Den Ex Dem. Burgwyn v. Devereux

23 N.C. 583
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 N.C. 583 (Den Ex Dem. Burgwyn v. Devereux) 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
Den Ex Dem. Burgwyn v. Devereux, 23 N.C. 583 (N.C. 1841).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

The lessors of the plaintiff claim to be tenants in common with the defendant, by a descent of the premises in dispute from George Pollok; and the defendant, admitting what is equivalent to an actual ouster, if the parties be tenants in common, yet insists, that the premises descended to Frances Devereux alone. The question, therefore, is, who is or are the heir or heirs of George Pollok, in respect of this land ?

Here, it may be as well to say at once, that the answer to that question, and to every other that can be raised as to a descent since 1808, depends, and depends exclusively, upon the act passed in that year, and re-enacted among the Revised Statutes of 1836. That act embraces the whole subject of descents, and, consequently, repealed the law, which previously existed, whether it existed as a part ofthe common law or in the form of a Statute. It is to be seen, therefore, -how the act of 1808 applies to the case before us.

The propositus deed in 1839, leaving no issue; and the present parties claim as his collateral heirs. The case may be simplified by considering that Sarah, who is represented by the lessors of the plaintiff, and was a maternal sister of Mr. Pollok, survived him: so that, upon his death, he may be supposed to have left the two sisters, Mrs. Devereux and Mrs. Burgwyn — the former of the whole blood; and the latter, of the maternal line only. The first thing to be noticed is, that the fifth and sixth sections ofthe act abrogate the incapacity of the half-blood, as such, to. inherit, which had once existed. It is thereby expressly enacted, that collateral relations of the half-blood shall inherit equally with those of the whole blood; and, also, that relations of both lines shall inherit equally in all cases, excepting only two: which are those provided for in the fourth section of the act, namely, first, where the inheritance has been transmitted to the propositus by descent from an ancestor; or, secondly, where it has been derived by gift, devise, or settlement from an ancestor, to *586 whom the person thus advanced (the propositusJ would, in the event oí such ancestor’s death, have been the heir or one of the heirs. In these two cases the fourth section provides, t2ia(. tjje inheritance shall descend to the next collateral relations of the propositus, who are of the blood of the ancestor, from whom it fell or was derived. The effect of the act, therefore, may be shortly stated to be, that purchased estates —in the popular sense of the term, purchase. — descend to the nearest relations, whether of the paternal or maternal line; and that descended estates and certain purchased estates (which the act puts on the same footing with those descended) descend to the nearest relations, of the blood of the ancestor or person from whom the estate moved. Our enquiry is, then, narrowed to the point, whether George Pollok derived this inheritance by one of those peculiar purchases, §numerated in the fourth section, so as to confine the descent from him to the blood of his father, Thomas the elder, and vest the inheritance in Mrs. Devereux. This question has been argued with zeal and at much length, particularly on the part of the defendant; and the court has given an earnest and deliberate attention to every thing that was said. But, after doing so, we all think as we did on the opening of the argument, that the case is not within the fourth section of the act.

Thomas Pollok, the father, owned the land in fee; and in 1777, (when the eldest son was, by law, the heir) he having two sons, Thomas and George, devised the land in fee to George, the second son; and the father died the same year, leaving both of the sons surviving him.

It is to be observed, in the first place, that George did not get this land by descent. It would have been thus transmitted, notwithstanding the will, if he had been the heir of his father. But he was not then, the heir, and could only claim under the will. As, therefore, he was in by de\ ise and could not have claimed as heir to his father, had the latter died intestate, the case is neither within the words or meaning of the Legislature, as it seems to us. The act was intended to provide for every case; and there is no doubt, that it applies to ah estates, whether vested before or after the passage of *587 the act. The period of the acquisition is not at ail material. But the mode of acquisition by the propositus, whether by descent or quasi descent — if the expression may be allowed— determines its quality as an estate descendible to relations a particular line, in exclusion of those of the other. Now, whether an estate be derived by descent or by purchase, is a fact, simply; and that, necessarily, is determined at the time the estate is derived. The fact, that it was derived in the one mode or the other, instantly imparted to the estate, upon its acquisition, the quality, as a descendible estate, of going, Upon the death of the new owner, to all his relations or to a particular line. We can conceive no instance, in which the character of an acquisition,whether by descent or purchasers not indelibly impressed on it at the time it is made. . Why, the very terms that must be used to state a case, prove this. For example, when it is asked, “when and how did George .Pollok get this land?” the case itself answers, that he got it in 1777, not as the heir of his father, but as a purchaser under the will of his father, which was made and went into effect in that year. Some years after the death of the father, a law was, indeed, made, which constituted all the sons heirs. But that law could not make this person, then take by descent that which he had long before taken by devise and purchase. Ballard v. Griffin, 2 No. Ca. Law Rep. 258. The case before us is that of an immediate devise of the inheritance in fee; and in its application to such a case the act is . so clear, that it seems impossible to render it more so by comment. But we deem the cases of gifts and settlements equally plain. The donation of each kind, specified in the fourth section, is one, which has been derived from an ancestor, to whom the person advanced would, in the event of such ancestor’s death, have been the heir or one of the heirs. The donation is, obviously, one which is merely in anticipation of a descent; that is to say, made to a person, who would, in case the donor had not made the donation and had died intestate, have taken the same estate or an estate of inheritance in some form in the same land or some part of it. To what period are we to look to ascertain, whether the donor and donee stood in that relation to each other? We can imagine no other than that, *588 at which the donation was made. Besides the general reason, that the nature of an acquisition is conclusively fixed at the . . time it first accrued, this act itself furnishes evidence that the writer had that principle in his mind, or, more probably, that unconsciously he acted on it from habit. The phrases, “ has been transmitted or has been derived, ” being in the past time, necessarily refer to the period, at which the estate was acquired in one or the other of the modes mentioned. Then the words, “ would have been heir, ” with the like necessity attach themselves to the same period.

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Related

Brown v. Cowper
100 S.E.2d 305 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1957)
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42 S.E.2d 620 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1947)
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Ballard v. . Griffin
4 N.C. 237 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1815)

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.C. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-ex-dem-burgwyn-v-devereux-nc-1841.