Strother v. Folk

115 S.E. 605, 123 S.C. 127, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 29, 1922
Docket11084
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 115 S.E. 605 (Strother v. Folk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strother v. Folk, 115 S.E. 605, 123 S.C. 127, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 264 (S.C. 1922).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court en banc was delivered by

Mr. Chirr Justice Gary.

The provision of the will, out of which this action arose, is as follows:

“It is also my will and desire that all the property both real and which I have willed and bequeathed to said Julia Ann Long or which may accrue to her under said will and testament shall be and remain to her during her natural life and to descend to the heirs of her body, and if she the said Julia Ann Long should die without issue or children of her body the said property to return to my son, Moses Long.”

*133 The following appears in the agreed statement of facts:

“The sole question to be determined in this case is whether or not, under the terms of the, will of J. A. C. Long, deceased, herein attached, the said Mrs. Julia A'. Folk (nee Long) had the right and power .to convey by her de.ed of conveyance unto W. H. Folk and E. H. Folk, the grantees therein, a fee-simple title to the aforesaid tract of land; the plaintiffs’ contention is that the said Julia A. Folk had only a life estate in said tract of land and had no right to convey anything more than a life estate therein; the defendants’ contention is that the said Mrs. Julia A. Folk had the right and power to convey and did convey in and by said deed of conveyance a fee-simple title to said tract of land unto the said W. H. Folk and E. H. Folk, the grantees, in said deed.”

It will thus be, seen that, if the words “heirs of her body” must be construed, under the rule in Shelley’s Case, as creating a fee conditional, then the judgment of the Circuit Court must necessarily be recovered. The only words in the will which are to be relied upon to show that the testator did not use the words “heirs of her body” in their ordinary acceptation as creating a fee conditional are the words “issue or children of her body.” “Issue” is a word of limitation. Williams v. Gause, 83 S. C., 265, 65 S. E., 241. On the other hand, “children of her body” are words of purchase, unless the entire will shows otherwise. The words “and if she the said Julia Ann Long should die without issue or children of her body, the said property to return to my son, Moses Long,” are not to be construed as a part of the granting clause, except in so far as they may throw light upon the sense in which the words “heirs of her body” were used; as an estate cannot be created by implication. Shaw v. Erwin, 41 S. C., 209, 19 S. E., 499. If the words “issue” and “children of her body” are both words of limitation, then there is no inconsistency between them and the words “heirs of her body.” If, on the other *134 band, the word “issue” and the words “children of her body” are both' words of purchase, and refer to distinct clauses, then they are inconsistent with the words “heirs of her body,” which refer to one class only, and this makes their import doubtful.

We here reproduce the following language of another member of this Court, as it brings out clearly the difference in our views:

“The real storm center of the controversy is, as to the effect of this superadded clause upon the question, whether the testator intended that the remainder after the life estate to the ‘heirs of her body’ should constitute a gift to ‘a class of persons to take in succession from generation to generation’ as the heirs of the body of the life' tenant or as a gift to such heirs of the body of the life tenant as answered the description of the ‘issue or children of her body’ at the time of her death, they taking not indefinite succession as heirs of the body of the life tenant, but directly under the will from the testator, as the stock of a new inheritance. . * * * The intention of the testator is made manifest that Julia Ann should take only a life estate; he says so in the plainest terms; he then provides that at her death the estate should descend to the, ‘heirs of her body’; in the very next clause he translates this expression into ‘issue or children of her body.’ He evidently intended that upon the death of Julia Ann the estate should go to her children, and then, thinking that perhaps some of the children might die leaving children, he employed the word ‘issue’ so as to include the grandchildren in that event. He then provides for the contingency of Julia Ann dying without children or issue by a devise over to his son, Moses. The controversy is over the power of this Court to carry that intention into effect. It can be done unless the rule in Shelley’s Case forbids it.”

• This construction practically makes another will in every respect, creates two classes of remainders when one only *135 was intended by the, testator, gives validity to an executory devise that was void for remoteness, as the testator died prior to the act of 1853 (now Section 3551 of the Code of Laws 1912), and is different from the construction adopted by his Honor, the' Circuit Judge;. It is truly said that the construction we have mentioned could be carried into effect unless .the rule in Shelley’s Case forbids it. That is just the trouble. The rule in Shelley’s Case does forbid it. The case of Cureton v. Little (S. C.), 111 S. E., 803, is conclusive of this controversy. In that case the property was devised “to my son, John M. Cureton, Jr., during his natural life, and afterwards to his bodily heirs.” It was-properly held that these words created a fee conditional. We quote as follows from that case:

“The following principles are well established in this state in the construction of wills: ‘When a gift is made in one-clause of a will in clear and unequivocal terms, the quantity or quality of the estate given should not be cut down or qualified by words of doubtful import found in a subsequent clause. To have that effect, the subsequent words should be at least as clear in expressing that intention as the words in which the interest is given.’ Walker v. Alverson, 87 S. C., 60, 68 S. E., 968, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.), 115. ‘Where an estate is given by will in words of clear and ascertained legal significance, it will not be enlarged, cut down, or destroyed by superadded words in the same or subsequent clauses, unless they raise an irresistible inference that such was the intent of the testator.’ Adams v. Verner, 102 S. C., 7, 86 S. E., 211. ‘Where an estate is devised by clear and unequivocal terms, superadded words of doubtful import must be rejected.’ Adams v. Verner, 102 S. C., 7, 86 S. E., 211.”

If these express words describing a life estate were not sufficient to limit the estate of John M. Cureton, it is scarcely reasonable to suppose that the words herein are *136 sufficient to limit the estate of Julia Ann Long, and confine it to a life estate. ' ■

There is another reason why the judgment should be reversed: There are no words in the will, whatever, showing when the children of Julia Ann (even conceding that they were intended to take) were to go into possession or their remainders become vested. Therefore the presumption is that those were to take who were in esse

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.E. 605, 123 S.C. 127, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strother-v-folk-sc-1922.