Croom v. . Herring

11 N.C. 393
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 11 N.C. 393 (Croom v. . Herring) 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
Croom v. . Herring, 11 N.C. 393 (N.C. 1826).

Opinion

Henderson, Judge. —

He on whom the law casts an inheritance 011 the death of the ancestor, is designated by the technical word heir. It could not originally be used to designate him on whom the law cast the goods ot chattel property, for it cast them on no one, no person was appointed by law to succeed to the deceased ancestor; *395 on bis death, they became bona vacantia, ami were seized by the king on tiiat account, and by him, as grand ai-moner, applied to pious uses, now considered superstitious, for the good of the soul of their former owner. Hence it is, that in the common law vocabulary* there could be found no technical word to designate such successor. After one was pointed out by the Statute of Distributions, the technical word used in regard to inheritances, would not answer for that purpose ; for very frequently the persons are different, the rules of construction being very different from the canons of descent. The meaning of the word heir, therefore, retains its primitive and technical meaning, when standing alone, and unexplained by the context. But as words of every kind, technical as well as others, and particularly when used in last wills, are liable to be varied in their meaning, to meet thedntention of those who use them, when shewn in an authentic manner, the word heir may mean some other person than him on whom the law casts the inheritance in a real estate; and the question is, whom.does it mean, when used in a last will, in reference to personal property ?

It is admitted by all, (hat it does not (unless under peculiar circumstances) mean the heir to real estate. By some, it is said that it means children ; by others, next of kin; and by others, all those who are called to succeed to personal estate by the law (the statute of distributions). Those who are in favour of the meaning first mentioned “ children” say, that this is its vulgar and common meaning, and as it cannot iiave its technical one, it must have this. I think that the premises are incorrect, and even if correct, that the conclusion does not follow; the word heirs, in common conversation, may and very often must be understood, to mean children ; but this arises, not from the word alone, but from the context, the mariner and cause of speaking; for a person to say that another has got an heir, or that lie has heirs, must unquestionably mean, if the speaker meant any *396 thing, that he has a child or children j for, to understand him as communicating something, and at the same time to use the word heir, in its extended sense, is next to im-p0ggjjjje . for títere is not a man in a hundred thousand born, without there being some one to succeed to his property, should he die instantly, particularly to personal property, where foreigners are not excluded. Most of us are born witii innumerable heirs, if so understood, unless therefore, we are speaking of some foreigner, just come among us, and then in regard to real property, or some person whose family connection is unknown, or supposed to be unknown, to the person spoken to, children must be presumed to be meant by the speaker, by the word heirs for we are not born with children— they are an after acquisition ; all of us do not have them at any time, it would be an absurdity to suppose, that the speaker designed to communicate to another, to inform him that another had that which is common to every man in the community, when, by not a very strained construction, a sensible and rational meaning can be attributed to the speaker. I think therefore, that the word heirs, of itself, unaided by any thing else, does not mean children, in common or vulgar conversation ; ■ although in such conversation, it must be so understood, to give to the speaker a rational meaning, or any meaning at all. This arises from what may properly be called the context, the subject; and if the premises are right, I should think the conclusion wrong; for the word was certainly adopted from the law of inheritances, and thereby acquired an analogous meaning, which would, by such construction, be entirely lost. Others say, that it means nextojjdn, admitting the analogy, and contending that blood connection is an essential constituent in an heir. It is admitted, that by the canons of descent in England, that one to succeed as heir, must be of the blood of the ancestor j but he is heir, not because he is pf the blood, but because he is the successor to the estate ..of the dead man. The law has prescribed blood as a *397 qualification ; but the right to succeed, and not the reason wherefore, stamps him with the character of heir. The law prescribed the canon of descent, to point out the successor; the person who succeeds is heir, not because he succeeds by this or that rule, but because he succeeds. And at once to put the argument at rest, it may be asked, does the widow who succeeds to theestate of her deceased husband, under our act of 1801, come to the estate by purchase, or descent ? For she must come in by the one or the other of these two ways ; there is no other. It is very clear that she does not come in .by purchase ; that is, by her own act she is perfectly passive 5 it is thrown upon her by law,' as much as it is thrown upon the un-de, there being no issue, brothers or sisters, or their issue; that is, none whom the law prefers to him. If she does not come in by purchase, it follows, that she comes in by descent. She is therefore, in such case, the heir of the husband — yet she is not of his blood.

Mr. Blacksione, in his discussion of the question, whether the Lord, who comes in by escheat, comes |in by descent or purchase, has caused some confusion on this subject. He could find no canon of descent which pointed to the lord as heir to his tenant $ the lord was passive, at least not active in the character of purchaser, i. e. acquirer, and there was evidently a vague notion floating in his mind, that he is not heir, because not of the blood. At length he takes a* middle conrse, the one most apt to be taken by those who are not sure which course is right, and says that he succeeds by a kind of quasi descent, a kind of caducary succession. The fact is, that he succeeded to the estate of his tenant by neither •, for he succeeded to his estate not at all, for the estate of the tenant expired by his death without heirs capable of succeeding him. It expired by the terms of its own limitation ; for it was to him and his heirs ; when they failed, the lands, not the estate reverted to the grantor, the lord of whom he held them. The lord took the lands again in virtue of that right of reverter, which in law is called a seig-, *398 n0py. He comes in, not under, or representing1 the tc-nant, but above him, and by virtue of a different estate. Exclude the idea of blood, and it is matter of surprise jiQW c0|1](| ^)e doubted, that the widow is not included in the word heir, when applied to personal property. Her claims to the succession, are precisely the same with the next, of kin ; both unknown to the common law, and both given by the same statute.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.C. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/croom-v-herring-nc-1826.