Varner v. . Johnston

17 S.E. 483, 112 N.C. 570
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 483 (Varner v. . Johnston) 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
Varner v. . Johnston, 17 S.E. 483, 112 N.C. 570 (N.C. 1893).

Opinion

*572 Burwell, J.:

Sarah Jamison died in Cabarrus county in 1855. She named no executor of her will, which was admitted to probato in “common form ” in October of that year. W. W. Rankin was duly appointed administrator cum testamento annexo of her estate, and died without having fully administered his trust. J. C. Cannon was then appointed administrator de bonis non, c. t. a., and in 1864, as such administrator, be sold a slave called Green, on credit, and after 1865 he collected on account of -said sale the net sum of $725.1)4, the proceeds of the sale of the slave. One-half of this fund was paid over to Jacob Black-welder, who had married Elizabeth, a granddaughter of Sarah Jamison. The other half of this fund came into the hands of the defendant N. Johnston in September, 1879, who had been appointed to succeed J. C. Cannon in the administration of the estate of Sarah Jamison. He has, it seems, in his hands no money or other assets belonging to that estate, except what is the subject of controversy in this action. Pie admits that he received this fund from his predecessor in the administration of the estate of Sarah Jamison as the proceeds of the sale of a slave alleged to belong to her and bequeathed by her in her will.

The plaintiff C. M. Varner, administrator, insists that the facts heretofore stated are true, and contends that under the provisions of the will of Sarah Jamison the fund in the hands of the defendant administrator should be paid to him. He is the administrator of the estate of W. S. Steel, who died December 23, 1863, intestate and unmarried, and of James PI. Steel, the father of W. S. Steel, who died in 1866. W. S. Steel -was a son of Sarah Gallamore, one of the granddaughters of Sarah Jamison, and his mother died Januaiy 30, 1836.

We are brought, therefore, to the consideration of the will of Sarah Jamison, which, so far as concerns this con *573 troversy, is as follows: “My negro bojq Green, is to remain witli my daughter, Isabella Gallamore, until my youngest granddaughter, Frances Lydia -Gallamore, arrives to eighteen years of ago, when he is to be valued, and one of my grandchildren take him at the valuation and pay over to the other surviving grandchildren their distributive share, and, if none of them will take him at the valuation, then he shall be put to public sale, and the proceeds equally divided between my surviving grandchildren. In case any of my grandchildren shall die and leave living children, their children shall receive the portion which would have been coining to them, provided - they had lived until the distribution had taken place.” .

Frances Lydia, the granddaughter named in this will, was born November 6, 1845, and died January 25, 1863, lacking nine months and twelve days of being eighteen years of age.

We think that the fact that she died before reaching the age of eighteen years could not have the effect of changing the period for which the slave was “to remain with” the daughter of the testatrix, or the time when he was to be sold and the proceeds distributed according to the provisions of the will. That was to be clone when Frances would have arrived at the age of eighteen — November 6, 1863.

We think it very clear that the testatrix intended that the fund to arise from the sale of the slave, at the time designated by her, should be divided among her grandchildren then living and the children of any that had died and left children. The language used seems plainly to express this intention, and is susceptible of no other interpretation.

It is found as a fact that at this date for the sale and distribution (November 6, 1863)-all the grandchildren were dead except Elizabeth who had married Jacob Black- *574 welder, and none of those deceased had left children, except Sarah Steel, the mother of plaintiff's intestate, William S. Steel, he being her only child.

This legacy, the proceeds of the sale of this slave, then became vested in these two persons, Mrs. Elizabeth Black-welder and William S. Steel, each being entitled to one-half thereof.

It is conceded that Mrs. Blackwelder’s share was paid to her representatives, and no claim is made for that by any one.

It follows, therefore, from the facts stated heretofore and the construction put upon the will of Sarah Jamison, that the administrator of William S. Steel is entitled to recover his share of this vested legacy, which is in the hands of the defendant administrator, unless there is some other claimant to the fund whose rights are superior to his, and who is asserting them against the defendant.

A claimant therefor appears in the person of Isabella (fallamore, the only child of Sarah Jamison, and a granddaughter of one Joseph Rogers, who died about the year 1829. She has been allowed to make herself a party plaintiff to this action, and, building up her claim to this fund upon an alleged title to the slave (Green), she elects to follow this fund.

As we learn from air examination of the voluminous record, she asserts three distinct rights to the slave and to this fund which she insists stands in his stead as to her:

First. She alleged and offered to prove that Sarah Jamison died intestate; that at the time she executed the scrip, which had been admitted to probate as her will, her mother was “mentally incompetent” to make a will, and she says that as she is the sole next of kin of her mother the fund should be paid to her.

*575 This claim falls to the ground unless two facts co-exist, viz., the intestacy of her mother and her ownership of the slave.

The referee properly excluded all evidence which she offered for the purpose of showing that the scrip, which had been probated as her mother’s-will, was not a valid will. The Code, §§2150, 2158. Hence the intestacy of Sarah .Jamison was not established, and this first assertion of right fails, though the plaintiff Varner admits the second fact, to-wit, the ownership by Mrs. Jamison of the slave. Hampton v. Hardin, 88 N. C., 592; London v. Railroad, Ibid., 584.

Second. She claims the fund as sole next of kin of her father, Samuel Jamison, who died in 1830. She says, in support of this, second assertion of right, that the testimon)^ shows that the mother of this slave belonged, jure mariti, to her father, and that by law the offspring of that slave (the slave Green) became at his birth also a part of her father’s estate.

It seems sufficient to say in regard to this assertion of right that only the personal representative of Samuel Jami-son can make it. If this fund, which is in all respects and as to all parties personal propert}'-, belongs to the estate of Samuel Jamison, only his administrator or his executor cam recover it.

Third. She asserts a right to this fund as legatee of her maternal grandfather, under the terms of whose will, as she alleges, the slave (Green) became the property of Sarah Jamison for life only, and upon the death of her mother belonged to her absolutely.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 483, 112 N.C. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/varner-v-johnston-nc-1893.