Hester v. . Hester

37 N.C. 330
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 37 N.C. 330 (Hester v. . Hester) 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
Hester v. . Hester, 37 N.C. 330 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

GastoN, J.

The most important question, arising upon the interpretation of this exceedingly imperfect and almost unintelligible will, is the construction of the bequest of *334 “£100 to the testator’s brothers’and sisters’ children.” Three constructions are presented to us, the first that it is a gift of £100 to each of these children: the second, that it is a gift of £100 to each family of children of a brother or sister; and the third, that it is a gift of one £100 to the testator’s nephews and nieces equally to be divided between them. The testator, who is admitted to have been a man of. large fortune, commences his will by making a provision for his wife. He gives to her absolutely 12 slaves, and $500 in silver, and the beneficial use of all his other property, real and personal, for life. Then, after making some specific devises of land and a specific bequest to Nancy Huddleston of a negro girl for life, and after her death to the heirs of her body, he thus expresses himself: “ Item — my will is, after the death of my wife and the negroes given her be taken out, that all the rest of my negroes be sold, and all my stock of horses, cattle, sheep and hogs, my household and kitchen furniture, and also all my land that I have not given away, and all my ‘bonds and money on hand, and out of the proceeds arising therefrom, my will is, that I give one hundred pounds to my brothers’ and sisters’ children, to be equally divided amongst them children that are alive. I except, (here the testator names five or six) for they are good for nothing. After this is done, if there are funds left, my will is that $500 be raised and given to some promising young man of good talents and of the Baptist order, at the discretion of my executors. This being done and my just debts paid, and there be a over-plus left, my will is, that it be equally divided amongst my brother Francis Hester’s children. This being done and after the death of my wife, my will is, that my old man Sha-drach be set free.” To this will is subjoined a codicil, wherein, after giving to his wife the half of his household goods and furniture absolutely, and a few other bequests to his friends, he proceeds thus : “ After this being done, I want all my bonds collected and my funds on hand, and put out at interest during my wife’s lifetime, and then to be distributed as hereto directed. My will is, that there are some of my brother’s heirs is owing me, and I have their notes. I wish that to be taken out of their rateable part of the hun *335 dred pounds, and then make the division, counting these notes so much of their part.” The testator left surviving him about seventy nephews and nieces, being the children respectively of his eight brothers and sisters. The fund, out of which the legacy to these children is directed to be paid, is amply sufficient for the payment to each of £100. Some of the notes referred to in the codicil, as being due to the testator from some of his brothers’ heirs, are for much larger sums than the pittance of the £100 which they would be entitled to receive, if the £100 is to be divided, per capita, among all the children of the testator’s brothers and sisters.

Waiving all objections to the admissibility of extraneous evidence, as to the amount of the fund and the number of the legatees, upon a question of mere construction, it cannot be doubted but that such evidence never can change the operation of legatory words, which have a clear and precise meaning. The will is the law which the testator is permitted to make for the disposition of his property. He must be presumed to understand his own meaning, and where he does speak unambiguously, those whose duty it is to execute this his law, must understand him to mean what he has said.— It is the intention, which the will expresses, that the law carries into effect, and collateral evidence is not permitted to introduce an intention into the will, which, with the aid of that collateral evidence, the will does not express. Admitting too, as we certainly do admit, that in construing any clause of a will, we are not only at liberty, but are bound, to take into consideration every other part of it, to see if something be not there found which either directly or by plain inference qualifies or explains the sense of the clause to be construed, yet we hold it to be undoubted law, that an express and unequivocal disposition of property cannot be controlled, by any inference from the context, of a probable oversight or mistake of the testator in that disposition. His meaning, once explicitly declared, cannot be changed by any inference of a different meaning, unless such inference be necessary and beyond doubt. It is not pretended that, by an adherence to these rules, courts will ascertain in every case what a testator actually does mean ; but they are deemed, upon *336 the whole, rules best calculated for ascertaining the meaning of testators, and there is no medium between adherence to the established rules of interpretation and the arbitrary discretion of Judges.

Nowthedispositionto be construed is perse, and to a certain extent, perfectly explicit. “ Out of the proceeds arising therefrom, my will is, that I give one hundred pounds to my brothers’and sisters’ children, to be equally divided amongst them children that are alive.” Upon this there is nothing left for construction, unless it be, what is the time referred to, at which the children, amongst whom the division is to be made, should be alive. Fix that time when you may, at the death of the testator, or at the time of the division, so as to determine which of these children are meant, and then the language ¡S' as precise as any that could be used. The sum given is £100.. It is given to the children of the testator’s brothers and sisters,.and the sum so given is to be equally divided between those children alive at a particular time. The amount of the gift — the persons to whom it is given, and the manner in which these persons shall divide the thing given — are all stated. Every one of the children of his brothers and sisters, except those expressly excluded by the will, or who shall not be alive at the time prescribed by the testator, is to have an equal part with every other child in the division of this sum of £100, and no other interpretation can be adopted without doing violence to the language here used. There is no other part of the will, which furnishes a necessary inference of an oversight or mistake of the testator in the language used. In the codicil, taking notice that some of his brothers’ children owe him, he directs that the amount of their debts shall be deducted “ out of their rateable parts of the £100,” and the debts to be deducted exceed their rateable parts of £100, if no more than that sum is given to all of them collectively. Hence it is inferred, that a greater legacy is given to each than the a-mountof his debt, because a larger debt cannot be deducted from a smaller legacy.

If the clause to be construed were really ambiguous, this argument might be entitled to much weight; but it is much *337 easier and safer to give to the codicil an explanation, which shall reconcile it to the plain text of the will, than it is to overrule that plain text by a rigid adherence to the letter of the codicil.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.C. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hester-v-hester-nc-1842.