Templeton v. Walker

24 S.C. Eq. 543
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 24 S.C. Eq. 543 (Templeton v. Walker) 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
Templeton v. Walker, 24 S.C. Eq. 543 (S.C. 1850).

Opinion

WaRdlaw, Ch.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Stephen Phillips, by voluntary deed, gave to his daughter, [548]*548Polly Phillips, afterwards Polly Templeton, and her future heirs of her body, two negro girls, Darkes and Sealeyto his daughter Flower Phillips a negro boy named Peter; to his daughter Elizabeth Nix a negro boy named Jeffree, and to his three daughters, above mentioned, a negro woman named Abigail ; and, after some provisions not now in question, proceeds to declare “ the above property is to my said daughters and the heirs of their body — now if either of the above named girls should die without any lawful heirs of their body, her property shall go to the surviving children, and so on.” Polly Temple-ton died in 1847, leaving her husband, Alexander Templeton, two children, the plaintiffs, and two grand-children, the issue of a deceased daughter, the defendants, who would be the distri-butees of her estate if she died intestate. The husband, Alexander Templeton, on 2d August, 1849, executed a deed,-whereby he released all his interest in the negroes, then twenty in number, given by the deed of Stephen Phillips to his daughter Polly, to the plaintiffs and defendants, in the proportions of one-third to each of the plaintiffs, and of one-third to the defendants to be equally divided between them. The bill prays partition of the negroes, according to the scheme of this last deed.

The Court of Appeals in Equity has decided, on the construction of the deed of Stephen Phillips, that the issue of Polly Templeton took as purchasers, after her life estate; and has referred to this Court the single question, whether the property shall be divided amongst said issue per stirpes or per capita.

It is well said by Lord Eldon, in Lady Lincoln vs. Pelham, (10 Ves. 175,) a case somewhat analagous to the present, that “ it is better to adhere to a settled construction than to come to a decision having a tendency to shake that which forms a rule of construction, and which may, in practice, have been acted upon in many cases.” Our first inquiry, then, should be, whether such words as are now in question have received a settled construction ” in this State. In the case of Campbell vs. Wiggins, (Rice’s Eq. 10,) in December, 1838, it was decided by three Chancellors against the opinion of the Chancellor on the circuit, that, under [549]*549a grant by Act of Assembly to the “ heirs at law of John Taylor and Blake Wiggins,” all who could bring themselves within the terms of the description were entitled to take per capita; and the general doctrine was announced that when the persons intended to take under a grant or devise are described as a class, without designating the proportions in which they are to take, all are equally entitled who can bring themselves within the description.” In Lemacks vs. Glover, (1 Rich. Eq. 141,) in January, 1845, where the limitation was to the “ heirs of the body ” of a tenant for life, the question as to the proportions in which the designated persons should take the estate, was referred to the ten Judges in the Court of Errors, but no authoritative decision was attained — five Judges, including one of the majority in Campbell vs. Wiggins, being of opinion that the distribution should be regulated by our Act of 1791, and five Judges being of opinion that the estate should be equally divided amongst all the objects of the gift. In Keitt vs. Houser, (M. S. May, 1846,) the Equity Court of Appeals decided according to the case of Campbell vs. Wiggins, but some stress seems to have been laid upon expressions introduced into the gift indicating equality of participation among the objects of bounty. In Rochell vs. Tompkins, (1 Strob. Eq. 114,) where an estate was limited, upon the death of a wife, without appointment and without living issue, to her right heirs, it was held,' that our statute of distributions should ascertain as well the persons who were to take, as the proportions in which they should take; and there the husband, as statutory heir, took one half of the estate, and the other distributees, who were numerous and in different degrees of relationship, took shares jure representation^ ; but, in that case, the question seems not to have been argued by counsel, nor considered by the Court. In Seabrook vs. Seabrook, (McM. Eq. 201,) the question underwent some discussion, but the case was determined upon principles not affecting the question. After this review of our cases on this subject, I think we may pronounce that, notwithstanding the doctrine of Campbell vs. Wiggins may have been the law of this State for about six years, it was greatly shaken by the case [550]*550of Lemacks vs. Glover, and that we have not any settled construction ” of such terms of description as are employed in the present case, forming a rule of property, and that we are at liberty to adopt any rule on the subject which we may suppose will best subserve the intention of donors and the policy of the State. . This conclusion is greatly confirmed by the consideration that our Act of 1791 is, and has long been, extensively known and highly approved by the people of this State; and that this legislative will, as it was called in the argument, has always had more influence in regulating testators and other grantors in the distribution of property than the rule of Campbell vs. Wiggins, which was little known, except to members of the profession, and could not have been acted upon in practice in many cases.

Whatever may be the doctrine of the English cases on this subject, the state of our law and of public policy justify the rule that whenever we are compelled by the terms of description, in a devise or grant, to resort to our statute of distributions for the purpose of ascertaining the objects of the gift, we must also resort to the statute to ascertain the proportions in which the donees shall take, unless the instrument making the gift indicates the intention of the donor that a different rule of distribution shall be pursued. In England, leaving out of view such exceptions as grow out of estates of gavelkind and coparcenary, &c., the heir is a single individual, designated by the common law, and when the term heirs is employed, it means persons who are to take successively as heir, and not persons who are entitled to an equal, or even a common participation; but our Act of 1791 is an Act of descents as well as distributions, and determines at once who shall be the heirs of the real estate of an intestate and the distributees of his personalty.

The term heirs is inapplicable to the succession to personal estate, and even as to real estate, we have no other heirs except the hceredes facti of our statute of distributions (Seabrook vs. Seabrook). As remarked by that eminent jurist, Chancellor HaRpeb,, in Lemacks vs. Glover, in an argument that has nca‘1 . [551]*551exhausted the subject: “ In England, when the term heirs or heirs of the body is taken to mean a class of persons, these cannot, in any manner or respect, take as heirs or heirs of the body. Whether construed children, issue or descendants, next of kin, &c., they must he always different persons from the heirs: not so with us.” In the case under consideration, the Court of Appeals in Equity could not have attained the conclusion that the “heirs of the body

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.C. Eq. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/templeton-v-walker-sc-1850.