Buchanan v. . Buchanan

5 S.E. 430, 99 N.C. 308
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 5 S.E. 430 (Buchanan v. . Buchanan) 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
Buchanan v. . Buchanan, 5 S.E. 430, 99 N.C. 308 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

(after stating the case). The ruling brought up for review proceeds upon a construction of the clause of the will in controversy, which requires the death of the devisee Richmond to take place in the life-time of the testator, as the contingency on which the limitation over to Andrew was to take effect, and defeating it if the testator was the survivor.

*311 The devise is of an estate in fee to Richmond, terminable at his decease without issue; and in such event passing over and vesting in Andrew. No time is fixed for the executory-devise over to take effect, except that it must be at the death of his brother, whenever this shall occur under the specified condition of his being “ without a bodily heir,” or childless, and to this the act of 1827 adds, “ living at the time of his death.” The Code, § 1327.

Without the aid of the statute, the concurrent rulings of the Courts are that such a limitation, being upon an indefinite failure of issue, that is, whenever such issue .ceases to exist, is void for remoteness, to prevent which the enactment, alike applicable to wills and deeds, was made when no contrary effect is manifest. Thereby the limitation over is made effectual or fails at the death of the first taker, and the result is then determined.

“ The series of cases in the English law,” in the language of Chancellor KeNt, “ have been uniform from the time of the Year Books down to the present day in the recognition of the rule of law that a devise in fee with a remainder over if the devisee dies with issue, or heirs of the body, is a fee cut down to an estate tail and the limitation over is void by way of executor}^ devise, as being too remote, and being founded on an indefinite failure of issue.” 4 Kent Com., 276, citing numerous cases; see also 3 Greenl. Cruise Real Prop., 461; 2 Wash. Real Prop., 355, to the same effect.

The rulings in this State have been explicit and to the same effect, as will be seen by referring to the following cases: Sutton v. Wood, Conf. Rep., 202 and 312; Bryan v. DeBerry, 2 Hay., 356, 546; Jones v. Speight, 1 Car. L. Repos., 544, 157; Sanders v. Hyall, 1 Hawks, 247; Beasley v. Whitehurst, 2 Hawks, 437; Ross v. Farris, 4 Dev., 376; Brown v. Brown, 3 Ired., 134; Hollowell v. Kornegay, 7 Ired., 261; Gibson v. Gibson, 4 Jones, 425.

*312 In Brown v. Brown, supra, it is declared that a devise before the act of 1827, in the words “if my son should die without lawful issue,” unexplained, imparted in a legal sense, the failure of issue at any indefinite time, whenever it might happen, and a remainder limited upon such contingency was void.”

The remoteness of the limitation, not allowed by the common law, is obviated by the annexing of the statutory words which confine the contingency to the state of things existing at the death of the previous owner.

Now, it is apparent that if the testator intended in the use of such general terms to provide for the happening of the contingency on which the limitation depends during his own life, there would be no antecedent estate to support a remainder, or to admit of a transfer of a preceding estate by way of executory devise, since, in consequence of the lapse, the devise would be of an immediate and present estate; and, as the effect of the superadded legislative words is to fix the vesting at the death of the preceding tenant, so as to obviate the objection of remoteness, so it would seem they must also determine the time when the limitation over, in cases like the present, must take effect.

There are, however, numerous cases in which it has been held that where no specific period is pointed out for the limitation over to vest, other than the death of the first tenant, the testator must be understood to have used the words to prevent a lapse, and to provide against such a result.

The principle is thus enunciated in Theobald’s Law of Wills, 483: “ If there is an immediate gift to A, and a gift over in case of his death, or any similar expression, implying death to be a contingent event, the gift over will take effect only in the event of A’s death before that of the testator,” and numerous cases are cited in support of the proposition. Here the death, an event certain in itself, is deemed to be contingent in respect to its occurring before or after the tes *313 tator’s own death, and the event resolves the contingency and determines the ulterior devise. Rogers v. Rogers, 7 W. R., 541, cited at page 541.

The same author proceeds to say, page 486, “ If there is an . immediate gift to A, and if he dies without issue over, the gift over takes effect upon the death of A, without issue, at any time, whether before or after the testator,” referring to many cases in support of the proposition. The contingency contemplated by the testator, in thus expressing himself, is not connected with or involved in the death, but is referable to the devisee’s having or not having issue then living, and the death, when it occurs, alone ascertains the efficacy of the ulterior devise.

The distinction in the mind of the author seems to be that when the testator speaks of the death as an uncertain event, he is understood as referring to an uncertainty in the time of its occurrence, whether before or after his own decease, but when the uncertainty is apparent in the form of the expression used, and is referable to the presence or absence of issue at the time of the death, the contingency is determined solely by the event of the death, whenever it may happen.

“ Possibly,” he continues, in further elucidation of the rule, “ when there is a gift over, if any members of a class die without issue to the survivors, the gift over must take effect, if at all, before the time when the survivors are to be ascertained.”

To this class belong the cases in our own reports. Biddle v. Hoyt, 1 Ired. Eq., 159; Webb v. Weeks, 3 Jo., 279; Pass v. Freeman, 3 Jo. Eq., 321; Hilliard v. Kearney, Bus. Eq., 221; Murchison v. Whitted, 87 N. C., 455, while to the former class belong Davis v. Parker, 69 N. C., 271; Burton v. Conigland, 82 N. C., 99; Price v. Johnson, 90 N. C., 572.

The first of the three last mentioned is summarily disposed of as coming within the principle decided in Hilliard v. Kearney, without adverting to the differences between them. *314 It is, moreover, opposed to the ruling in Jones v. Spaight, 1 Car. Law Rep., supra,

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5 S.E. 430, 99 N.C. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-buchanan-nc-1888.