Wool v. Fleetwood.

67 L.R.A. 444, 48 S.E. 785, 136 N.C. 460, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 67 L.R.A. 444 (Wool v. Fleetwood.) 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
Wool v. Fleetwood., 67 L.R.A. 444, 48 S.E. 785, 136 N.C. 460, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 291 (N.C. 1904).

Opinion

Walkee, J.,

after stating the facts. We do not see why the plaintiffs are not able by the deed which they have tendered to convey a good and indefeasible title to the defendant. The latter contends, as we understand, that the deed will not pass to him such a title for three reasons: (1) because by the fifth item of the will the widow and the heirs axe forbidden to sell or dispose of any of the real estate during the life of the former; (2) because by the terms of the sixth item no estate vested in the plaintiffs, Leonard and Elizabeth Wool, either by descent or purchase, until the expiration of five years after the devisor’s death, and (3) because by the seventh item the said Leonard and Elizabeth did not acquire the fee, but only a life estate, the word “lawful” *464 which qualifies the word “heirs” having the effect in law of preventing the latter word from operating as one of limitation and of restricting the meaning of the words “lawful heirs” to that of “children” who will take,.not by descent from their parents but by purchase directly from the devisor, and, therefore, that the rule in Shelley’s case and The Code, sec. 1325, converting fees tail into fees-simple, do not apply.

It is true that the testator places a positive restraint upon the alienation of the real property in the fifth item of his will, and the plaintiffs by reason of that restriction cannot convey a good title to the defendant if that provision of the will is valid. We entertain no doubt upon the question thus presented, as it is well settled that such a restraint upon the donee’s right to dispose of the property is void as being contrary to a wise principle of the law which is based upon a sound public policy. As a general rule it may be conceded that every person may do with his own as he pleases; but this rule is not of universal application, but is subject to some exceptions made necessary by the interest of the public that the titles to land should be as little fettered and the power of alienation as little subject to restraint as possible and consistent with a reasonable enjoyment of the right of property and all of its incidents — it being, generally speaking, against public policy to allow restraints to be put upon transfers which that public policy does not forbid. Gray Restraint on Alienation (2 Ed.), sec. 3. Hence it has ever been the inclination of the courts in their decisions to remove old restraints and not only to discountenance but to disallow new ones, and to put all obstacles out of the way of a fair and reasonable exercise of this power of alienation, which is one of the most important and valuable incidents of the right of property. While limited restraints of a certain kind have been recognized as valid when the fee is conveyed, it must be conceded at this time to be well settled that a restraint *465 upon the right of alienation even for a limited period of time is, as to such an estate, invalid — it being inconsistent with the nature of the grant or of the estate which is created by the latter. Gray, supra,, 41. The elementary law writers (2 J31k., 157) lay down the rule generally that a condition of non-alienation annexed to a conveyance inter vivos, or to a devise of a fee, is void, because it is inconsistent with the full and free enjoyment which the ownership of such an estate implies. Twitty v. Camp, 62 N. C., 61. “The doctrine,” says Ruffin, C. J., speaking for the Court, “rests upon these considerations that a gift of the legal property in a thing includes the jus disponendi and that a restriction on that right, as a condition, is repugnant to the grant and therefore void.” Mebane v. Mebane, 39 N. C., 131, 44 Am. Dec., 102.

The statute, Quia Emptores, 18 Edw. I., chap. 1 (1290), abolished subinfeudation and by virtue of its provisions all persons, except the King’s tenants in capite, were left at liberty to alien all or any part of their lands at their own pleasure and discretion (2 Blk., 289), and finally restrictions in cases of freehold tenure were entirely removed by 12 Car. II., chap. 34, and ever since those statutes were passed the right of free and unlimited alienation has been regarded as an inseparable incident to an estate in fee. 1 Wash. R. P. (5 Ed.), p. 83; Hardy v. Galloway, 111 N. C., 519, 32 Am. St. Rep., 828. It cannot be questioned that a condition of non-alienation annexed to the grant of an estate in fee is void, though confined in its operation to a limited period of time. Gray, sec. 54. “The capricious regulations which individuals would fain impose on the enjoyment and disposal of property must yield to the fixed rules, which have been prescribed by the supreme power as essential to the useful existence of property.” Dick v. Pitchford, 21 N. C., 484; Pritchard v. Bailey, 113 N. C., 521; Lattimer v. Waddell, *466 119 N. C., 370; School v. Kesler, 67 N. C., at p. 447; Coke, sec. 362.

We think it is equally well settled, at least in this State, that such a condition annexed to the grant or devise of an estate for life is also void, both as to legal and equitable estates. In Dick v. Pitchford, supra, Gaston, J., for the Court, says: “The deed does not provide that in the event of the life tenant attempting to sell or dispose of the [rents and profits] or otherwise to anticipate the receipt thereof, that they shall then go over and be paid to some other person; it secures to him, at all events, the enjoyment of the property for life, and prohibits him from transferring it or anticipating its profits. Now the general right of the giver of property to prescribe the modifications of his gift is subject to the condition that these modifications be not contrary to law nor repugnant to the nature of the conveyance, nor incompatible with the legal incidents belonging to the disposition he has made. The power of alienation is a legal incident to ownership. It is familiar doctrine that if a feoffment, grant, release, confirmation or devise be made 'upon condition not to alien the estate, or if a term for years or chattel personal be granted upon condition not to assign, such conditions are altogether nugatory. The doctrine obtains not less in courts of equity, acting upon those interests which are the proper siibjecfc-matter of their jurisdiction, than in courts of law adjudicating upon legal interests. A departure from it would introduce endless confusion and innumerable mischiefs.” Gray, sec. 134; 24 A. & E. Ency., p. 870.

A distinction is sometimes to be found in the cases between a condition against alienation or anticipation, coupled with a provision that the life tenant and his assigns shall lose the estate if the condition is broken and that it shall go over (which makes it a limitation), and one by which he is compelled to keep the property so that neither his grantees nor *467 any third person can get hold of or enjoy it, the latter condition being declared as void and the former as valid. We need not pass upon this distinction as there is no limitation over in this case.

The nest objection to the title is equally untenable.

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Bluebook (online)
67 L.R.A. 444, 48 S.E. 785, 136 N.C. 460, 1904 N.C. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wool-v-fleetwood-nc-1904.