Benton v. . Alexander

32 S.E.2d 584, 224 N.C. 800, 156 A.L.R. 814, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 3, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 32 S.E.2d 584 (Benton v. . Alexander) 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
Benton v. . Alexander, 32 S.E.2d 584, 224 N.C. 800, 156 A.L.R. 814, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 223 (N.C. 1945).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

While decided differently in many jurisdictions, it is settled law in this State that, nothing else appearing, a beneficiary under *803 a will, wbo is under tbe necessity of making an election, bas exercised tbat privilege by offering tbe will as executor and procuring its probate. Mendenhall v. Mendenhall, 53 N. C., 287; Tripp v. Nobles, 136 N. C., 99, 48 S. E., 675; Elmore v. Byrd, 180 N. C., 120, 104 S. E., 162; Syme v. Badger, 92 N. C., 706.

Tbe question presented bere is whether tbe plaintiff in tbis action was put to ber election under tbe terms of ber husband’s will. Bearing upon tbe issues in controversy, if tbis query should be answered in tbe affirmative, we might inquire whether plaintiff was reasonably informed, or in tbe exercise of due diligence might have become informed, of those facts and conditions reasonably necessary to a valid and irrevocable choice, and consider tbe significance of tbe evidence on tbat point. Since we are convinced we need not go any further than a construction of tbe will in tbe light of admitted facts to arrive at a decision, we enter into no discussion of tbe rejected evidence bearing upon tbat phase of tbe case. In passing, however, we observe it is not disputed tbat tbe personalty willed to ber was insufficient to pay tbe debts of tbe deceased, and tbat she spent substantial sums of ber own money in discharging them. While it is contended tbat, in law, tbis might ordinarily merely reflect tbe unwisdom of ber choice, it does have a bearing on tbe intent of tbe testator, wbo is presumed to have known bis property, its value, and tbe extent of bis obligations, when we come to analyze tbe question of election from tbat point of view; and, as hereafter pointed out, it may well be a decisive factor in tbe ease.

In our approach to tbe problem, we are compelled to cite elementary law and principles well understood by tbe profession. But in their arrangement it is our purpose to make it clear tbat no mechanical application of rules will subordinate tbe intent of the will upon tbe vital point whether tbe beneficiary is put to an election.

Tbe equitable doctrine of election is based upon tbe fundamental principle tbat a person designated as beneficiary under a will cannot take its separate benefits and at tbe same time reject its provisions adverse to bis interest. “Tbe doctrine rests upon tbe principle tbat a person claiming under any document shall not interfere by title paramount to prevent another part of tbe same document from having effect according to its construction; be cannot accept and reject tbe same writing. Bispbam Eq., 6th Ed., p. 413, sec. 295.” Elmore v. Byrd, 180 N. O., 120, 122— “Tbe doctrine of election, as applied to tbe law of wills, simply means tbat one wbo takes under a will must conform to all of its legal provisions.” McOehee v. McGehee, 189 N. C., 558, 560, 127 S. E., 684.

To raise tbe legal necessity of election, tbe intent of tbe donor must clearly appear from tbe will under recognized rules of construction. Beferring particularly to tbe type of problem bere presented, it is said *804 in Page on Wills, Yol. 4, p. 1347: “The intention o£ testator to dispose of property or interests adverse to those of the devisee, must ordinarily be clear to put the devisee to his election,” citing Rich v. Morisey, 149 N. 0., 37, 62. S. E., 762; Bank v. Misenheimer, 211 N. C., 519, 191 S. E., 14.

We cannot accept the contention that upon the face of the will, the testator either actually conveyed, or intended to convey, lands belonging to his wife to another, or that if he did so, he did it with the intention of confining her to an alternate gift of personalty.

The land, subject of the devise in the will, is described generally as “all my real estate, consisting of lands and buildings thereon.” Nothing else appearing, this would probably be regarded as insufficient to describe land held by the husband and wife in entirety, and beyond the testator’s power of disposition — which in the event of his death would, by survivor-ship, become the estate of his wife. However, conceding that extraneous evidence and the admissions in the record identify the land devised to be the land so held by the entirety, it is not thereby any too clearly established that it was the intention of the donor to put the widow to an election. Under the circumstances of the case, it seems to us rather more reasonable that he was mistaken as to the nature of his interest in the property, and supposed himself, at the time of making the will, to be the owner of the land or some disposable interest in it, and was not consciously devising it as land of his wife.

In the case at bar there is no express declaration that the one gift should be taken in lieu of the other, as we often find in wills intended to put the wife to her election with regard to common law or statutory rights in the property of her husband. The inference of election arises only from the assumption that the devise related to the land of the wife. The intention to put the donee to an election cannot be imputed to a testator who, as one of the supposedly alternate gifts, attempts to devise property which he mistakenly believes to be his own, and so describes it, whereas, in reality, it is the property of another. In the case at bar the inference that an alternative proposal is presented in the will depends on the assumption that the testator was consciously devising his wife’s land, whereas the terms of ownership employed — “my real estate” — are strongly persuasive that he regarded it as his own. Such a description— designation by the mere circumstance of ownership — would be sufficient in any will to pass title to the lands of the owner and is commonly used for that purpose. Its significance here cannot be ignored. It is strong evidence of the fact that the testator really supposed the land to be his own, or that he had a disposable interest in it, and was not conscious as we have said of an attempt to devise the land of his wife.

*805 In Elmore v. Byrd, supra, p. 125, Walker, J., writing the opinion, quotes from Pomeroy on Equity, 3 Ed., 1 Yol., at pi 792, sec. 475:

“The doctrine of election is not applicable to cases where the testator, erroneously thinking certain property is his own, gives it to a donee to whom in fact it belongs, and also gives him other property which is really the testator’s own, for in such cases the testator intends that the devisee shall have both, though he is mistaken as to his own title to one.” Mr. Pomeroy cites Gull v. Showell, Ambler, 727, S. c., 27 Eng. Beports, full reprint p. 470: “One devised to A. for life an estate, which she supposed she had a power to dispose of, but in fact had not. She also gave a life interest in other estates to A. A. claimed the first estate under an old entail. Held, he is not put to his election.”

The case considered in Elmore v. Byrd, supra, was distinguished from Cull v. Showell, supra. But in our opinion, the cited ease embodies a sound principle of law. Its adoption by such a distinguished and careful writer on Equity as Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E.2d 584, 224 N.C. 800, 156 A.L.R. 814, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-alexander-nc-1945.