Hauser v. Craft.

46 S.E. 756, 134 N.C. 319, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 8, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 756 (Hauser v. Craft.) 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
Hauser v. Craft., 46 S.E. 756, 134 N.C. 319, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 103 (N.C. 1904).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the case. We decided at the last term in Whitfield v. Garris, 134 N. C., 24, that when property is given to a person absolutely, and if he should die without leaving children, or heirs of his body, then over, the primary devisee takes a fee defeasible on his dying without leaving children, and that the children, if he leave any, take no estate as purchasers under the will by implication. If the first taker dies leaving children and without having disposed of his defeasible estate, the children take from him by descent and they cannot take it by implication as purchasers, unless that was the intention of the testator expressed in the will or to be dearly inferred therefrom. 1 Under-hill on Wills, section 468. We could discover no' such intention of the testator in that case. The rule thus stated also applies where the devise is in the first instance to the parent for life and then over to ulterior devisees if the parent dies without leaving children. But in the latter case it is *323 said that the law will raise an estate in remainder by implication in favor of surviving children upon slight indication of an intention to that effect, and one reason for the rule is that it would be absurd to assume the testator intended that the death of the first taker leaving no children should entitle the devisee who is to take in remainder or by way of execu-tory devise, while the converse, that is, his death leaving a child, will defeat the limitation over without benefitting either parent or child. 1 Underhill on Wills, section 468, p. 623; Kinsella v. Caffery, 11 Ire., Ch. Rep., 154; Ex Parte Rogers, 2 Maddox Ch., 1 Am. Ed., 576. Whether this be the correct principle or not, it is certainly true that if it sufficiently appears from the will the testator so intended, the law will raise an estate by implication in favor of the children in such a case, notwithstanding the estate is not expressly limited to them in the will. We must, therefore, determine in our case whether Katherine ITauser took only a life-estate in the Elder tract of land, which is the property in dispute, or an estate'in fee, and if she took only a life-estate, whether the plaintiffs took an estate in remainder by implication, or if not whether, lastly, they took as heirs of the testator under the ulterior limitation. It is admitted that Katherine Hauser took only a life-estate, if the words in the third item, namely, “Which is to be hers during her natural life only,” should not be confined to the gift of the “meadow land and cartway,” but should be extended to the limitation of the Elder tract. The defendants contend that if the third item of the will is construed as it is punctuated, the qualifying words apply only to the meadow tract and cartway and not to the Elder tract. That a will is couched in ungrammatical language and is incorrectly punctuated are facts of little importance in construing it. The punctuation may in certain cases have some effect in ascertaining the true meaning, and it is said to be a guide, though not a *324 very reliable one, to aid ns in seeking for tbe testator’s intention, bnt tbe latter must always be determined exclusively from tbe words employed by tbe testator, viewed in tbe light afforded by tbe context. Tbe punctuation, or tbe lack of it, is not material and may be omitted or supplied by tbe Court. Commas may be inserted for periods or vice versa, in order to accomplish tbe paramount object, which is tbe ascertainment of tbe testator’s will or meaning. 1 Underbill, supra, section 369. Uut, while this may be done when necessary to effectuate tbe intention of the testator, we do not think that tbe punctuation of tbe third item of tbe will evinces a purpose to' separate tbe qualifying clause from that part of the devise which precedes tbe reference to the meadow land and cartway and to' restrict its operation entirely to tbe latter. It is evident from tbe entire structure of that item of tbe will that tbe testator intended to limit tbe interest of Katherine Hauser in all tbe property described in it to a life-estate. If be bad intended differently be would in some way have indicated bis purpose to give a fee in tbe property other than tbe meadow land and cartway in more explicit language. There is just as much reason for bolding that tbe restrictive words apply to tbe Elder tract of land as there is for construing tbe will so that they may be confined in their operation to tbe meadow land and cartway. Tbe relative pronoun “which” must be understood to refer to all that precedes in that item of tbe will, and especially is this so when tbe clause which it introduces is placed in immediate connection with tbe last provision of tbe item, namely, “and should tbe said Katherine Scott die without leaving any child or children tbe property which I have given to her to be divided among tbe rest of my heirs.” This provision follows tbe clause “which is to be hers during her natural life only” and is joined to it by tbe conjunction *325 “and,” wbicb shows that the testator intended that the two should be taken and construed together, and, if this is done, it is perfectly clear that the testator intended to- give his grand-danghter Katherine Scott a life-estate in the Elder tract. The interpretation we have thus placed upon the item seems to us to be the only natural and reasonable one, and, besides, we are utterly unable to see any good reason why the testator should have given his grandchild an estate for life in the two acres of meadow land and the cartway and a fee in the other property. A careful reading of the item shows that his purpose was to make ample provision for this grandchild, who lived with him and who was dependent upon him, by giving her a farm with slaves to cultivate it and other necessary personal property for its better and more convenient enjoyment, and the meadow land “with the privilege of the cartway to and from it” as a means of ingress and egress was given as an appurtenance to the larger tract, and as being necessary also for its advantageous enjoyment. It is all one devise and bequest, and the use of periods and capitals was not intended to disassociate the different clauses so as to constitute each one of them as the expression of a separate and distinct gift of the property therein described. The defendant’s counsel contended that because of the peculiar punctuation and the use of capitals the restricted clause applied only to the meadow land and cartway; but if we consider the method of punctuation as indicating the intention, there is no reason why that clause should not be as well applied to the horse, bridle and other species of personal property mentioned and described immediately before the meadow land and cartway. They are separated only by semicolons, and the grammatical construction would require the restriction to be extended to them. -

In construing wills, as exactly the same language or form of expression is rarely used, each case must, generally speak *326 ing, be decided upon its own facts, and tbe intention of tbe testator is to be diligently sought for and wben found is to be carried out if not contrary to the law, but tbe intention must be gathered from tbe whole will. We can derive little aid from merely technical rules. In this case it appeal’s that at the time the will was executed Katherine S'cott was living with her grandfather and was unmarried.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 756, 134 N.C. 319, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauser-v-craft-nc-1904.