Wilcoxen v. Owen

185 So. 897, 237 Ala. 169, 125 A.L.R. 539, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 481
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 22, 1938
Docket4 Div. 55.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 185 So. 897 (Wilcoxen v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcoxen v. Owen, 185 So. 897, 237 Ala. 169, 125 A.L.R. 539, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 481 (Ala. 1938).

Opinion

*174 GARDNER, Justice.

Howell L. Peebles, in January 1878, was the owner of certain described lands in Bullock County, Alabama. He died in March 1919, leaving a last will, which has been duly admitted to probate. His widow, Willie W. Peebles, survived. No child was ever born of this union, but in April 1900, he legally adopted a child, then eight years of age, under the name of Howell Peebles Wilcoxen. Peebles at the time of his death had no parents, no grandparents, no brother nor sister, niece nor nephew living. The widow, Willie W. Peebles, died in March 1936, without issue having been born of her marriage with Howell L. Peebles.

These complainants, his cousins, constitute his next of kin in blood relationship. They claim title to the lands here involved under a deed (and we think it clear that it is a deed and not a will — Graves v. Wheeler, 180 Ala. 412, 61 So. 341; Self v. Self, 212 Ala. 513, 103 So. 591) executed in January 1878, which appears in the report of the case. The proper construction of this deed presents the vital question here for determination.

Under the terms of the will (also, in pertinent part, appearing in the report of the case) Peebles devised the reversion in the realty described in the deed to defendant Howell Peebles Wilcoxen, but complainants insist the deed of 1878 takes precedence over the will, and the chancellor accepted this theory of the case.

Complainants’ contention is succinctly stated in the sixth paragraph of the bill, as follows:

“That said deed crea'ted a lifé estate in and to the property described therein in Willie W. Peebles, grantor’s wife, with contingent remainder in such child or children as were born to her by him, with gift over, in the event his wife survived him, to his next of kin. That on the death of said Howell L. Peebles, childless, his next of kin, at the time of his death, took a vested remainder in said property, and upon the death of his wife, the life tenant, the next of kin of said Howell L. Peebles at the time of his death (and the respective heirs of those then deceased) took a fee simple estate in and to said lands.”

On the other hand defendant contends that under the language of the deed, which must be interpreted in the light of the common law, there was in fact no remainder interest in these complainants, but that the estate created was one in reversion, capable of subsequent disposition by the grantor as was done in the execution of the will which should be held to prevail.

Our study of the authorities has led us to the conclusion that this is the better view. The prime purpose here, of course, is to ascertain the intention of the grantor, which must control. Section 6921, Code of 1923; Section 2187, Code of 1876; Long v. Holden, 216 Ala. 81, 112 So. 444, 52 A.L.R. 536; Dickson v. VanHoose, 157 Ala. 459, 47 So. 718, 19 L.R.A.,N.S., 719; 18 Corpus Juris 311. The deed is to be construed by the common law, as we are aware of no controlling statute. The. statute abolishing the Rule in Shelley’.s Case- (Sec *175 tion 2183, Code of 1876, Section 6907, Code •of 1923) is without application.

This was pointed out by the Tennessee Court in Robinson v. Blankenship, 116 Tenn. 394, 92 S.W. 854, where the court, speaking of an act abolishing the Rule in Shelley’s Case, in all respects similar to •our own, said [page 855] : “The operation of that act, however, by its terms is confined to a case where a remainder is limited to the heirs, or the heirs of the body oí a person, to whom a life estate in the same premises is given. There has never been a statute passed in this state affecting the other common-law rule which in a case like the present, where the testator or grantor disposing of a life estate, in terms, seeks to create a remainder in his own heirs, lets these heirs in upon the termination of the life estate, as reversioners rather than as remaindermen.”

We think this language equally applicable here, and that neither the above noted statute nor section 2180, Code of 1876, section 6902, Code of 1923, nor any other statute of our State affects the common law rule referred to by the Tennessee court. This common law rule recognized and applied by the Tennessee court in the above authority is correctly therein stated as appears from an examination of both textbooks and decided cases.

In Section 1525, Vol. 2, Washburn on Real Property, 6th Ed., the author states the rule as follows:

“At common law, if a man seised of an •estate limited it to one for life, remainder to his own right heirs, they would take, not as remaindermen, but as reversioners; and it would be, moreover, competent for him, as being himself the reversioner, after making such limitation, to grant away the reversion. And where he made the limitation after a life estate to his own heirs by will, they took as reversioners, and not as purchasers.”

And in 18 Corpus Juris 310, the following:

“At common law, the rule is that, where a person conveys a life estate to another with remainder to the heirs of the grantor, they take, not as remaindermen, but as reversioners, and the grantor being himself the reversioner after such limitation he may grant away the reversion. A deed creating a remainder in fee, to vest contingently in some person not in esse, on his coming into being, providing for the reversion of such remainder to the grantor or his heirs in the event the contingency does not occur, does not divest the grantor of the fee of such contingent remainder; and the contingent interest will not be deemed to be in abeyance, but to remain with the grantor, subject to be divested on the happening of the contingency.”

And among the exceptions to the fourth class of contingent remainders considered in 21 Corpus Juris 984, is “a remainder limited to the heirs of the grantor.” The cases of Akers v. Clark, 184 Ill. 136, 56 N.E. 296, 75 Am.St.Rep. 152, Mayes v. Kuykendall, Ky., 112 S.W. 673, and Robinson v. Blankenship, supra, restate and apply this rule. In this latter authority, the opinion makes reference to the exception above referred to and quotes from Vol. 24, page 398, Am. and Eng.Ency. of Law, as follows :

“An exception to contingent remainders is where the remainder is limited to the heirs of the grantor. This exception rests on the principle that, while such a limitation is designated as a remainder, it is not a remainder at all, but is an estate which continues in the grantor as the reversion in fee.”

But our own Court in Due v. Woodward, 151 Ala. 136, 44 So. 44, gave application to this common law rule. There the grantor conveyed to his wife a life estate in the land, with the added proviso that upon her death the property “shall revert” to him, and in the event of his prior death, “to his lawful heirs.” [page 45.] The holding was that the grantor merely, by the use of this language, directed the course of descent from‘him as ancestor to his lawful heirs and that the property should descend according to the Statute of descent in this State in force at the time, and that his lawful heirs should inherit from him as ancestor. A deed subsequently executed to a purchaser was held valid as against the claim of title of the grantor’s only surviving child.

Among other cited authorities is that of Couch v. Anderson, 26 Ala.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 897, 237 Ala. 169, 125 A.L.R. 539, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcoxen-v-owen-ala-1938.