Tucker v. Adams

14 Ga. 548
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
DocketNo. 72
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 14 Ga. 548 (Tucker v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Adams, 14 Ga. 548 (Ga. 1854).

Opinion

By the Court.

Benning, J.,

delivering the opinion.

[1.] These two cases turn upon one and the same question. That question is, whether the defendants in erroi^take as “purchasers” under the deed of Wm. Nelson.

The answer to this depends upon the answers to two other ques- ■ tions : 1. Did Wm. Nelson intend them, to take as purchasers ? 2. If he did, was such an intention lawful? The intention of every man, if not unlawful, is, as a matter of course, to have effect. This may be assumed.

Lot the case be considered first, as governed by the Law of England.

[550]*550What, then, was Wm. Nelson’s intention ?

That, by the aid of certain legal rales of interpretation, is -to be drawn from the words which ho used in his deed.

I-Iis deed was as follows:

■“ Georgia, Montgomery County:

“Know all men by these presents, that I, William Nelson, of the State and county aforesaid, being of sound mind and memory, and without defraud to my creditors, or any other person, do, by these presents, for the natural love and affection I have for, and do have towards my beloved daughter Elizabeth, and her husband, John Adams, for and during their existence in this Avorld, give and bequeath unto them one negro woman, named Judah, and her increase, to use and make use of their labor in any manner, whatever, which they may think most conducive to their interest, except that of selling said negro, or any part of her increase, to defraud their proper heirs, or my intention by this deed of gift; that is, at the death of the above named Elizabeth, my daughter, and John, my son-in-law, then the said negro Judah and her increase, to be equally divided among and between the lawful heirs of the body of the above named Elizabeth, my beloved daughter, as their own right and property, and for their own proper use and benefit forever, in fee simple.”

What did Wm. Nelson mean by these words ? There are certain rules of interpretation, which will assist us in the endeavor to answer this question. They are these:

1. “ That the construction bo favorable and as near the minds and apparent intents of the parties, as the rules of Law will admit. For the maxims of law are, that “ verba intentioni debent inservire’; and 1 benigne interpretamur ehartas propter simplicitatum lairorum’. And therefore, the construction must also be reasonable and agreeable to common understanding”.

2. “ That quoteis in verbis nulla est ambiguitas ibi nulla ex-positio contra verba fienda est, but that where the intention is clear, too minute a stress be not laid on the strict and precise [551]*551signification of words. Nam qui haeret in litera haeret incortice.”

3. That the construction be made upon the entire deed and not merely upon disjointed parts of it. ‘ Nam ex antecedentibus et consequentibus fit aptima interpretatio’. And therefore, that every part of it be (if possible) made to take effect ; and no word but what may operate in some shape or other. ‘ Nam verba debent intelligi cura effectu est res magisr valeat quampereat.’ ”

4. “ That if the words will bear two senses, one agreeable to and another against Law, that sense be preferred which is most agreeable thereto.” (2 Blade. Oom. 379-80.)

Let us assume, for the present, the property mentioned in the deed, to be real property, instead of personal.

Now, from the words of the deed, and these rules of construction, it may be safely said that Wm. Nelson meant:

1. That there should be a division of the property.

2. That this division should take place at the death of his daughter and son-in-law.

3. That there should not be repeated divisions of the property.

4. That the persons among whom the property was to be divided, were each to take his share absolutely, in fee simple”.

This much, at least, is clear as to what he meant; and with this, therefore, whatever else be meant, must, if possible, be made to correspond.

Who, then, did he intend as those among whom the division of the property was to be made ? Did he intend the lawful heirs of the body of his daughter as heirs ? He certainly did not.

There cannot be a division of any sort among persons as heirs of each other, or as heirs of a common ancestor. There can never, as a general rule, at any one time, exist more than one such person — the eldest son. Nemo est haeres viventis.

Heirs of the body cannot, as heirs of the body, take in fee simple.

[552]*552If such a thing as a division among heirs of the body were partially possible, it would be necessary to have a new division every time there should be a new heir. But, indeed, such a thing is not practically possible.

The words of the deed are, “ At the death of Elizabeth, my daughter, and John, my son-in-law, then the said negro Judah and her increase, to be equally divided among and between the lawful heirs of the body of my daughter, as their own right and property, and for their own proper use and benfit, forever, in fee simple.”

Who did the maker of the deed mean by “ The lawful heirs of the body” ? He meant the descendants of his daughter, who should be living at the time of the death of the daughter and son-in-law.

This meaning is consistent with those other clear and unmistakeable meanings, which we have seen him to have had; it allows every word of the deed to have effect — it is lawful.

Among such descendants, all living at once, there may be a division.

A division which needs not to be repeated.

A division in which each descendant may take his share, in fee simple.

A division which may be made at the death of the daughter.

But will the Law let the word “heirs” be used in the sense of descendants ? It is not unlawful to use it in that sense. The question, therefore, becomes simply a question of intention.

Was it the intention of Wm. Nelson to use the words, heirs of the body, in the sense of the word descendants ? It was.

1. The use of them, in that sense, is “ agreeable to common understanding” ; and Wm. Nelson, it is manifest from the face of the deed, was not a lawyer.

2. Besides the words “ heirs of the body”, the deed con-, tains other words — “ superadded words” — which show the intention to have been to use those words in this sense. “ Super-added words” are such things as may show this sort of intention. This is undisputed.

What kind of “ superadded words” are sufficient to produce [553]*553this effect- ? Any which clearly show that the takers of the gift are to take, not as heirs, not by inheritance; but as purchasers, as objects of a private bounty; which .show that those takers are to take, not from the hand of the law, hut from the hand of A. B., the author of tho conveyance. This is the principle — the instances are various.

In the deed of Nelson, the superadded words are those in italics which follow:

3.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ga. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-adams-ga-1854.