Biddle v. . Carraway

59 N.C. 95
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 59 N.C. 95 (Biddle v. . Carraway) 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
Biddle v. . Carraway, 59 N.C. 95 (N.C. 1860).

Opinions

The bill was filed for the purpose of obtaining a construction of the will of Snoad B. Carraway, deceased, and the main questions raised by the pleadings are, whether the legacies given by the testator to his wife to repair and furnish "the house at Brandon, in Wake County," and for one year's support of her herself and her family, and the legacy of $500 given to the testator's cousin, Louisa Carraway, are bequeathed in such terms as to make them a charge upon the specific legacies; or, are they to be regarded as mere pecuniary legacies, not so charged, and, therefore, first liable for the payments of debts, (98) upon a deficiency of the assets appropriated for that purpose?

The language of the bequest to the wife is as follows: "I hereby direct my executors to pay to my wife, Sarah F. Carraway, one thousand five hundred dollars, out of my estate, to repair and furnish the house at Brandon, in Wake County. Also, an ample sufficiency of every necessary for the support of herself and family for one year." The bequest to Louisa Carraway is of "five hundred dollars, to be paid by my executor out of my estate." By a codicil, the testator declared his will to be "that the sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars shall be paid by my executor to my wife, Sarah, to finish the improvements and furnish the house at Brandon, Wake County, the chief part having already been done." A question has been made upon the terms of the codicil, whether they revoke and annul the force of the expression contained in the will, that the legacy is to be paid by the executor out of the testator's estate. We think clearly that they do not; because it is manifest that the testator's only intention was to lessen that amount of the legacy, the object of the bequest having been already partly accomplished. In the late case of Dalton v. Houston,58 N.C. 401, the following passage from 1 Jarman on Wills, 160, in regard to the effect of a codicil upon a will, is quoted with approbation, and we think it governs the present case: "In dealing with such cases (says Mr. Jarman), it is an established rule not to disturb the dispositions of thewill, further than is absolutely necessary for the purpose of giving effect to the codicil."

Another question has also been made, whether the bequest for the widow's year's support is expressed in the terms "to be paid by the executor out of the estate," and we think it is, by force of the word "also" coming immediately after the legacy given for the repair and furnishing of the house at Brandon.

These questions are preliminary to the main one, which we will now proceed to consider. In discussing this question, we will first remark, that if the testator had simply directed the legacies to be paid out *Page 85 of his estate, without saying by his executor, we should not (99) hesitate to hold that they were a charge upon the land as well as upon the personal property; the former, however, being only an auxiliary fund to be brought in after the latter, as the primary funds had been exhausted. In support of this proposition, we should rely upon Bray v.Lamb, 17 N.C. 372, as one directly in point. The expression there was, "I give and bequeath unto Nancy Guilford Bray, five hundred dollars, to be raised and paid out of my estate." The Court held the legacy to be well charged upon the land. In delivering the opinion, we do not discover that RUFFIN, Chief Justice, laid any particular stress upon the work "raised," and we are unable to perceive any difference in the meaning of the terms "raised out of my estate," and "paid out of my estate." We do discover, though, that he emphasizes the word"estate," to show that the realty as well as the personalty was included in its signification. We do not overlook the fact that his Honor used the word "raised," and it was natural that he should do so, because that word was used in the will, but we can not perceive that he assigns to it a meaning stronger than would have been conveyed by the word "paid," to which it is conjoined. But it is unnecessary to pursue the enquiry, as it is contended in the present case that, as the legacies are to be paid out of the estate by the executor, the land can not have been meant, because the executor has no control given him by the will over the land, and, therefore, the term "estate" must be restricted to the personal estate. Supposing that to be so, still the expression may furnish an argument that if the testator intended to charge the legacies upon the real as well as the personal estate, and failed to do so as to the land, because he directed them to be paid by his executor, it shows conclusively that he intended them to be paid out of the primary fund, to wit, the whole personal estate. Waiving, however, this argument, we are inclined to the opinion that when a testator directs a pecuniary legacy to be paid by his executor out of his estate, he thereby, either expressly or by the necessary construction of his language, gives it a preference over his specific legacies, or, in other words, he means that it shall be (100) paid anyhow, or in any event, provided all the personal assets are not exhausted in the payment of debts. But, if we are mistaken in this as a general proposition, we are satisfied that the testator so intended in the present case, and that such intention is so clearly manifested in the will itself, that we are bound to give effect to it.

The general proposition is, we think, supported by principle, as well as by the authority of the leading case, Sayer v. Sayer, Prec. Chan., 392. The general rule undoubtedly is, that specific legacies do not abate in favor of pecuniary legacies. This is founded on the presumed intention of the testator that they shall not so abate; but it is clear that the *Page 86 testator may declare a different intention, and may, if he think proper, by express words, or by a necessary implication, put general or pecuniary legacies upon the same footing in this respect with specific legacies, or may impose them as a charge upon such legacies, so that upon a deficiency of assets for the payment of debts, the specific legacies shall be first exhausted before the general or pecuniary legacies can be taken. There are two classes of cases where such will be the result: first, where a testator gives specific and pecuniary legacies, and afterwards says that such pecuniary legacies shall come out of all his personal estate, or words tantamount. Secondly, where there is no other personal estate than the specific legacies; for, in that case, they must be intended to be subject to the pecuniary legacies, otherwise those legacies would be mocked; see White v. Beaty, 16 N.C. 87 and 320. In Sayer v. Sayer, the specific legacy was not subjected to the payment of the general legacy on account of the special words of the will, but the general principles with regard to the two classes of cases above specified were clearly recognized and laid down by the Lord Chancellor. In the will now before us, the testator, in plain terms, directs the general or pecuniary legacies in question to be paid by his executor "out of his (101) estate," which, as there is no exception, must mean out of his whole estate.

But if the proposition that a general or pecuniary legacy is charged upon a specific one (when there is a deficiency of assets to pay both), by the express direction to the executor to pay it out of the testator's estate, is denied or doubted, we then say, with great confidence, that the testator, in the present will, has given a preference of the pecuniary legacies over the specific ones.

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Related

Everitt v. . Lane
37 N.C. 548 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1843)
White v. . Beattie
16 N.C. 87 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1827)
Shaw v. . McBride
56 N.C. 173 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1857)
Dalton v. . Houston
58 N.C. 401 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1860)
Bray v. . Lamb
17 N.C. 372 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1833)

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.C. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biddle-v-carraway-nc-1860.