith,
In Helms v. Helms,
In Hinton v. Vinson,
For the reasons stated and upon the authorities cited, we concur in the ruling of the court below that plaintiffs' proper deed would convey a good and indefeasible title to the land. The judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.