Jones v. . Myatt

69 S.E. 135, 153 N.C. 225, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 135 (Jones v. . Myatt) 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
Jones v. . Myatt, 69 S.E. 135, 153 N.C. 225, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 55 (N.C. 1910).

Opinion

MANNING, J.

The rights of the parties depend, first, upon the proper construction of the following items in the will of Elizabeth T. Jones: “Second. I devise that the negroes be kept together on the plantation and the farm be carried on in the same way as it was in my lifetime, until Nancy P. Jones shall marry or become of twenty-one years of age, or either Needhan P. Jones or Alfred Jones shall become of twenty-one years of age, then the property, both real and personal, shall be equally divided between them.

“Third. I devise that one-half of-each distributive share to my children, Nancy P. Jones, Needham P. Jones and Alfred Jones, as d directed above, shall be settled upon each one of my children, which shall always and at all times be free from all claims of any and all persons, so that they shall have the use of said half of each one’s distributive share during their natural life, and at their death be equally divided between their children, and if either of them shall die and leave no children or no will (which power I give either of them over said one-half of each distributive share to will), then the said half distributive share shall go to the living child or children.” The will was written in 1850, and, upon the death of .the testatrix in 1864, was duly admitted to probate. The three children of the testatrix were then minors and unmarried. The property of the testatrix in her negroes was, soon after her death, swept away by the stern command of “grim visaged war,” and the case presents for determination solely the disposition of her lands. The first contention of the defendant Myatt is that by item 2 the testatrix *227 devised ber real and personal property to ber three children to be equally divided between them, and that by the use of the words, “distributive share,” in item 3, the testatrix limited the property disposed of under that item to personal property. We do not think this construction properly interprets the intention of the testatrix as manifested by the other words of the will. It may here be stated that the children of Elizabeth T. Jones are dead, each leaving children, except Mrs. Nannie P. Jones, who is living and has children, and the plaintiffs are the children of Alfred Jones, and neither of them exercised the power of disposition by will, each dying intestate. While it is undoubtedly true that the words, “distributive share,” ordinarily refers to personal property, and “distributee” denotes the person or persons upon whom such property devolves by act of law in cases of intestacy (Revisal, secs. 132, 144, 145, 155; Boyd v. Small, 56 N. C., 39 ; Henry v. Henry, 31 N. C., 278; 3 Words & Phrases Judicially Defined, 2133, 2134, 2135), yet, as is said in Schonler on Wills (2 Ed.), sec. 470, “technical words are liable to other explanatory and qualifying expressions in the context which discloses the testator’s actual intention; and where a different meaning is fairly deducible from the whole will, the technical sense must bend to the apparent intention. In short, the testator’s intention, as gathered from the will,. shall prevail against the technical meaning of words or phrases so far as may consist, at least, with the rules of sound policy.” So in Gardner on Wills, p. 403, the author says: “So words intrinsically applicable to personal estate may, by force of the context, be made to include land. This frequently happens where an expression is evidently used as referential to and synonymous with an anterior word, clearly descriptive of real estate, in which ease its extent of operation is measured, not by its own inherent strength, but by the import of its synonym. Even the expression ‘personal estates,’ and it being clear beyond all possibility of doubt upon the face of the will that the testator meant by these words (not what is ordinarily understood by them but) such real property over which he had an absolute personal power of disposition and control, we have no hesitation in saying that the freehold passed by this description.” In Hope v. Taylor, 1 Burrows, 268, Lord *228 Mansfield beld that the word “legacy” in the will construed in that case, extended to and embraced land. No other word has so fixed and determinate meaning in English jurisprudence, yet it was held, in the case just cited, decided in 1757, in order to give effect to the intention of the testator, that “a different construction has been sometimes put upon the very same words, as applied to money and lands, in order to support the intent of the testator.” In Burwell v. Mandeville’s Executors, 2 How. 560 (577 and 578), Judge Story says: “It is said that, admitting such to be his intention (disposal of all his estate), the testator has not carried it into effect; because the residuary clause declares John West his ‘residuary legatee’ only, and not his residuary devisee also; and that we are to interpret the words of the will, according to their legal import, as confined altogether to the residue of the personal estate. This is, in our judgment, a very narrow and technical interpretation of the words of the will. The language used by the testator shows him to have been an unskilful man and not versed in legal phraseology. The cardinal rule in the interpretation of wills is, that the language is to be interpreted in subordination to the intention of the testator, and is not to control that intention, when it is clear and determinate.” So the Court held that if the words, “residuary legatee,” were restrained to the mere personalty, the intention of the testator would be defeated, and they were enlarged to embrace realty as well. The decisions of our Court are in entire harmony with these authorities. Foil v. Newsome, 138 N. C., 115; Page v. Foust, 89 N. C., 447, and cases cited. Therefore it seems to us clear that the testatrix, Mrs. Elizabeth T. Jones, intended by the use of the words “distributive share,” in the third item of her will, to mean both real and personal property; she uses the words “devise,” “as directed above,” referring to the property' devised in the second item, and in our opinion to restrain the meaning to personal property would' defeat the general scheme of the testatrix in the disposal of her estate. It clearly appears from these two items (quoted above) that the testatrix devised her entire estate to her three• children in equal shares; that she fixed the time of actual division, to-wit, the marriage of her only daughter or the arrival at the age of twenty-one of *229 any one of ber three children, and that, upon division, each of her children should own one-half of the one-third (his or her equal part) in fee, but should, in the other one-half of his share, have a life estate only, with remainder in fee to his or her children, to b.e equally divided at the parent’s death among them. The remainder in fee could be defeated by the exercise of the power of disposal by will, but this was not done.

It also appears in the case that Nancy Price died in 1814, leaving a last will and testament, which was duly admitted to probate, in which she devised in fee and in equal parts, a large body of land in Wake County to her three grandchildren, Nancy P. Jones, Needham P. Jones and Alfred Jones — the children of Elizabeth T. Jones. These lands contained 1,526 acres; the lands devised under the will of Elizabeth T. Jones contained 1,230 acres. By the will of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 135, 153 N.C. 225, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-myatt-nc-1910.