Martin v. . Knowles

142 S.E. 313, 195 N.C. 427, 1928 N.C. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 4, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 142 S.E. 313 (Martin v. . Knowles) 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
Martin v. . Knowles, 142 S.E. 313, 195 N.C. 427, 1928 N.C. LEXIS 112 (N.C. 1928).

Opinion

Stacy, C. J.

Plaintiff, Sallie Jane Martin, derives title to the tract of land sought to be conveyed, the locus in quo, by deed from Albert D. Dail and wife, and, on the facts agreed, the title offered was properly made to depend upon the construction of said deed.

The parties are designated in the premises as “Albert D. Dail and his wife, Lucy ~W. Dail, parties of the first part; and Sallie Jane Martin and her children, parties of the second part.” The granting clause and other parts of the deed are as follows: “Said parties of the first part, for and in consideration of ten dollars paid by the party of the second part, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have bargained and sold and by these presents do bargain, sell and convey unto said party of the second part a life estate therein, and then to- her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, a certain tract of land (description not in dispute).

“It is the purpose of this deed to convey the above tract of land to Sallie Jane Martin during her lifetime, then to her heirs in fee simple, forever.

*429 “To have and to bold tbe aforesaid tract of land, and all privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging, to tbe said parties of tbe second part, their heirs and assigns, to their only use and behoof.”

Tbe record is silent as to whether there were any children of Sallie Jane Martin in esse at the time of the making of this deed, or as to whether she has ever had any children. However, under the view we take of the conveyance, the facts in this respect, whatever they may be, are not deemed material.

Plaintiffs contend that under the foregoing deed, Sallie Jane Martin holds a fee-simple title to the tract of land sought to be conveyed; while the defendant contends that, under said deed, the plaintiff, Sallie Jane Martin, took only a life estate in the property thereby conveyed. It was agreed that judgment should be entered for plaintiffs, or for the defendant, according to the view the court should take as to the contentions of the parties with respect to the proper construction of this deed.

It is manifest, we think, viewing the instrument in its entirety, that, under the rule in Shelley’s case, this deed conveys to Sallie Jane Martin a fee-simple estate to the land described therein. Welch v. Gibson, 193 N. C., 684, 138 S. E., 25; Benton v. Baucom, 192 N. C., 630, 135 S. E., 629; Hampton v. Griggs, 184 N. C., 13, 113 S. E., 501; Crisp v. Biggs, 176 N. C., 1, 96 S. E., 662; Nichols v. Gladden, 117 N. C., 497, 23 S. E., 459. The use of the word “children” in naming the party of the second part was evidently an inadvertence.

One of the clearest statements, if not the clearest exposition, of the rule in Shelley’s case, to be found anywhere, appears in Vol. I Hayes’s Conveyancing (5 ed.), 542-553, published in 1840 by William Hayes, Esq., eminent English barrister and author, from which we quote somewhat at length, as this work, if not out of print, is no longer' readily obtainable on the market. The explanation ought to prove helpful to the profession, as well as to students of the subject.

Mr. Hayes says: “The rule in Shelley’s case says, in substance, that if an estate of freehold be limited to A., with remainder to his heirs, general or special, the remainder, although importing an- independent gift to the heirs, as original takers, shall confer the inheritance on A., the ancestor. An attempt will now be made to develop the leading principles of this rule, than which, when divested of all extraneous matter, no rule of law is more simple or certain.

“I. If the rule in question had not been adopted, land might have been limited for a particular estate of freehold (as to one in tail, for life, pur auter vie, etc.), with remainder to the heirs of the body, or heirs general, *430 of the freeholder, which remainder, since nemo est hares viventis, must have been contingent during his life, but, if not defeated by the determination, in his lifetime, of his particular estate, would have vested, on his death, in the person or persons then answering the description of his heir or coheirs special or general. Thus the law would have stood. If not, why was the rule instituted?

“II. The rule assumes and founds itself upon two preexisting circumstances — a freehold in the ancestor, and a remainder to the heirs. The absence of either of these ingredients repels the application of the rule; their concurrence irresistibly invites it. When the rule supposes the secohd limitation to be a remainder, it plainly excludes — 1, the case of limitations differing in quality, the one being legal and the other equitable ; 2, the case of limitations arising under distinct assurances; and, 3, the case of an executory limitation, by way of devise or use; and, consequently, upon principle, the case of a limitation arising under an appointment of the use; — but authority seems to have established an anomalous exception in regard to appointments. Again, as the second limitation must be a remainder to the heirs, it follows, that, with limitations to sons, children, or other objects, to take, either as individuals or as a class, under what is termed a descriptio personae, as distinguished from a limitation embracing the line of inheritable succession, the rule has no concern whatever. In order to find whether the second limitation is a remainder to the heirs or not, we must resort to the general rules and principles of law. The rule being a maxim of legal policy, conversant with things and not with words, applies whenever judicial exposition determines that heirs are described, though informally, under a term correctly descriptive of other objects, but stands excluded whenever it determines that other objects are described, though informally, under the term heirs. Thus, even the word children, aided by the context, or the word issue, uncontrolled by the context, may have all the force of the word heirs, and then the rule applies; while the word heirs, restrained by the context, may have only the force of the word children, and then the rule is utterly irrelevant. These are preliminary questions, purely of construction, to be considered without any reference to the rule, and to be solved by, exclusively, the ordinary process of interpretation. This point, kept steadily in view, would have prevented infinite confusion.

“III. The operation of the rule is two-fold: first, it denies to the remainder the effect of a gift to the heirs; secondly, it attributes to the remainder the effect of a gift to the ancestor himself. It is, therefore, clear that the rule not only defeats the intention, hut substitutes a legal *431

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.E. 313, 195 N.C. 427, 1928 N.C. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-knowles-nc-1928.