Coddington v. . Stone

9 S.E.2d 420, 217 N.C. 714, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 335
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 8, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 9 S.E.2d 420 (Coddington v. . Stone) 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
Coddington v. . Stone, 9 S.E.2d 420, 217 N.C. 714, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 335 (N.C. 1940).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

The only question argued before this Court was whether the will of Charles C. Coddington, Sr., conferred on his son, Charles C. Coddington,-Jr., an inheritable estate at the death of the testator, or whether the purport and effect of the will was to vest the estate only when the youngest son became twenty-one years of age, at which time the will directs the estate to be divided into three parts and turned over to the beneficiaries. In other words, the question is whether the time at which distribution is required to be made is annexed to the substance of the gift, or merely operates to postpone its enjoyment. It was assumed that if C. 0. Coddington, Jr., had an estate of inheritance at his death, which passed to his- surviving brothers, the succession is subject to an inheritance tax, both State and Federal, and such tax would constitute a lien or encumbrance on the land, which is the subject of the purchase and sale contract between the parties; and it was assumed, conversely, that if no such inheritable estate passed at the death of C. C. Coddington, Jr., there was no tax due and no lien. Actually there may be other provisions of the State Inheritance Tax Law, the applicability of which might be considered in case no estate of inheritance vested at the time of the testator’s death, but we need not consider them in view of the conclusion we have reached.

Whether the date appointed in the will for the completion of the trust and the division and turning over of the estate is a time annexed to the substance of the gift, marking the creation of the estate and the time of its vestment, or whether it operates as a mere postponement of the complete enjoyment of the estate vesting at the death of the testator, is, in this case, reduced to a question of testamentary intent, to be determined by the will itself, the situation as it existed between the testator and the beneficiaries under the will, aided by certain rules of construe *718 tion arising out of both experience and policy which the courts are accustomed to apply.

If it be argued that the circumstance that the gift of the estate is expressed only in the clause requiring it to be divided and turned over at a certain time may indicate, prima facie, a contingency, the answer is that, taking the will altogether, it contains so many circumstances and provisions as to be controlling in the particular case against such presumption. Hooker v. Bryan, 140 N. C., 402, 53 S. E., 130.

We understand from the record that Mr. Coddington must have been a man of intelligence and business acumen, having built up a fortune of over a million dollars. He had three young children for whom to provide. We must assume, nothing else appearing to the contrary, that he was normal in his affections, his social impulses, his sense of obligation to his children and their immediate posterity, and the obligation that rested upon him to make a wise and just disposition of his great property, if he undertook to make any at all. But the will is amazingly brief and direct, considering the size of the estate involved; and if we accept the theory that he did not intend to have his estate to vest in any of his children upon his death, it is remarkably defective in its scheme of disposition, in its want of provision for obvious contingencies which must have presented themselves to the normal mind. We must assume from the record that he was acquainted with the vicissitudes of life as well as of business, and may well understand that their consideration were especially within his contemplation while engaged in the solemn act of composing his will. Yet he made no provision or disposition of his property or limitation over in the event of the death of any of the named beneficiaries, or all of them, before the date appointed for the division and delivery of the trust estate. At that time Charles, had he lived, would have been twenty-five years old and Dabney twenty-three. Had any of the sons died before that date, leaving a wife or children, these would have been left unprovided for if the estate did not vest at the death of the testator. Perry v. Rhodes, 6 N. C., 140; Sutton v. West, 77 N. C., 429; Sims v. Smith, 59 N. C., 347. This is but one of the many contingencies which might have happened.

The absence of any provision of this kind, and of any limitation over upon the contingency of the death of the beneficiary, has been considered to raise a strong inference that it was the intention of the testator to confer an immediate estate, vesting at his death. Meyers v. Williams, 58 N. C., 362; Allen v. Van Meter (Ky.), 1 Met., 264; Young v. Stover, 37 Pa., 105; Goebel v. Wolf, 113 N. Y., 405, 21 N. E., 388; Robinson’s Estate, 13 Phila., 299 (set out in Note to Shackley v. Homer, 55 L. R. A. [N. S.], 1159); Sammis v. Sammis, 14 R. I., 123; Foster v. Holland, 56 Ala., 474; Ordivay v. Bow, 55 N. H., 11.

*719 It is generally beld, nothing else appearing in the will to the contrary, that where an estate is devised to a trustee in an active trust for the sole benefit of persons named as beneficiaries, with direction to divide up and deliver the estate at a stated time, this will have the effect of vesting the interest immediately on the death of the testator. The intervention of the estate of the trustee will not have the effect of postponing the gift itself, but only its enjoyment. Ordway v. Dow, supra; Tayloe v. Mosher, 29 Md., 443. The rule is, we think, applicable to an estate in trust of mixed personalty and realty. Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Wood, 201 Pa., 420, 50 Atl., 920; Sammis v. Sammis, supra. In estates of this sort no distinction can be maintained between legacies, formerly governed by the rules of the civil law applied in the ecclesiastical courts, and devises governed by the rules of the common law, if such distinction has ever been strictly regarded by the courts of this State. Hooker v. Bryan, supra.

In approval of this principle and in support of the main proposition that under a will of this type the estate vests in the beneficiary immediately upon the death of the testator, the following North Carolina cases may be cited: Guyther v. Taylor, 38 N. C., 323; Williams v. Smith, 57 N. C., 254; Fuller v. Fuller, 58 N. C., 223. In High v. Worley, 32 Ala., 709; Foster v. Holland, supra; and Shafer v. Tereso, 133 Iowa, 342, 110 N. W., 746, the absence of a limitation over or any provision for a contingency or expression thereof was held to vest the interest in the beneficiary at the time of the death of the testator. Hocker v. Gentry, 3 Met. (Ely.), 463; Sutton v. West, supra; Sims v. Smith, supra; Warrant v. Hembree, 8 Ore., 118; Goebel v. Wolf, supra. In the latter case, the fact that there was nothing on the face of the will to indicate that the testator contemplated the death of any of his children during minority was considered, among other things, as indicative of the testator’s intention to give them immediate interests. Ordway v. Dow, supra; Robinson's Estate, supra; Re Lincoln Trust Co., 139 N. Y.

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9 S.E.2d 420, 217 N.C. 714, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coddington-v-stone-nc-1940.