Welch v. . Gibson

138 S.E. 25, 193 N.C. 684, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 25 (Welch v. . Gibson) 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
Welch v. . Gibson, 138 S.E. 25, 193 N.C. 684, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 432 (N.C. 1927).

Opinion

*685 Stacy, C. J.

On the hearing the sufficiency of the title offered was properly made to depend upon the construction of the following provision in the will of Mary M. Kennedy:

“I will and bequeath to my daughter, Garnette Jones Welch, all of my property, both personal and real, for the term of her natural life, and at the death of my said daughter, Mrs. Welch, all this property so devised shall go to the bodily heirs of Mrs. Welch, and to go as entailed property for succeeding generations; all living children at the death of the said Mrs. Welch are to have an equal share in this property during the term of their lives, and shall go to the heirs of these said legatees from generation to generation forever. No wood shall be sold off this place, and only such wood shall be cut during the lifetime.of the said Mrs. Welch,, or the minority of her youngest children, only so much as may be necessary for firewood for the house and for the cooking stove.”

The fact situation is that Mary M. Kennedy died testate in 1914, leaving.an only daughter, Mrs. Garnett Jones Welch, coplaintiff with her husband herein, who now has seven living children, four of whom are infants, and none of whom are parties to this controversy, save the defendant, Mary S. Hager, who was made a party at her own request, and'who claims an interest in the land under her grandmother’s will.

The plaintiffs claim that Mrs. Garnett Jones Welch acquired a fee-simple title to all her mother’s real estate under the above provision of her will, and that the deed tendered is sufficient to convey a good and indefeasible fee-simple title to the lot described therein, while the defendant, Charles Gibson, as well as his codefendant, Mary S. Hager, contends that the feme plaintiff, • under the above provision of her mother’s will, takes only a life estate in the property so devised.

It is conceded that the relative merits of the controversy depend upon whether or not the limitations in the above clause of the will of Mary M. Kennedy to the heirs or heirs of the body of her daughter, Mrs. Gar-nett Jones Welch, are so framed as to attract the rule announced in the celebrated English case of Wolfe v. Shelley, 1 Coke, 93b, commonly known as the rule in Shelley's case, which, with us, has become a rule of property as well as a rule of law, and is stated by Mr. Preston, an eminent English authority, as abridged by Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries (4 Kent Com., 215), as follows: “When a person takes an estate of freehold, legally or equitably, under a deed, will, or other writing, and in the same instrument there is a limitation by way of remainder, either with or without the interposition of another estate, of an interest of the same legal or equitable quality, to his heirs or heirs of his body, as a class of persons to take in succession from generation to generation, the limitation to the heirs entitles the ancestor to the *686 whole estate.” 1 Prest. Est., 263. This definition was quoted with approval in Smith v. Proctor, 139 N. C., 314.

The origin o£ the rule, as well as the wisdom of its adoption, has been the subject of much curious and learned speculation. Though found among the remains of feudality, it is neither a relic of barbarism nor a part of the rubbish of the dark ages, but rather a Gothic column, as it were, which has been preserved to aid in sustaining the fabric of our modern social system. Nicholson v. Gladden, 117 N. C., 497; Starnes v. Hill, 112 N. C., 1; Note, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.), 963; Daniel v. Bass, ante, 294; Foley v. Ivey, ibid., 453; Polk v. Faris, 9 Yerg., 209; 30 Am. Dec., 400. It prevents the tying up of real estate during the life of the first taker, facilitates its alienation a generation earlier, and at the same time subjects it to the payment of. the debts of the ancestor. It also favors dower. Walker v. Butner, 187 N. C., 535; Crisp v. Biggs, 176 N. C., 1; Cohoon v. Upton, 174 N. C., 88.

The effect of the rule, when it applies, is simply this: By force of the limitation to the ancestor’s heirs, general or special, the rule in Shelley’s case operates to give to the first taker, who already has an estate of freehold in the land, the inheritance also, by conferring the remainder on him, as the stock from which alone the heirs can inherit, and the source alone from which their inheritable blood can spring. Hampton v. Griggs, 184 N. C., 13; Jones v. Whichard, 163 N. C., 241.

It is said by many writers on the subject that the limitation to the heirs unites and coalesces with the limitation of the freehold in the ancestor, and thus operates to vest in the first taker a fee simple or a fee tail, as the case may be, divided or split by intervening limitations, where there are any. Benton v. Baucom, 192 N. C., 630. Thus, a gift or a grant to one for life, with remainder to his heirs, gives him a fee simple in possession by the merger of his life estate in the inheritance. But a gift or grant to one for life, remainder to another for life, remainder to the heirs of the first taker, gives to the first taker an estate for life in possession, with a fee simple in expectancy — a merger in this case being prevented by the intermediate life estate. Hileman v. Bouslaugh, 13 Pa. St., 344. In such case, however, the ancestor or first taker may deal with the property as full owner thereof, subject only to the intervening life estate and its incidents. Smith v. Smith, 173 N. C., 124; Cotten v. Moseley, 159 N. C., 1.

A donor or grantor is no more competent to make a tenancy for life a source of inheritable succession than he is competent to create a perpetuity, or a new canofi of descent; and the rule is too intimately connected with the doctrine of estates to be separated from it without breaking the ligaments of property. Benton v. Baucom, 192 N. C., 630; Crisp v. Biggs, supra. It is one of the ancient landmarks which the *687 fathers have set in the law as it relates to the subject of real property. Hampton v. Griggs, supra.

Mr. Tiffany, in his valuable treatise on Real Property, vol. 1 (2 ed.), 529, gives a practical statement of the rule, and discusses its application to various illustrative cases, citing numerous authorities in support of the text, as follows:
“If, after the limitation of a particular estate of freehold in favor of a person, a remainder is limited in favor of his heirs, or the heirs of his body, such person will take an estate in remainder in fee simple or fee tail, according as the limitation in remainder is in favor of his heirs or the heirs of his body, and the particular estate will merge therein, unless another estate be interposed between the particular estate and the remainder.
“In the case of a limitation to A.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 25, 193 N.C. 684, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-gibson-nc-1927.