Den Ex Dem. Wood v. Sparks

18 N.C. 389
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 N.C. 389 (Den Ex Dem. Wood v. Sparks) 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. Wood v. Sparks, 18 N.C. 389 (N.C. 1835).

Opinion

Gaston, J.,

after stating the case as above, proceeded: —Under the will of Levin Bozman, no estate passed to his executors. The inheritance descended at his death to his heirs-at-law, liable to be divested, upon a sale made by his executors. When a sale should be made as directed, the purchaser would take the estate under and by the devisor. The power was given not to persons by name, but to his executors; but the object of the power was the benefit of the heirs-at-law, and not the furtherance of any duty properly appertaining to the office of executors. It was a pure naked power uncoupled with an interest. Whatever construction of this power might be thought by us best calculated to effect the intention of the testator, the weight of authorities seems to be, that antecedently to the statute of 21st Henry 8th, c. 4, it would not have beén regarded as a power so attached to the office of executor, *391 as that it might be exercised by' one only of them, if he alone accepted the office. Many .inconveniences resulted from the narrow construction which thé Courts thought themselves bound to give to such. powers $ and the preamble to the statute of 21st Henry 8,. c., 4, complains grievously of the evils thereby occasioned. It recites in language of strong reprobation, that many, persons have by their last wills and testaments willed and declared their lands to be sold by their executors, for the payment of their debts, performance of their legacies/necessary and convenient finding of their wives,, virtuous bringing up of their children, and for other charitable deeds; and notwithstanding such trust and confidence so by them put in their executors, some of them, willing to accomplish that trust, have accepted and taken upon ■ them the charge of the said testament, and have been ready to fulfil all things therein contained, and the residue Of them, uncharitably, contrary to the trust reposed in them, have refused to intermeddle in any wise with the execution.of the will, or with the sale of such lands so willed to be sold: and it further recites, that a bargain and sale of such lands, “ after the opinion of divers persons,” can in no wise be good and effectual in the law, unless the .same be made by the whole number of the executors named to and for "the same, by reason whereof the laudable purposes of such testators have been disappointed. .After setting forth these mischiefs, for remedy thereof the statute enacts, that where part of the executors named in any such testament, of any such person so making or declaring any such will of lands to be sold by his executors after his death “ do refuse to take upon him or them the administration and charge of the same testament and last will,” “ then all bargains and sales of such lands so willed-to-be sold by the executors of any testator, as well heretofore made, as hereafter to be made by him or them only that so doth accept, or that heretofore hath accepted and taken upon him or them any such care or charge of administration of any such will, shall be as good and as effectual- in the law, as if .all the residue of the same executors named in the said testament, so refusing the administration of the same *392 testament, had joined in the making of the bargain and sale, &c.” A proviso is annexed, that the act shall not extend to give power to an executor or executors at any time thereafter to bargain, or put to sale any lands, &c., by virtue and authority of any will or testament theretofore made, otherwise than they might do by the course of the common law, afore the making of the act.

The question as to the valid execution of the power depends upon the proper exposition to be given to this statute. On the part of the lessors of the plaintiff, it is insisted, that a sale by less than the whole number of the executors is not thereby legalised, unless those not joining therein have renounced the office of executors before the ordinary. In support of this position, authorities have been cited to show, that the Spiritual Court requires such a renunciation by executors, before it will grant administration with the will annexed, because of their refusal to take the office; and it is argued, that this settled practice shows that nothing less than such a renunciation can be deemed a refusal, and that therefore the statute, when it speaks “ of' a refusal to take the administration and charge of the will,” must be understood to speak of a renunciation — of that solemn act which the Spiritual Court regards as such a refusal. There are many reasons which induce us to believe, that this position is not well founded. The ordinai'y hath no power to grant administration, except in cases of intestacy. If a man make a will, but do not name an executor, the will is not a testament, but'is confided by the ordinary to the care of an administrator by him appointed to see it faithfully executed. If in the will, executors be named, these, by virtue of the will, take the legal interest in the testator’s goods and chattels, and until this interest be released, disclaimed or abandoned, there is no intestacy. In the case of a testament, such a release, disclaimer or abandonment is indispensable, to give the ordinary jurisdiction to appoint an administrator. It is essential, therefore, to the validity of a grant of letters of administration, that they show either that the deceased died intestate, or that he has become intestate, by reason of the death or refusal of the trust, by those whom the *393 deceased named to execute his will. The ordinary hath very properly established certain ' rules' of evidence by which the fact of such refusal may be made out to his .entire satisfaction. The renunciation.of.the office before him is one mode by which it can be clearly testified. It may also be done by a writing addressed to the ordinary and filed or recorded in his Court.

And so it may be by failing to appear to a citation calling on'the executor or executors nominátecb-to' come forward, and accept the executorship. However'made to appear, he.adjudges that the executor or executors have refused to prove the testament. Had the statute contemplated such a renunciation as indispensable, it can scarcely be believed, that it would not have used the appropriate terms, “ refused the probate of the will before the ordinary.” But it alludes not in the slightest degree to the usages or adjudications of the Spiritual Court. It legislates upon a subject- — the devise of lands — over which that Court had no jurisdiction. It purposes to correct what it deems a mischievous doctrine of the Court’s of Common haw in relation to a matter whereof these Courts can take cognizance, and undertakes to make a new law, which is to be there observed. These Courts, in inquiring whether a power given by a devisor had or had not been validly executed, so as to pass his real estate, were not under a necessity to notice what had been done respecting the will . , ct « ■ n /-n T . , . ° in the Spiritual Court. Its probate 'there in no respect affected it as a will of lands. The qualification of the executors ¿Aere was wholly unnecessary to the execution of the powers which the will gave them-, oyer .lands; and their ■renunciation of the office in no respect took away any of those powers, unless from the words of the'will, it appeared .that the powers were given to them simply as executors,

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.C. 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-ex-dem-wood-v-sparks-nc-1835.