Fellowes v. . Durfey

79 S.E. 621, 163 N.C. 305, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 621 (Fellowes v. . Durfey) 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
Fellowes v. . Durfey, 79 S.E. 621, 163 N.C. 305, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 172 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

Clark, C. J.

The decision of this case affects the present control and. custody of a large amount of property, and to a lesser extent its ultimate destination, for the will of Mrs. Tucker substantially divides it equally among her children, and the children of a deceased son, share and share alike, but with the exception of a cash devise to each and some personal property, gives her children the annual interest only, and devises the principal of each share in trust to be divided *309 among the grandchildren at the death of their mothers. The will of Florence P. Tucker is not presented for construction, but the fact that the bulk of the principal of the estate is thus tied up during the lifetime of her children, who are to receive merely the interest, is the ground of the action on the. part of the plaintiffs, who contend that the property was not devised to her by her husband in fee, and that the estate should be divided at this time.

The elementary rule for the construction of wills is that every will shall be construed to effectuate the intent of the testator,- and that this intention must be gathered from the terms of the will itself. The testator was a man of large estate and of high intelligence, a graduate of the State University, and, as the will itself states, it is written entirely in his own handwriting and is dated fourteen years prior to his death.

The language of the will is explicit, and the testator’s intention is very clearly expressed, in these words: “I give, devise, and bequeath to my dear wife, Florence Perkins Tucker, all of my estate, real and personal, wherever located or however held; or all that I may acquire or hold at the time of my death, of whatever nature or description then belonging to me. I desire that my wife shall take, hold, and own, just as I now hold and 'own, or shall hold and own at the date of my death. I declare her interest in my estate, real and personal, shall be as absolute as my own, and not to be considered or taken as a trust, technically so called, to be enforced by the judgment or decree of any court other than her own conscience, judgment, and affection shall prompt her to so regard it.

These words are so clear and peremptory that we cannot conceive that the testator meant other than to devise his entire property to his' wife to “hold and own just as he held and owned, or should hold and own it at the .day of his death,” and that “her interest in his estate, real and personal, should be as absolute as his own, and not to be considered or taken as a trust, technically so called, to be enforced by the judgment or decree of any court other than her own conscience, judgment, and affection should prompt her. to so regard it.”

There is nothing that follows in this will which ean shake- *310 or throw a doubt upon this so clear expression of the testator’s intention, wbieb was declared to be to vest the estáte “as absolutely in bis wife as the testator held it at bis death,” and’by anticipation, forbids any construction of the will which should hold its terms as ‘giving her an interest as trustee and not absolutely.

The next paragraph in the will is an explanation to his children of the reason why he has thus devised the estate absolutely to his wife. He then enjoins upon her to reserve to herself the homestead and sufficient means for the proper support of herself and family. Counsel for the plaintiffs place ■emphasis upon the word “enjoin.” But with the context it is merely the expression of solicitude and a desire that his wife should not out of affection for her children strip herself of a sufficient support and maintenance.

The next paragraph of the will is advice to his wife as to the method of making advancements, which he naturally and evidently expected she would 'make to the children, and that the children shall be charged for such advancements at the market value at the time, and, further, he expresses the desire that the support and education of the children shall not be regarded as an advancement.

The next paragraph provides that in event his wife should marry (which event did not occur), the property should be divided between .her and his. children according to the statute of distribution and by the method he suggested. In short, the testator gave his wife a fee in his estate, defeasible on the contingency of her marriage.

The next paragraph of his will appointed his wife sole executrix without security or bond, and expresses a desire that she will avail herself of the advice of his brother, William (who predeceased him), in the management of the property and the investment of surplus funds, adding a desire that his interest in the mercantile firm of which he and his brother were members should remain unchanged unless his wife should find good reason for a change, which was left entirely to her judgment. This is the whole will.

*311 Tbe very able and learned counsel on both, sides who argued this cause have cited us to a very large number of cases. But we do not think that they can add to the understanding of this will, which is the clear expression of his intentions as to the disposal of his property, by an educated, intelligent gentleman who knew how to make himself understood in other matters and whose words in this important matter admit of no doubt or ambiguity.

Citations of the decisions of many courts as to other wills, whose language is more or less similar to that here used, cannot aid us, for in few of them, if any, has the intention to confer a fee been contested when so clearly expressed as in this case.

In Griffin v. Gommanchr, ante, 230, the devise to the widow was of all the testator’s estate, “with power to give and devise the same after her death to our beloved children and grandchildren; that inasmuch as they are and should be our lawful heirs,' and that they are equally our own and well beloved by each of us, as their joint parents, she has the same right of distribution of our estate as I have, knowing no partiality or discrimination in the same.” We held that the widow held the property in fee, and that the rule applicable was clearly stated in Borden v. Downey, 35 N. J. L., 77: “Where an estate for life is expressly given and a power of disposition is annexed to it, in such case the fee does not pass under such devise, but the naked power to dispose of the fee. It is otherwise in case there is a gift generally of the estate, with a power of disposition annexed. In this latter case the property itself is transferred.”

In Jackson v. Robbins, 16 Johns. (N. Y.), 538, it is held to be settled law that “where an estate is given to a person generally, or indefinitely, with power of disposition, it carries a fee, and the only exception to the rule is where the testator gives to the first taker an estate for life only, by certain and express words, and annexes thereto a power of disposal; in that special and particular case the devisees will not take the estate in fee.” This case was cited and approved in Bass v. Bass, 78 N. C., 374. To same effect, Patrick v. Morehead, 85 *312 N. C., 62; McKrow v. Painter, 89 N. C., 437; Parks v. Robinson, 138 N.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 621, 163 N.C. 305, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fellowes-v-durfey-nc-1913.