Bowers v. Newman

27 S.C.L. 472
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 27 S.C.L. 472 (Bowers v. Newman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowers v. Newman, 27 S.C.L. 472 (S.C. 1842).

Opinion

Curia, per

Earle, J.

Whatever may be 'said about public policy, and whatever may be the future consequences, it is now a settled point, that a free person of colour, by the laws of this State, may take and hold, convey by deed, dispose of by will, or transmit to his heir at law, both real and personal estate. Barbara Holmes, the ancestor of the plaintiffs, and under whom the defendant claims, was a slave at the time of the devise in question. The plaintiffs who bring this action to recover the land, must shew a perfect title in themselves. In order to do this, they must shew, 1,. that Barbara, although a slave of the testator at his death, could take, and did take, under the will; or 2, that the remainder to the plaintiffs is good, by way of executory devise, although the devise of the life estate to Barbara, may be void as to one incapable of taking; 3, that her marriage with Holmes was a lawful and valid marriage, which rendered the issue legitimate, and capable of taking the remainder limited to them ; 4, that the codicil is not a revocation of the will, so far as regards the remainder to the plaintiffs, but that under it Barbara ¡took ¡only a .life estate, subject to the same limitations and conditions which are annexed to the-devise in the will itself.

Seyeral of these propositions involve points that are not free from difficulty, and on which there might be some diversity of opinion, but as the judgment of the majority of the court has been formed from a construction of the codicil alone, it has been ¿deemed unnecessary to consider any of the other questions raised by the plaintiffs’ case, or to express any opinion upon them. If in fact the will, as far as regards the remainder to the plaintiffs, is revoked by the codicil, then it is needless to inquire whether Barbara could take her freedom and the devise by the same instrument ; or whether the remainder must take effect by way of exe-cutory devise ; or to consider the validity of the defendant’s marriage with Holmes. The civil status of a person circumstanced [487]*487as Barbara was, especially in regard to her capacity to take and hold property, is not easy to define. A slave may acquire property, but as he cannot hold, it enures to the benefit of the owner. At the date of this will there was no restraint on the power of manumission, and Barbara was lawfully made free, exempted from the control, and placed beyond the reach of the heir at law. Freedom, when bestowed upon a slave by will, is usually spoken of as a legacy, which requires the assent of the executor as other bequests. The analogy is not perfect, and I am not sure that some confusion of ideas is not created by the use of the same terms, in reference to subjects which seem to be of different natures. If property be given to a slave the master may seize it presently. But freedom bequeathed to a slave of the testator, is not only inconsistent with any claim of property in the heir a.t law, but a solemn declaration that he shall not seize or hold him as property. Should the executor withhold his assent to the legacy of freedom to the slave, could the heir at law retain him in slavery ? But in this case the testator died in 1782, and Barbara immediately went into the enjoyment of her freedom, and into possession of the land, and so remained until her death in 1830. The assent of the executor may be necessary to the enjoyment of the legacy in possession, but not so to enable it to vest., which I apprehend it did at the instant of the death, subject only to the claim of creditors, and the power of the executor to make her liable for debts. Without this, if a slave can take at all, subject to the right of escheat or to the superior claim of the master, then the devise also vested in Barbara, and as soon as from lapse of time the assent of the executor to the legacy of freedom might be presumed, and the claims of creditors to be satisfied or barred, then her title became absolute and perfect: If twenty years were necessary for this purpose, she had, after the expiration of that term, twenty eight years of quiet and undisturbed possession of the land, which would be sufficient to give her a title, as a free person of colour, against the heir at law, and all the world, unless the plaintiffs are entitled to the remainder they claim, after the determination of what they allege to have been her life estate.

In coming to a conclusion upon the construction of the codicil, we should have no difficulty if we were to confine our attention to the words of the devise. It is a gift of land to Barbara, without words of perpetuity or of limitation. The Act of 1824 [488]*488has furnished the rule of interpretation for such a devise. “Every gift of land by devise shall be considered as a gift in fee simple, unless such construction be inconsistant with the will of the testator, expressed or implied.” The word “hereafter,” in the first part of the section, is held to relate to the time of adjudication, in connection with the word “considered,” and not to the date of the devise. And therefore wills executed before, as well as since the Act, have been construed according to its provisions. Hall et al. vs. Goodwyn et al. 4 M’Cord, 442; Dunlap vs. Crawford, 2 M'C. Ch. R. 171. The ground of the argument for the plaintiffs is, that such construction is inconsistent with the will of the testatator, as implied from the context of the instrument, and the views which have been urged upon the court to sustain that ground are ingenious and plausible. Admitting the rule to be that the intention of the testator is the object of inquiry, and when ascertained is to govern in the construction, yet when the words used are plain and unambiguous, and have a certain and definite legal import, it is not enough for the plaintiffs to make out a case that is plausible or probable. The intention to give the words a different and more limited meaning, must be made clear and manifest. A majority of the court thinks that this has not been done. Without minutely reviewing all the grounds of argument which have been taken for, the plaintiffs, I will briefly present the reasons for supposing that the legal interpretation of the words is supported by the apparent intention of the testator ; and in doing so I shall notice incidentally some of the arguments of the plaintiff's counsel.

In the will, the testator devises in consecutive clauses, first to Judith, then to Barbara, each one half of certain lands containing 13 or 1400 acres, to themselves for life, with the power of disposing, and in default, with remainder over. The language of the two clauses is identical, except the names of the devisees and the dis-cription of the lands. In the codicil the testator uses the following language. “I do hereby revoke that part of my will wherein I bequeathed to the within named Judith and Barbara the three tracts of land between them.” Had the testator stopped here, and made no further devise in favour of either, can there be a doubt that the original devise, both life estate and remainder, would have been gone 1 But the testator proceeds in the next paragraph as follows. “I bequeath to the said Judith the place whereon she now lives, adjoining John Newman’s land, contain[489]*489ing three hundred acres, under the contingencies, limitations and restrictions mentioned in my said will.” Had he after-wards made no provision for Barbara, it is equally clear that the claim of the plaintiffs, to the remainder under the original de vise, would have been extinguished along with the life estate of their mother.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.C.L. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-newman-sc-1842.