Doty v. Wray

66 Ga. 153
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 Ga. 153 (Doty v. Wray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doty v. Wray, 66 Ga. 153 (Ga. 1880).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.

The following deed was executed by Mrs. Ann Elon:

“State of Georgia — Chatham County.
“This Indenture made at Savannah, state of Georgia, county of Chat-ham, between Mrs. Ann Elon, of the said city of Savannah, county and state aforesaid, of the one part, and Mrs. Ann Pickett, daughter of the said Ann Elon, of the other part, witnesseth that the said Ann Elon, as well for the natural love and affection, and in consideration of the said natural love and affection which she, the said Ann Elon( hath and beareth unto the said Ann Pickett, as also for the better maintenance, support and livelihood of her, the said Ann Pickett, hath [154]*154given, granted, aliened and confirmed, and by these presents doth give, grant, alien and confirm, unto the said Ann Pickett and her three children (lawfully begotten), viz: Ann Brown, and by marriage,-Ann Crane, Mary Pickett and Charles S. Pickett, being the lawful heirs of the said Ann Pickett, all those four negro slaves, viz: Mary, a negro woman, slave, and her three children, viz: Robert, a mulatto man, Adam, a black man, and Catharine, a black girl; also, I do hereby give, grant, enfeoff and confirm, and by these presents do give, grant, alien, enfeoff and confirm, unto the said Ann Pickett and her three children aforesaid, all those two lots of land in the city of Savannah, lying and being in the upper part of Oglethorpe ward, formerly the village of St. Gall, containing-feet in length and-feet in depth, said lots known and designated in the plan of said city by the letters, to-wit: one lot by the letter (J), on which there is a story-and-a-half house now standing in which the said Ann Pickett now lives, occupies and resides in, and, also, the lot adjoining, known and designated in the plan of said city by the lot -letter (L) on which there is a house now standing. To have and to hold the aforesaid 'four negro slaves and the future issue and increase of the female slaves, and to have and to hold the aforesaid two lots of land before described, to them and their lawful heirs, executors, administrators and assigns as hereinafter mentioned, laid down and described and set forth, and subject to the following conditions, restrictions and reservations that is to say, as follows: that the aforesaid four negro slaves named in the Indenture, as well as the two lots of land described above, are to be and shall remain in the full use, occupation and custody of my daughter, Ann Pickett, for and during her natural lifetime, for her own sole and proper use and benefit — nevertheless, by no means whatsoever, to be subject or subjected to the use, uses, control or disposition of her husband or husbands.
“And it is expressly understood, meant, intended and determined, that the said husband or husbands of the said Ann Pickett, are not nor shall not, make, use or control any part or parcel of the aforesaid four negroes and two lots, nor shall he receive any part of the benefit or benefits arising therefrom in any way whatsoever, but to remain immediately under the control of the said Ann Pickett during her natural lifetime, and it is also expressly understood that at her death the said property, and the whole of it, shall remain undivided, and to be placed in the hands and possession of such trustees, executors or administrators as she, the said Ann Pickett, may make, constitute and appoint, until such time as the youngest child of the said Ann Pickett shall come of lawful age, to-wit: Charles S. Pickett, and then, and not till then, shall the said property, to-wit; the four negroes and the two lots, be equally divided between the aforesaid three children, Mary [155]*155Pickett, Charles S. Pickett and Ann Crane, aiid should either die before they should arrive to lawful age, leaving no lawful issue of their bodies, then shall the survivor or survivors be entitled to and receive such portion as the deceased would have been entitled to — and it is also expressly understood that neither of the husbands of the female heirs shall have any control, use or disposition of such portion of the aforesaid property that they or either of them shall or may receive, nor shall it be subject or subjected to him or them, or any control, or debts that he or they may make in any way whatsoever.
“And lastly, it is expressly understood, meant, declared and intended, that should all of the aforesaid children, to-wit: Ann Pickett (Ann Crane), Mary Pickett and Charles S. Pickett, die, leaving no lawful issue, then and in that case, all the aforesaid property so given and granted shall revert and go back to my surviving children, that is to’ say, the surviving children of Ann Elon, to be equally divided among them and their heirs, share and share alike.
“In witness whereof I, the said Ann Elon, have hereto set my hand and seal, at Savannah, this twelfth day of August in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and twenty.
“ (Signed) Ann Elon.” [l. s.]
‘ ‘Signed, sealed and delivered in presence of
“ (Signed) Wm. Miller,
“ (Signed) Wm. C. Barton, j. p.”

Mrs. Ann Elon died in 1820, leaving four children, of whom Mrs. Doty was one, and Mrs. Ann Pickett, the grantee under the foregoing deed, another. Ejectment was brought under the statutory form for the land described in the deed by the son and sole heir of Mrs. Doty against Mrs. Charles S. Pickett, who held under her husband, Charles S., named as a co-grantee in the deed. The son and heir of Mrs. Doty, sued as remainderman under the deed, the three children of Mrs. Ann Pickett having died, leaving no issue at the time of their respective deaths ; and the defendant claimed under the deed of her husband to Hiram Roberts, as trustee for her and her children. Those children died in infancy, and thus she became sole beneficiary under the deed. Pending the suit, Doty, the plaintiff, and Mrs. Charles S. Pickett, the defendant, both died, and the action proceeded in the names of their res[156]*156pective administrators. When Charles S. Pickett became of age there was no division of the lands under the deed of Mrs. Elon, but the other children were dead, or he had bought their interest in the estate. He came to his mn jority in 1834, and executed the deed to Roberts in trust for his wife in 1848 ; and surviving one of his sisters win, died leaving no issue, died himself without issue, in 1857 —the other sister died in 1862, also without issue — Mrs. Ann Pickett herself died in 1845, leaving Charles S. and one daughter surviving her. So that the question is, did Charles S. Pickett take under this deed a vested remainder in fee when he attained his majority? and when he bought the interest of his sister, and survived his mother, was the whole estate his? If this beso, he conveyed it to Roberts in trust for his wife, and her administrator will hold the land; if the remainder did not then vest in him, but he took only an estate for life, unless he left issue, with contingent remainder over to the other offspring of Ann Elon, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover as such contingent remainderman. Leaving out the last clause of the deed, which is the only clause in it which makes any mention of or allusion to the other children of Ann Elon, the grantor, it would be beyond cavil that he took the absolute title ; and it is conceded by the plaintiff in error to be so. Does that clause alter it ? We think not, for by its very words, if Ann Pickett, Ann Crane, Mary Pickett or Charles S.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ga. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doty-v-wray-ga-1880.