Allen v. . Bryant

42 N.C. 276
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 5, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 42 N.C. 276 (Allen v. . Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. . Bryant, 42 N.C. 276 (N.C. 1851).

Opinion

Pearson, J.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Allen, was the widow of Ambrose Mills, who died in 1848, leaving a will, by which he bequeaths as follows:

“ Thirdly : I give to my beloved wife the right and privilege of residing in my mansion house, together with the use of a sufficient quantity of adjoining land to support her well and comfortably during her life, (and if she desires it, to have one third of my lands laid off to her during her life.) But it is m.y wish, that the whole of my lands, intended for her support, should be in the possession and under the control and management of my son William, as it is to be his after death, by satisfying and supporting her. I also give her a negro girl Maria absolutely ; also old Grey and Milly, his wife, and Maria’s four children, Button, Larkin, *277 Mack and George, and the following stock, to wit: two horses, four cows and calves, ten sheep and twenty hogs, to be selected by her out of the stock in hand, during her ■life, and, at her death, the stock to be equally divided between, &c., “ and Button, Larkin, Mack and George, to be divided between,” &c. By another clause he gives her two beds and furniture, and a bureau; and he devises the «¡home place and the lands adjoining to his son William E. Mills, “ subject to the support of his mother for life, as before provided.”

William E. Mills was appointed executor. He qualified and assented to the legacies.' In January, 1849, Mrs. Mills and William E. Mills executed the following deed :

“STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA — Polk County.
“ This agreement made and entered into this.. 1st day of January, 1849, between Ann F. Mills of tKe"one part, and William E. Mills of the other part, witnesseth: That, whereas, by the provisions of the last will and testament of Ambrose Mills, deceased, the said William is to have the possession and control of the real and personal property left to the said Ann F. (or Nancy, as she is called in the,will,) his mother, by supporting her well and comfortably during her life, now it is agreed by the said William and Ann for the mutual benefit of each other, and in order that there shall be no misunderstanding hereafter by any of the, parties interested — the said William will and he does hereby give up and surrender to his said mother, Ann F., two rooms in the late dwelling house of the said Ambrose for her separate use, and over which she is to have the entire management and control, and in which she is to keep her own beds and furniture. He also gives her the entire use and control of a negro girl, Maria, to wait on her, clothe herself and negro children, and to do any thing and every thing she may wish and direct. And the said William doth further agree and bind himself to support his said mother and her negroes well and comfortably during her life — that is, he is to furnish all the provisions and necessaries at his own expense, and his said mother is to come to his table as one of the family, without any trouble and expense on her *278 part; and he is also to furnish her with a horse to ride whenever she desires it.
And the said Ann F- Mills does hereby covenant and agree on her part, for and in consideration of the foregoing stipulations, to surrender, and she does hereby surrender and give up and relinquish to the said William all the remainder of the dwelling house, lands and negroes, for the entire management and control of said property left to her under the said will; and she does also surrender unto the said William all her part of the stock absolutely to manage and'" do with as he pleases, the said William being bound as before stated, to support his mother well during her life or so long as they may live together. And we, the said Ann F. and William E. do hereby bind ourselves to each other, our heirs, executors and administrators, well and truly to perform the foregoing covenants and agreements. In witness whereof, we have herewith set■ our hands and seals, the day and date above written.
“ANN F. MILLS, [seal.]
“WILLIAM E.MILLS, [seal.]

The parties acted under this deed until August, 1850, when William E. Mills died, leaving him surviving a widow and three infant children, who are defendants, and leaving a last will and testament, by which he gives his estate to his widow and children. The will was duly proven, and the defendants, Bryan and Mills, were appointed administrators with the will annexed. Soon after the death of William E., the plaintiff, Mrs. Mills, intermarried with the other plaintiff, Allen, and a controve? sy arising as to the legal effect of the deed, this bill was filed. The plaintiffs insist, that the intent ofthe deed was to make a mere temporary arrangement, by which to define the rights of the parties, for their mutual satisfaction; which arrangement was to be revocable at the pleasure of either party, and was, as a matter of course, to be at an end upon the death of William E. Mills, whose personal service, in taking charge of, and managing, the property, and the right to “come to his table as one of the family,” (the consideration which induced the plaintiff, Mrs. Allen, to enter into the *279 agreement,) could no longer be rendered or enjoyed. And' the plaintiffs insist, that, if the legal effect of the deed is to vest all of the interest and estate of Mrs. Allen in William E. Mills, as his property, the deed ought to be declared void and of no effect; because, it was executed in ignorance of her rights, was obtained by surprise and without consideration, and - by the exercise of an influence growing out or the relation in which the parties stood to each other. The prayer is for an account, and a surrender and rc-conveyance of all interest or estate acquired by William E. Mills, under the deed, and an allotment of one-third* of the land of her deceased husband.

The defendants deny, that the deed was intended as a mere temporary arrangement, and lost its binding force and effect by the death of William E. Mills. On the contrary, they insist, that its legal effect was to vest in him, as his property, all the interest and estate of the plaintiff, Mrs. Allen, in the land, negroes and stock, to which she was entitled under the will of her former husband. They deny, that she was ignorant of her rights, surprised, or in any way unduly influenced; and they aver, that the agreement was fair and reasonable, for the consideration therein expressed. They further aver, that none of the negroes, except the woman, Maria, could have been hired for anything, Grey and his wife being very old, and the four boys being between the ages of eleven and five years; and Mrs. Allen had no means of providing for the support either of the ne-groes or of the stock; so that, if she had kept them, she would have been compelled to go in debt, and “would, probably, (almost inevitably,) be so deeply insolvent for their support, that she would be compelled to sell them, and leave herself without support in her old age, dependent upon the .bounty of her friends. These things she often repeated to William E. Mills, and importuned him to take a conveyance.of all of her property, except Maria and the two beds and bureau, and bind himself to support her; and, in par- *280

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.C. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-bryant-nc-1851.