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Jones v. Perry

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1844
38 N.C. 200 (N.C. 1844)

Opinion

(June Term, 1844.)

1. A testator bequeathed certain negroes to his wife for life, and made no specific disposition of them after her death. He had other negroes, and, after making several other bequests, he bequeathed as follows: "All my negroes that are not given away by this my last will shall be equally divided between W. E. and M.": Held, that the remainder in the negroes given to the wife for life passed by this residuary clause to W. E. and M.

2. As to personal estate, a residuary clause carries not only every thing not disposed of, but everything that turns out not to be disposed of.

This cause was set for hearing at Spring Term, 1844, of the Court of Equity for NASH, and then transmitted by consent to the Supreme Court.

Saunders for the plaintiffs.

B. F. Moore for the defendants.


The bill was filed to obtain the opinion of the Court upon the will of William Boddie, deceased, late of Nash County. The testator died in the year....., having previously made and published in writing his last will and testament. In the will is contained the following bequest: "I give and bequeath to my dearly beloved wife, Patsy Boddie, one bay horse by the name of Sipp, and my plantation whereon I do now live. Also my still, also the use and labor of the following negroes, to wit, Isaac and Silvy and Mary, her daughter, and Buck and little Dinah and Glasgow and Mingo — also four cows and calves, two barren cows and four breeding sows, and ten year-old hogs and ten head of sheep, and also (201) the use of all my kitchen and household furniture, that is not in this my last will otherwise ordered and during her life or widowhood." In a subsequent clause, after some legacies to his son William Willis Boddie, and to his daughters, is the following residuary disposition: "All my negroes that is not given away by this my last will shall be equally divided between William Willis Boddie, Elizabeth and Martha Ann Boddie — and also all my horses, cattle, sheep and hogs for to be equally divided among them." It is admitted that William Willis Boddie, qualified as executor of his father's will and assented to the legacies contained in the will — that the defendants are in possession of the negroes who were bequeathed to Mrs. Boddie, the widow, during her life or widowhood, claiming them under the said residuary clause, in their own right, and as representing W. W. Boddie who is dead — and that the plaintiffs are other children and distributees of the said William Boddie, the testator. It is further admitted that the testator died possessed of other negroes than those left for life to Mrs. Boddie. The plaintiffs contend that the negroes, in which a life-estate was given to the widow, and their increase did not pass under the residuary clause, but as to them, the testator died intestate — and they are entitled, as in a case of intestacy, to their distributive share of them. The defendants allege that, by the terms of the residuary clause, those negroes are embraced in it and passed to the residuary legatees, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to no portion thereof. It is admitted that Mrs. Boddie has recently died.


We are of opinion that the negroes bequeathed to Mrs. Boddie for life, passed, under the residuary clause, to the persons therein named, to wit, William Willis Boddie and Elizabeth and Martha Ann Boddie, and constituted in them a vested remainder, to be enjoyed after the death of the (202) widow. It is a principle of law, that a testator is to be presumed to intend not to die intestate, as to any portion of his estate; and, therefore, it is always held that a residuary clause passes whatever is not otherwise disposed of, unless particularly restrained. Indeed, the very end and object of a residuary clause appear to be, together up the fragments of an estate after other portions of it have been particularly disposed of. It is, therefore, a rule well established in the English courts, as in ours, that, as to personal estate, a residuary clause carries not only everything not disposed of, but everything that turns out not to be disposed of. 1 Ves. Jr., 109, 110; 15 do., 509; Taylor v. Lucas, 11 N.C. 215. It is not so much the intention of the party, though that intention clearly expressed will govern, as the presumption of law in favor of the residuary legatee, to avoid an intestacy. When, therefore, a particular legacy lapses, it falls into the residuum for the benefit of the residuary legatee — he being preferred to the next of kin. In Speight v. Gatlin, 17 N.C. 5, the devise to Mrs. Speight, the widow, was of a tract of land and five negroes during her life. There was then a devise of all the remainder of his estate of every description to be sold and divided between his two sons. There was no mention otherwise, in the will, of the negroes devised for life to the widow. The Court decided they passed under the residuary clause. It is difficult to distinguish that case from the present. The negroes passed to the residuary fund, because the language was sufficient to embrace them, and because it was evident the testator did not intend to die intestate. Here the words in the residuary clause are sufficiently comprehensive to embrace the negroes given to the widow for life; "all my negroes that are not given away by this my last will," etc. The language used by the testator, in the bequest to the wife, may assist us in ascertaining his intention, if it is necessary to resort to his intention to expound the clause under consideration. "I give the use and labor of my negro Isaac," etc. It is fair to suppose he used those terms in their common and ordinary exception; for in the residuary clause he varies the expression so as to give (203) the negroes themselves, and not merely the use. But, if he had given them in so many words to his wife for life, without more, an interest remained in him undisposed of — the remainder — and the language used is sufficient to embrace it; for, according to Taylor v. Lucas, 11 N.C. 215, the residuary clause will, by construction of law, carry not only everything not disposed of, but everything that in the event turns out not to be disposed of. The testator, then, in this case, not only had negroes not expressly given away by the will, by any devise going before the residuary clause, but it turned out that he had others of which he had not disposed. The law then, beside the intent of the testator, places them in the residuary clause, and, upon the death of the widow, Mrs. Boddie, they go, together with their increase to the residuary legatees, the defendants in this case. The bill must be dismissed.

PER CURIAM. BILL DISMISSED.

Cited: Hyman v. Williams, 34 N.C. 94; Bennechan v. Norwood, 40 N.C. 109; Hastings v. Earp, 62 N.C. 6; Mabry v. Stafford, 88 N.C. 604; Blue v. Ritter, 118 N.C. 582; Peebles v. Graham, 128 N.C. 225.

(204)


Summaries of

Jones v. Perry

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1844
38 N.C. 200 (N.C. 1844)
Case details for

Jones v. Perry

Case Details

Full title:HILL JONES et al. v . BENNETT PERRY et al

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Jun 1, 1844

Citations

38 N.C. 200 (N.C. 1844)

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