Melchor v. . Burger

21 N.C. 634
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 21 N.C. 634 (Melchor v. . Burger) 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
Melchor v. . Burger, 21 N.C. 634 (N.C. 1837).

Opinion

Gaston, Judge,

after stating the case as above, proceeded : — Ever since the case of Noyes v. Mordaunt, which was decided in 1706, (2 Ves. 581,) it has been holden for ■an established principle of equity, that where a testator by his will confers a bounty on one person, and makes a disposition in favour of another prejudicial to the former, the *635 person thus prejudiced shall not insist upon his old right, and at the saibe time enjoy the bounty conferred by the will. The intention of the testator is apparent that both dispositions shall take effect, and the conscience of the donee is affected by the condition thus implied, that he shall not defraud the design of the donor by accepting the benefit, and disclaiming the burthen — giving effect-to the disposition in his favour, and defeating that to his prejudice. The donee is therefore put to his election, either to take the thing given, and confirm the will; or retaining what is his independently of the will, to surrender to the disappointed devisees or legatees, so much of what the testator has given him, as will compensate them for the disappointment. It has however been settled in England, at least as early as 1749, that a devise of freehold by one not having legal capacity to devise lands, or not executed according to the solemnities required by law in devises of lands, contained in a will valid as one of personalty, did not impose on the heir disputing its validity an obligation to elect between his rights as heir, and the personal benefits bequeathed by the will. Hearle v. Greenbank, 1 Ves. Sen. 306; 3 Atk. 695; Carey v. Askew, 8 Ves. 492; 1 Cox, 241. Goodrich v. Sheddon, 8 Ves. 481; Thellusson v. Woodford, 13 Ves. 209. This modification of the general doctrine is founded upon the principle that the attempted devise affords no legal evidence of an intention in the testator to devise; or in the language of Lord Eeskine, a devise of real estate was considered a matter of so much solemnity and importance, that the law would accept no proof of the act, except what is required for the validity of the act.” 13 Ves. Jun. 223. The intention not being before the Court, the estate did not appear to have been devised away from the heir, and the will must be read by the Court, as if such devise was not in it. Eminent judges have indeed expressed dissatisfaction with this reasoning,' and have thought, that however ineffectual the attempt to devise, the Court might regard the attempt as indicating an intention to devise, which had failed to have legal effect, as clearly as in the case where the devisor attempts through mistake to devise an estate which .belongs to another person. However this may be, the rule is there *636 settled as a rule of property; and if no more appears than a devise from the heir, and a bequest of personalty to him, in a will sufficiently executed to pass personal, but not sufficiently executed to pass real estate, it is a good will of the personalty ; it is no will as to the lands; there is no implied condition of election; and the heir may keep the lands descended, and also take his legacy'.

We are not aware of any express adjudication in our state in which this doctrine has been declared with respect to devises under our statute; but we know that it has been regarded by the profession as existing here in full force; and we know of several cases, and some of them involving property to a large amount, in which an election might have been implied, but for this supposed rule, and in which it was not attempted to be raised, because of the conviction that it was a rule of property not to/be controverted. We feel ourselves therefore bound so to consider it.

But as a testator may qualify a bounty which he confers by any condition not contrary to law; and as a legatee in such case must take the bounty,-if he take' it at all, subject to the condition which the testator has annexed to the bequest, it was thought that' i'f-.in a will sufficient to pass the personal, but-'pot-to pass the realyeState, the:testator annexes as a condition to a legacy gi!vé&;tf;Íii;s:.!jairra.t-law, that the legatees shall- permit the. p'ersops- :'nafriecl-''in the will to take the lands of the testator, the 90nc|ij.iqri annexed would be effectual, although the devise:'vi’as 'ydfd-; arid the beir must surrender the lands, if he insist • on the legacy. This was held in the case of Boughton v. Boughton, in 1750, by the same eriiinent lawyer, Lord Hardwicke, who decided the case of Hearle v. Greenbank, but the year before.. In that case, by a will not executed according to the statute of frauds, real estate was given to A., rind a legacy to the testator’s heir at law, his grand-darighter, and in the will was an express clause; that if any of his children, or any who might receive benefit by his will, should controvert any part thereof, and not comply with the whole, both as to real and personal estate, they should severally forfeit every claim under his will, and what was given,to them should go to his residuary legatee. The Chancellor determined that this express clause consti *637 tuted the distinction between this and the other cases: that in the other cases where there was no condition expressed in the will, but the Court was to imply a condition on the dispositions in the will, it could notice no dispositions but those which were declared with the formalities prescribed by law ; but where a condition was annexed to a personal legacy, the Court must examine every part of that conditional bequest, let it relate to what it might— to personal or to real estate, or to any other matter whatever. See Boughton v. Boughton, 2 Ves. Sr. 11. This distinction between an express and implied condition is perhaps a subtle one. Sir William Ghaut indeed has observed, that he did not understand why a will, though not executed so as to pass real estate, should not be read for the purpose of discovering in it an implied condition concerning real estate, annexed to a gift of personal property, as it is admitted that it must be read when such condition is expressly annexed to the gift; for thlt if by a sound construction such condition is rightly inferred from the whole instrument, the effect would seem to be the same as if it were expressed in words. Bradie v. Barry, 2 Ves. & Beame, 130. It was also regarded by Lord Kenyon as an unsatisfactory distinction. Carey v. Askew, 1 Cox, 241. And Lord Eldon has said of it, that it was “ such as the mind could not well fasten upon.” Sheddon v. Goodrich,, 8 Ves. 197. Yet it has been uniformly held to be well established, and is recognized as a fixed rule of property in the case of Ker v. Wanehope, 1 Bligh. 23-25.

In the case before us, if we are at liberty judicially to notice all the dispositions made, or attempted in the will, there can be no doubt but that it was the testator’s intention that the defendant should not have any part of his estate, real or personal, except that specifically bequeathed to her.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.C. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melchor-v-burger-nc-1837.