Wellons v. . Jordan

83 N.C. 371
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 83 N.C. 371 (Wellons v. . Jordan) 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
Wellons v. . Jordan, 83 N.C. 371 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Smith, 0. J.

The solution of the controversy mainly depends upon the construction of the following clause in the will of Shadrack Ingram, who died in 1829;

“ I lend unto m-y grandson Henry (Harry) Ingram., two-tracts of land containing one-hundred acres.each, lying ou-tlie-south-side of Hannah’s creek, being, on the road and. on the head of Meadow branch, joining M. Vinson, M.. Allen and Hardy Lee’s land, and one hundred acres below the spring, branch, joining William Allen’s land on the-south-side of the creek, on said- creek between-the Watery branch and Meadow branch, joining Wm. Lee, Hardy Lee,, and the Allen lands,, some under one hundred acres in it, and one negro boy, named Sam, two cows and two sows.. Said Harry Ingram is to take care of his father and mother and to support their bodily needs, as far as in h-is-power;, their life time, and to hold the foresaid property his> life- *373 itime, and if he does take eare of his parents and support them as above prescribed, and has issue, said property shall be theirs and their heirs forever. But if he die without issue, ¿hen it shall deseend to my daughters and their heirs forever, after a bodily support for his father and mother their life time, if the said Harry Ingram should decease before fthey do.”

The following facts are reported by the referee: The defendant is in possession of sixty-two acres of the devised land. At the death of the testator, his grandson Harry was seventeen years of age, and soon after Ambrose his father, :and himself, built a house on the land, which was occupied by the family until 1833. In that year Ambrose and Harry ^contracted to sell the traet known as “ Sockery place,” to Nathan B. Allen, and the latter when he attained his majority in October of that year, executed a deed of conveyance therefor to Allen both understanding it to pass a life -estate only. This was done at the instance of Ambrose who .received in different articles most of the purchase money. Ambrose died soon after, and Harry, who while not lunatic, was of feeble mind, was not faithful in his attentions during his father’s illness, but his father never suffered for the necessaries of life. About 1846 or 1847, his mother, Sally, .also died. Harry lived with her till his marriage and then moved into a house on the same tract, some four hundred yards distant, and occasionally worked on her farm. She owned land, slaves and other property and had the means -of comfortable subsistence. Harr.y did not take care of her and passed most of his time in childish amusements, but shis life estate went mainly .to Ihe support and use of his parents.

Upon these facts the exceptions rest for support, and .are mow to be considered.

1. Upon the whole case, for want of proof of title the plaintiffs cannot maintain their action ; This objection, was *374 mot made in the court below, nor the subject of invéstigation by the referee. The dispute as to title seems to have been limited to the proper interpretation of the will of Shadrack Ingram, and his ownership of the land conceded; According-to the settled practice, points first made in this court, and which if taken at the trial, could have been perhaps fully answered and removed, will not be allowed, and cases on appeal are considered as prepared only to present such as were then taken and ruled; The cases relied on Meekins v. Tatem, 79 N. C. 546, and Bank v. Graham, 82 N. C., 489, do not sustain the position for which-they are cited.. They simply declare that when, upon the plaintiff’s own-showing, that is, noon the case he presents in his complaint,there is a want of jurisdiction, or cause of action apparent, the court will notice the objection and act upon.it. But they do not establish the proposition nor warrant the inference that every omission to state a fact, material to the right of recovery, is to be considered as if the fact did not exist. Cases are made up lo present exceptions and the decisions, upon them and only such facts as are necessary to their being understood and hence the propriety of the rule that excludes from consideration all such as were not taken in the court below. State v. Secrest, 80 N. C., 450.

2. The land is not sufficiently described in the will, nor in the complaint.: The defendant recognizes-the identity of the land, claimed,.and in his answer “admits that he withholds-the possession, of the said premises ” and asserts-title-thereto in himself. How could he say this unless he knew from the complaint what lands were demanded of him and are claimed by himself?' There seems to have been no. controversy about the identity of the devised land as defined in the- will, of which that in the defendant’s occupancy forms part, and we cannot, from- mere inspection ofT the will, undertake to determine- that a. description calling, for various natural objects and Lines-of adjoining proprife- *375 tors, and located in the survey ordered, is too imperfect to admit of location by parol evidence.

3. The devise to the plaintiffs, the issue of Harry, upon the condition precedent that “ he does take care of his-parents and support them,” fails for want of compliance with its requirements: We do not think the testator intended nor that the language employed expresses an intent that the limitation over to the issue of Harry was to be dependent upon his taking care of and supplying the bodily wants of his parents, since the further contingent remainder is given to the testator’s daughters only in the event that Harry “ dies without issue,” and not also for want of the eare and attention enjoined and expected. At most it would be a charge on the estate, a personal obligation on the devisee, as was held in Taylor v. Lanier, 3 Muph., 98. As was said in McNeely v. McNeely, 82 N. C., 183, where the devise was to a son “by him seeing to her,” his mother, and it was contended that these words fettered and controlled the estate devised: “ In the will now under consideration the words which give rise to the controversy ‘by him seeing to her’ are in themselves vague.and indeterminate, and if an essential and defeating condition of the gift, would be very difficult of application. What is meant by seeing to the widow, and what neglects fall short of that duty? How much of personal care and attention in the son to the mother is requisite, and how is the dividing line to be run between such omissions as are, and such as are not, fatal to the devise?

In Willard v. Henry, 2 N. H., 120, cited by defendant’s counsel, the land was conveyed by the father to his son by deed in February, 180% on condition that unless the son maintained both his parents and a brother in a specified manner, and cultivated the farm with care and fidelity, the deed should become void as to the whole land during the life of the parents, and after their death, as to an undivided *376 half should continuo void forever. In 1807 the father died and the widow repudiated the provision for her in the deed and took dower in the land. She died in 1818. In 1808 the son sold and conveyed the land to the ancestor of the plaintiff in the action.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.C. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wellons-v-jordan-nc-1880.