Patrick v. . Morehead

85 N.C. 62
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 85 N.C. 62 (Patrick v. . Morehead) 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
Patrick v. . Morehead, 85 N.C. 62 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Asi-ie, J.

This case comes up by appeal from a judgment rendered in the court below on a statement of facts agreed upon by counsel in a controversy submitted without action. The statement contains the following clause in the last will and testament of James Patrick, Sen., namely: I give to my gandson James D. Patrick, the plantation known as the old ‘ Iron Works,’ containing about eight hundred acres of land, to hold during his life time, and if it shall so happen that he has any lawful heirs, I give it to them or any of them that he may think proper; and should it so happen that he dies without any lawful issue, for the land to be equally divided between all my male grandchildren.”

The plaintiffs claim that Ja'mes D. Patrick, their father, under the third clause of his grandfather’s will took a life estate in the land, and they, the remainder in fee simple after his death; and that the sheriff’s deed to Morehead and Gilmer conveyed only the interest of James D. Patrick, *65 which terminated at his death on the first of May, 1879. The defendants on the other hand resist this construction of the will, and claim that James D. Patrick by the devise to him acquired an absolute estate in the land, and that they as heirs of James T. Morehead, deceased, have the fee simple title. And we are now called upon to determine the true construction of the above recited clause in the will of James Patrick, Sen.,and to decide whether James D. Patrick took thereby an estate in fee simple or only an estate for life with remainder to his children or descendants.

It is the well settled rule in the judicial construction of wills, that the intention of the testator shall prevail unless it contravenes some established principle of law. It is therefore our duty to ascertain what the intention of the testator was, and to effectuate that intention if warranted by law in. so doing.

There perhaps is no branch of the law that has given rise to more conflicting decisions, or a greater display of legal learning, than the application of the rule in Shelley’s case to the construction of deeds and wills. But fortunately in this case we are not compelled to grope our way through the mist with which the subject has been enveloped by the many clashing decisions, to reach what we conceive to be the correct interpretation of the will under consideration. A few decisions of our own court with some others lead, we think, to a satisfactory solution of the question.

It has been settled upon unquestionable authority, that if an estate be given by will to a person generally with a power of disposition or appointment, it carries the fee; but if it be given to one for life only and there is annexed to it such a power, it does not enlarge his estate, but gives him only an estate for life.

In the case of Jackson v. Robbins, 16 Johnson Rep., 537, the court say: “ We may lay it down as an incontrovertible rule that where an estate is given to a person generally *66 or indefinitely with a power of disposition, it carries a fee, and the only exception to the rule is where the testator gives to the first taker an estate for life only, by certain and express words, and annexes to it a power of disposition. In that particular and special ease, the devisee for life will not take an estate in fee, notwithstanding the distinct and naked gift of a power of disposition of the reversion.”

In this state in the case of Alexander v. Cunningham, 5 Ired., 430, which was a petition for dower, depending upon the construction of a will which read, “ I will to my son, M'. W. •Alexander, all my estate, real and personal, for his use and benefit and then to be divided off and distributed among his children, as he may think proper, that is to say, my land to be used by him and the profits thereof to be to him, but the laud to be by him divided and distributed as he may think proper,” Chief Justice Ruffin in delivering the opinion of the court, said : “ We are of the opinion that the son took but an estate for life, with the power of dividing the land and the other property within his life-time or at his death among his children as purchasers from the testator; and that until such an appointment, the remainder in fee either vested in the children, or descended to the heirs of the testator. It is very dear that inhere there is an express estate for life to one, and a power to him to appoint the estate among certain persons, the first taker gets but an estate for life.” Same principle in Sugden on Powers, 15 Law Lib., 66; Bass v. Bass, 78 N. C., 374.

It is true the word employed in the will in Alexander v. Cunningham was “ children,” but that does not affect the ap-^ •positeness of the authority, for it is evident the testator in this will did not use the words “ lawful heirs” in their technical sense, but as synonymous with issue or children. The father, the brothers and sisters, and aunt of James D. Patrick, were all alive at the date of the will. Several of them were the objects of the testator’s bounty. He knew if James *67 D. died immediately after the publication of his will that his brothers and sisters would be his heirs, and the very male grandchildren, to whom the estate was devised in the event of James D. Patrick’s dying without issue, would have been his heirs, if all others standing in nearer degree had died before him. If be meant heirs general, why say “if it ■should so happen that he has -any lawful heirs,” &c., knowing at the time that the persons were then living who must-be his lawful heirs, in the event of his dying, and that he must continue to have such heirs, so long as those to whom the land was limited in remainder continued to live. The words “ if it shall so happen,” &c., refer to the future, not to the class of heirs the devisee then had, but to a class yet to come into existence, and who could only be composed of his lineal descendants. If this be so, and we think it is too plain to admit-of controversy, then the will should be construed, as reading, I give unto my grandson, James D. Patrick, the plantation, &c., to hold during his life-time, and if it should so happen that he has any heirs of his body, I give it to them, or any of them that he may think proper, &e. And if the devise had stopped with the words “ I give it to them,” it would have been a case clearly falling within the rule in Shelley’s case, and by operation of the act of 1784, the defendants would have a title in fee simple. But the super-added words “ or any of them that he may think proper,” have an important bearing upon the question of interpretation, and we think prevent the application of the rule.

In Allen v. Pass, 4 Dev. & Bat., 77, Judge GastoN used the, following language: “ Before the application of the rule in Shettey’-s case, it is always proper first to ascertain whether, on the true interpretation of the words of the gift, there is a limitation of the inheritance in remainder to the heirs, or to the heirs of the body, of one to whom a precedent estate is given — such a limitation does exist when the limitation is to them in the quality of heirs

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.C. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-v-morehead-nc-1881.