Cotten v. . Moseley

74 S.E. 454, 159 N.C. 1, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 3, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 74 S.E. 454 (Cotten v. . Moseley) 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
Cotten v. . Moseley, 74 S.E. 454, 159 N.C. 1, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 216 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the' case: The question in the case is, whether the limitation of the estate to husband and wife for their natural lives, afterwards to the heirs of the wife forever, is sufficient to pass the fee under the rule in Shelley’s case. The principle embodied in this rule, which, perhaps, was first formally and authoritatively announced by all the judges during the reign of Elizabeth, in the case from which it takes its name (1 Coke, 219), was of far more remote origin, and for many years had been called “an ancient dogma of the common law.” The principal and most forceful reasons advanced for adopting the rule were to prevent the abeyance or suspension of the inheritance, and to facilitate the alienation of land, throwing it into the track of commerce one generation sooner, by vesting the inheritance in the ancestor, than if he continued tenant for life and the heir was declared a purchaser. “Therefore,” said Justice Blaclestone, “where an estate was limited to the ancestor for life, and afterwards (mediately or immediately) to his heirs, who are uncertain till the time of his death, the law considered the ancestor as the first principal of the donor’s bounty; and therefore permitted him (who, as it is said, Co. Litt., 22, beareth in his body all his heirs, and who 'had the only visible and notorious freehold in the land) to sell it, devise it where the custom would permit’, or charge it with *3 bis debts and encumbrances. And however narrow and illiberal the original establishment of this rule, or the adhering to it in later times, may have been represented in argument, I own myself of opinion that those constructions of law which tend to facilitate the sale and circulation of property in a free and commercial country, and make it more liable to the debts of the visible owner, who derives a greater credit from that ownership — such constructions, I say, are founded upon principles of' public policy altogether as open and as enlarged as those which favor the accumulation of estates in private families by fettering inheritances till the full age of posterity now unborn, and which may not be born for half a century.” The rule has also been fiercely assailed by some and mildly criticised by others, as being at war with our free institutions and policy, and as founded upon subtle and artificial reasons and extremely technical considerations. Whether it is an arbitrary rule which is calculated to defeat rather than to execute the intention of the grantor, we are not at liberty to inquire, as it (has been firmly established in our jurisprudence as a rule of lay, which we must enforce whenever applicable.

The question before us is as to the legal effect of the deed of William Gardner to ITenry 0. and his wife, Martha Jane Gardner. Did it convey the fee to Martha, under the rule in Shelley’s casef We are of the opinion that it did. The defendants contend that the subsequent limitation must be to the heirs of the person who takes the particular estate — that is, in this case, the second limitation should have been to the heirs of both husband and wife, as they were seized of the entirety and did not take by moities; but such is not the true operation of the rule. If the limitation had been to the wife for life, remainder to the heirs of the husband and wife, the freehold being in the wife alone, the limitation over would be a contingent remainder, and their heirs would take as purchasers, because the heirs of the husband would not necessarily be the heirs of the wife. 2 Washburn on Real Property (5 Ed.), p. 649; Robinson v. Wharey, 3 Wilson, 125. As Eearne (p. 38) says: “Every person may so far be supposed to carry his own heirs in himself during his life as that a limitation to *4 them where be takes a preceding freehold.may vest in himself; yet no person can be supposed to include in himself the heirs of himself and of somebody else.” Coke (sec. 26) refers to this passage from Littleton: “If tenements be given to a man and to his wife, and to the heires of the bodie of the man, in this case- the husband hath an estate in general taile, and the wife but an estate for terme of life. If lands' be given to the husband and wife, and to the heires of the husband which he shall beget on the body of his wife, in this case the husband hath an estate in special taile, and the wife but an estate for life. If the gift be made to the husband and to his wife, and to the heires of the body of the wife by the husband begotten, there the wife hath an estate in special taile, and the husband but for terme of life. But if lands be given to the husband and the wife, and to the heires which the husband shall beget on the body of the wife, in this case both of them have an estate taile, because this word (heires) is not limited to the one more than to the other.” Commenting upon the passage, Coke says: “This word (heires) is nomen operativum. To which of the donees it is limited, it createth the estate taile; but if it incline no more to the one than to the other, then both doe take, as here Littleton putteth the case.” In pleading seizin of such an estate (when the inheritance inclines to the wife), “it shall be alleged that they were seized together and to the heirs of the body of the wife in her right; and not that they were seized of the freehold or fee tail.” Coke, sec. 28 and note 1. And Eearne (p. 39) tells us that “the same distinction was relied on in Repps v. Bonham, Yelverton 131” : “Where, upon a feoffment to the use of R and his wife for their lives, remainder to the use of the first, second, and third son of the body of the wife, and afterwards to the heirs of the body of the wife by R begotten, it was held, that the inheritance was only in the wife; because the word heirs, which made the inheritance, was annexed only to the body of the wife; but that if it had been to the heirs which the husband should beget on the body of the wife, it would have been an estate tail in them both.” In the official report of this case it is stated to have been held that R had an estate for life and his wife an estate tail, and “this was *5 adjudged by all of tbe Court,'without any scruple.” In a note to that case it is said that to whichever body the word heirs inclines by the limitation, it creates a descendible estate in such person; but if it be not more particularly limited to the body of one than the other, but inclines to- each alike, then it creates a descendible estate in each of them. 3 Bac. Abr. (Bouvier’s Ed.), p. .439. It is not necessary that the limitation to the heirs should be enjoyed immediately upon the death of the first taker. Nor will it have any effect to exclude the rule that the remainder cannot by possibility vest as a remainder in the lifetime of the ancestor, as where the limitation was to A and B and the heirs of him who should die first. So if the remainder be limited on a contingency which does not happen in the ancestor’s lifetime) nevertheless the heirs will take by descent. ,The mere circumstance that the remainder was contingent does not prevent the operation of the rule the moment the remainder vests. Thus, an estate limited to A for life, and if A survives B, then to his heirs, would be a contingent remainder in A, depending upon his surviving B. If he does, his estate becomes at once vested, and his term for life merges in the inheritance. (Starnes v. Hill, 112 N.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 S.E. 454, 159 N.C. 1, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotten-v-moseley-nc-1912.