Woodley v. Calhoun

48 S.E. 272, 69 S.C. 285, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 S.E. 272 (Woodley v. Calhoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodley v. Calhoun, 48 S.E. 272, 69 S.C. 285, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 119 (S.C. 1904).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

This appeal raises the question whether those persons named in the deed of trust hereinafter mentioned took as vested or contingent remaindermen.

The facts are thus set out in the decree of his Honor, the Circuit Judge: “Mary A. Woodley, being the owner in fee of a certain tract of land, on the 2d day of December, 1897, made to Archibald L. Calhoun, sr., a formal deed of conveyance thereto with habendum to him, his heirs and assigns, ‘in trust, nevertheless, for my sole use, benefit and behoof, for and during the term of my natural life, without impeachment of or for any manner of waste, and to- permit me to use, *286 occupy and possess said' premises and said personal property so long as I may live, and to receive and enjoy the rents, profits, usufruct and income therefrom, without accounting or accountability to any one whomsoever, and upon and immediately after my death to' convey said real estate and transfer and deliver said personal property unto' Legare S. Calhoun, Margaret E. McLeod, J. Meekins Woodley, Flora Woodley, John A. Woodley, Jas. D. Woodley, Tot A. Woodley, Lydia J. Woodley, and the children of my deceased daughter, Mary Woodley Moore, in the proportion that each of my said children shall receive one share, and the children of my deceased daughter, Mary Woodley Moore, shall among them receive the one share to which their mother would have been entitled had she been living; and in case any of my said children or grand-children shall die before said conveyance is made, then the child or children of such deceased child shall receive the part or portion to which his or their parent would have, been entitled, had he or she been living.’

“The said Mary A. Woodley died October 5, 1901, leaving her surviving as her only heirs at law all the beneficiaries named in said deed, except Tot A. Woodley, who died some time previous to the death of said Mary A. Woodley, his heirs at law being his widow and a posthumous child, who lived only a few months, and also1 died before the said Mary A. Woodley.

“Soon after the death of said Mary A. Woodley, John A. Woodley qualified as administrator of her estate, and on December 2, 1901, instituted this suit, making all of said heirs at law of Mary A. Woodley, and also the said Hattie Woodley, parties defendant. The action being for a sale of said land to pay her debts and for partition, the complaint alleging that said Hattie Woodley claimed, but was not entitled to participate in the same. On December 28th, 1901, an order was granted calling in creditors, and under the call several creditors proved claims. On November 1, 1902, an order of sale was granted and also of reference. *287 The sale was duly made, and report thereof confirmed by order, and distribution directed after providing for the payment of the debts of said Mary A. Woodley.

“The order of distribution provided, ‘that the clerk should retain the sum of five hundred and fifty-one and 81-100 dollars until the determination of the right thereto of the defendant, Hattie Woodley, nothing in this order being intended to prejudice that question one way or the other.’

“The defendant, Hattie Woodley, never answered in said cause, and never formally appeared, until about the time said order of distribution was about to be made.

“The order of reference above mentioned was revoked by order dated October 30th, 1903. So that the sole question left for adjudication is, shall the amount held by the clerk, to wit: the sum of five hundred and fifty-one and 80-100 dollars, be paid over to the defendant, Hattie Woodley, the wife of Tot A. Woodley, or shall the same be distributed among the surviving beneficiaries under said deed of trust and heirs at law of said Mary A. Woodley. The question depends upon the proper construction of the deed of Mary A. Woodley.”

The Circuit Judge then states his reasons for holding that the remainders were contingent, as follows:

“The property mentioned in the deed was the property of Mary A. Woodley. She conveyed it to' the trustee and his heirs and assigns in trust, to hold it for her use during her natural life, and after her death to convey it to the persons named in the deed. She must have had some object in conveying the fee to the trustee, as she could have conveyed to her children direct, reserving a life estate, without the interposition of a trustee. The onfy object she could have had was to1 prevent the vesting of the title to the property given to the beneficiaries until the term fixed by her in the deed, and for it to be conveyed to only those persons named in the deed.

“When not a violation of some rule of law, the intention of the maker of a deed must prevail, and this intention must *288 be ascertained from a consideration of the whole instrument. Duckett v. Butler, 67 S. C., 130. Considering the words of the deed, I am of the opinion that the grantor intended, by putting the title of the property in the trustee, to fix the period of her death as the time for the vesting of the interests given to' her children; and further, that she intended to confine the property to be conveyed at that time to* a class— children or grand-children, or lineal heirs, and not collateral heirs. If such was her intention, the remainders to1 the beneficiaries were contingent remainders, and for the purpose of preserving such remainders, the fee was' necessarily put in the trustee.

“When the right to the estate is deferred, is not only deferred, but is dependent upon the happening of some future contingency, the remainder is contingent. Farr v. Gilreath, 22 S. C., 512; Faber v. Police, 10 Id., 386. Not only is the remainder contingent, but the persons to take are uncertain until the estate becomes vested by the happening of the contingency. Roundtree v. Roundtree, 26 S. C., 450.

“By the terms of this deed no one of the children or grand-children is to take except upon the contingency that he or she is living at the death of the grantor. Tot A. Woodley and his only child died before the grantor, and no interest in the property conveyed was vested in either of them, as the contingency of those surviving the grantor never happened. If the remainder was contingent, then the widow of Tot Woodley and the mother of his child has no interest under the deed in the property. The rule is well settled, that when a legacy is given to a class of persons in general terms, and one or more of the described class dies in the lifetime of the testator, those of the described class who survive the testator take the whole estate. Reynolds v. Reynolds, 65 S. C., 396.

“The grantor requires the trustee to convey the interest to each beneficiary under the deed. In order for him to do so and execute the trust, it was necessary that he should hold the legal title to' the property until after the death of *289 the life tenant.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.E. 272, 69 S.C. 285, 1904 S.C. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodley-v-calhoun-sc-1904.