Pollard v. . Slaughter

92 N.C. 72
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 92 N.C. 72 (Pollard v. . Slaughter) 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
Pollard v. . Slaughter, 92 N.C. 72 (N.C. 1885).

Opinion

Asi-ie, J.

This was an action to recover land, tried before Avery, Judge, at the February Term, 1884, of Wake Superior Court.

A jury trial was waived and the action submitted to the decision of the Court. The plaintiff claimed the land in controversy under the will of Berry Surles, which said will is as follows, to-wit:

“First, I give and bequeath to John Pollard, one negro girl named Jane, to him and his lawful heirs begotten of his body; *73 dying intestate, such to return to Caswell Pollard and Thomas Slaughter, or their lawful heirs begotten of their bodies.

“Then second, I give Caswell Pollard one negro girl by the name of Hannah, to him and his lawful heirs begotten of his body, dying without such, to return as above directed.

“ Thirdly, I give to Thomas Slaughter, one negro girl named Pat, to him and his lawful heirs begotten of his body, dying without such, to return to John and Caswell Pollard, or their lawful heirs begotten of their body, and the balance of my land and negroes to be equally divided between John Pollard, Caswell Pollard and Thomas Slaughter, after paying all my just debts; with this exception, Buck, it is my desire that he be sold to a speculator, and it is my desire that all of my stock of all kinds to be sold and equally divided between them as above stated, also my money and notes to be divided in the manner above stated, equally, my three sons which is named in this will. It is my desire if they all should die without such heirs, to return to my brothers and sisters or their lawful heirs.”

It was admitted that John Pollard, one of the devisees, died, leaving no issue of his body, and his interest in said land was divided between Caswell Pollard and Thomas Slaughter, by a decree of the Superior Court of Wake county, and that Thomas Slaughter, on the-day of-, 18 — , died, leaving no issue of his body, but leaving a widow, the defendant in this action.

The defendant, in her defence to the plaintiff’s action set up as a counter-claim that she "was entitled to dower in the land in controversy, as the Avidow of Thomas Slaughter, who was seized thereof at his death of an estate of which her issue might have been heirs, and demanded- judgment that she have dower allotted to her in the same.

The Court rendered, judgment in behalf of the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.

The case was argued in this Court at considerable length and with great ability by counsel on both sides, and the only question *74 mooted by counsel was, whether the plaintiff was entitled to dower in the lands described in the complaint.

Both parties claim under the will of Berry Surles, and the question in controversy depends upon the construction of the will. The plaintiff contends that the proper construction of the will is, that the same conditions and limitations attached by the testator to the personal estate apply as well to the devises, and that upon the death of either, John Pollard, Caswell Pollard or Slaughter, without heirs of his body at the time of his death, his share passed to the survivors, and upon the death of another of the devisees without heirs of his body, his share went to the last survivor with the accrued interest of him who first died, because the testator directed that upon the death of all the named devisees, without such issue, the whole estate should go over to his brothers and sisters, and that when either one of the devisees died without having issue, his estate at once ceased by the limitations to the survivor, and the estate ceasing, all the incidents of the estate, such as dower, ceased with it.

The defendant insisted, that conceding the construction contended for by the plaintiff to be correct, that, by the will and the operations of the act of 1784, (Code, sec. 2180,) a fee simple estate was vested in each of the devisees, to be defeated by the happening of the contingency of dying without heirs of the body, and when one of them died, without having had issue, leaving a widow, she. would be entitled to dower, because her husband had beeu seized of an estate of inheritance in the law, during the coverture, to which any child she might have had by him would have been heir. If the construction contended for by the plaintiff is not the proper interpretation of the will, then the only other construction of which it is susceptible, is that the devise in the will vested in each of the devisees an absolute estate in fee simple, without any of the conditions or limitations annexed to the bequests of personalty.

But in the view we take of the case, it is needless to decide which is the proper construction, and we, therefore, express no *75 opinion upon that point, for whichever way it is taken, in our opinion the defendant is entitled to dower.

From the leading and most reliable authorities upon the subject of a widow’s right of dower, the criterion for determining in any case whether she is entitled to dower, is whether her husband was seized of such an estate during the coverture, as any child she might have by him could by possibility take it by descent. Littleton in 1 Thomas’ Coke, sec. 53, page 450, lays down the rule to be, in “ any case where a woman takes a husband seized of such an estate in tenements, &c., so as by possibility it may hapnen that the wife may have issue by her husband, and that the same issue may by possibility inherit the same tenements of such an estate as the husband hath, as heir to the husband, of such tenements she shall have her dower — not otherwise.”

The same rule is laid down by Blackstone, who adds that if the land abides in him (the husband) for the interval of but a single moment it seems that the wife shall be endowed. 2 Bh, 132. To the same effect are the opinions of Scribner, in his work on Dower, and Washburn on Real Property.

Perhaps there is no subject in the law which has given rise to a greater diversity of opinion and elicited more learned disquisitions than the question involved in this case, whether the widow of one to whom by executory devise an estate is given in fee simple, but if he should die without issue, then over to another in fee, is entitled to dower.

The first and leading English adjudication on this subject was the case of Buckworth v. Thirkell, 3 Bos. and Pull., 652, note. The facts in that case were substantially that an estate by execu-tory devise was given to M. B. in fee simple in the event she should attain the age of twenty-one, or her marriage. Upon the happening of either event she was to take an estate in fee simple. But in case she should die before attaining the age of twenty-one and without having issue, in that event the estate was limited over. She married one Hansard, had a child by him, the child died, and then she died under the age of twenty-one, without *76 leaving issue. The case was twice argued in the King’s Bench, and after due consideration, it was held, that the husband of M. B. was entitled to his ourtesy. The principle there decided after such careful consideration was, that the determination of an estate by operation of an executory devise,

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.C. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-slaughter-nc-1885.