Benton v. . Baucom

135 S.E. 629, 192 N.C. 630, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 135 S.E. 629 (Benton v. . Baucom) 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. . Baucom, 135 S.E. 629, 192 N.C. 630, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 366 (N.C. 1926).

Opinion

Stacy, C. J.

On the hearing the question for decision was properly made to depend upon the construction of the following item in the will of James 0. Hargett:

“Item 5th. I give and bequeath to my eldest stepdaughter, Sarah Myers (now Sarah Y. Benton) a home and support with her mother during her single days, and fifty acres of land at her mother’s death, of the tract I now live on, to include all the buildings, to have and to hold her lifetime, and then to her lawful heirs, if any, and if not, then it is to go to my own three children, or their heirs, together with all the personal estate I have given her.”

*631 Tbe plaintiff is tbe eldest stepdaughter of tbe testator and bolds possession of tbe land described in tbe complaint, under tbis item of tbe will. Tbe defendant is one of tbe' three children of tbe testator mentioned in tbe latter part of said clause and claims a contingent interest in tbe land described therein, which she says will vest in right upon tbe death of Sarah Y. Benton without “lawful heirs,” or lawful children, her surviving, or certainly without her ever having bad a “lawful heir” or lawful child. Tbe record shows that Sarah Y. Benton is above 65 years of age; that she has given birth to but one child, which was illegitimate and is now dead.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that she holds a fee-simple title to the land devised in item five above; while the defendant contends that the plaintiff takes only a life estate, or at most a defeasible fee, in the property so devised.

It is conceded that the relative merits of the controversy depend.upon whether the limitations in this clause are so framed as to attract the rule announced in the celebrated English case of Wolfe v. Shelley, 1 Coke, 93-b, commonly known as the rule in Shelley’s case, which, with us, has become a rule of property as well as a rule of law, and is stated by Lord Macnaghten in Van Grutten v. Foxwell, Appeal Cases, Law Reports (1897), p. 658, as follows: “It is a rule in law when the ancestor by any gift or conveyance takes an estate of freehold, and in the same gift or conveyance an estate is limited either mediately or immediately to his heirs in fee or in tail, that always in such cases ‘the heirs’ are words of limitation of the estate and not words of purchase.”

It is hardly necessary to observe that every part of this statement is deserving of attention, from the opening words, which declare it to be a “rule in law,” to the last clause, which says that “the heirs” can never take by purchase when the rule applies.

The sources of the rule are apparently lost in the mystery that characterizes all origins. No one seems to know its author, or how it came to be laid down. Even its purpose, as well as the wisdom of its adoption, has been the subject of controversy. The better view seems to be that it sprang from the holding of lands by feudal tenure, and that its purpose originally was to prevent the lord from being defrauded of the chief fruits or seigniory, which he did not receive when an estate went by purchase. It was equally important to the tenant that the distinction between descent and purchase should be maintained. Speaking to the subject in Williams v. Houston, 57 N. C., 277, Pearson, C. J., said: “ ‘The rule’ was adopted for the prevention of fraud, and the substance of it is, where an estate for life is given to one and by the same conveyance the property is given to his heirs in such a manner that the *632 same persons are to take the same estate as they would have taken by operatio.n of the law bad the whole estate been given to the tenant for life, be shall take the whole estate, and such persons shall take by operation of law, and not as purchasers, notwithstanding the express intention was that the one should take a life-estate only and the others should take as purchasers; the principle is the same as that by which, if one seized in fee in England devises to his eldest son in fee simple, the son shall take by descent and not under the devise; for, although the intention that he shall take by the devise is express, yet such intention being in manifest fraud of the rights of third persons shall not be carried into effect.”

Today the rule serves quite a different, but no less valuable, purpose, in that it prevents the tying up of real estate during the life of the first taker, facilitates its alienation a generation earlier, and at the same time, subjects it to the payment of the debts of the ancestor. Walker v. Butner, 187 N. C., 535; Crisp v. Biggs, 176 N. C., 1; Cohoon v. Upton, 174 N. C., 90. “It is a rule or canon of property, which so far from being at war with the genius of our institutions, or with the liberal and commercial spirit of the age, which alike abhor the locking up and rendering inalienable real estate and other property, seems to be in perfect harmony with both. It is owing perhaps to this circumstance that the rule, a Gothic column found among the remains of feudality, has been preserved in all its strength to aid in sustaining the fabric of the modern social system.” Reese, J., in Polk v. Faris, 9 Yerg., 209, 30 Am. Dec., 400.

The learned writers on the subject also disagree as to the manner in which the rule operates. It is said by many, who constitute by far the larger number, that the limitation to the heirs unites and coalesces with the limitation of the freehold to the ancestor, and thus operates to vest in the first taker a fee simple or a fee tail, as the case may be, divided or split by intervening limitations, where there are any. (There were intermediate estates in Shelley’s case itself.) By others it is said that there is no such union or coalescence, but that the limitation to the heirs is executed in the ancestor, to whom a gift is implied, so as to vest in him another and larger estate, which swallows up the particular estate of freehold when there are no intervening limitations. Van Grutten v. Foxwell, 77 L. T. N. S., 170.

But whatever may have been the origin of the rule, and regardless of the mode of its operation, it is firmly established, not only as a rule of law, but also as a rule of property, in this jurisdiction, and it is our .duty to observe it wherever the limitations in any deed or will call for its application. Hartman v. Flynn, 189 N. C., 452; Fillyaw v. Van Lear, *633 188 N. C., 772; Bank v. Dortch, 186 N. C., 510; Wallace v. Wallace, 181 N. C., 158. It is one of tbe ancient landmarks wbicb the fathers have set in the law, as it relates to the subject of real property, and we should be slow to remove it. Prov., 22:28.

A restatement of the essential facts, stripped of all irrelevant matter, appearing in the case from which the rule takes its name, may aid measurably in determining its application to other facts or other limitations.

Edward Shelley, being tenant in tail general, had two sons, Henry and Richard. Henry died in his father’s lifetime, leaving a daughter and his wife enciente with a son.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.E. 629, 192 N.C. 630, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-baucom-nc-1926.