From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Robertson v. Stephens

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1840
36 N.C. 247 (N.C. 1840)

Opinion

(December Term, 1840.)

Where real estate was devised in fee to a woman, who afterwards married, but it was directed in the will that the possession should be retained by A., a third person, and the rents and profits received by him until a certain debt was paid. Held, that the interest of this possessor could not be regarded as of a higher character than a term or chattel interest, that the possession of a termor is the seizin of him who hath the inheritance, and that in such a case the wife having had issue born during the marriage, the husband is entitled to be tenant by the curtesy.

To determine whether a bill is multifarious, the inquiry is not whether each party is connected with every branch of the cause, but whether the bill seeks relief in respect of matters which are in their nature separate and distinct. A bill is not multifarious where all the plaintiffs have an interest on one side and all the defendants have a common interest on the other in the decision of the main matter of controversy.

Election may be enforced against femes covert and infants between two inconsistent rights, where there is a clear intention of him under whom one of them is derived, that both shall not be enjoyed, and when it is against conscience to enjoy both.

THIS was an appeal, by leave of the court, from an interlocutory decree of the Court of Equity of JOHNSTON, made at Spring Term, 1840, by his Honor, Nash, J., overruling a demurrer which had been filed to the complainants' bill. The allegations of the bill and the causes of demurrer are set forth in the opinion of the Court.

W. H. Haywood for plaintiffs.

Badger and Bryan for defendants.


This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree in the court below, overruling a demurrer put in by the defendants to the bill of the plaintiffs. The bill, which was filed by Temple Robertson and Everett Robertson, against Patience Stephens, Jacob A. Stephens, Everett Stephens, Henry Stephens, John Allen and his wife, Manda, Gaston Lockhart and his wife, Rachel, sets forth that Jacob Stephens, formerly of Johnston County, died in 1829, seized of a large real and possessed of a large personal estate, leaving surviving him his (248) wife, the defendant Patience, and the defendants Jacob, Everett, Henry, Manda and Rachel, his only children by the said Patience; that before his death the said Jacob duly executed his last will, with all the solemnities to pass real as well as personal property, which has been duly proved and recorded, and therein and thereby devised unto his daughter, by a former wife, Joanna Stephens and her heirs, a certain tract of land whereof he was possessed at the date of his will, and continued possessed until his death. The bill further states that the said Joanna, in the month of December, 1830, intermarried with the plaintiff Temple, and by that marriage had issue, the plaintiff Everett, and afterwards, in December, 1831, died; that in the will of Jacob Stephens there is a clause in the following words, "My will and desire is that all my property of every description that I am possessed of stay in the possession of my wife until she can raise money and pay a certain debt that I owe to Thomas Rice for land to the amount of $1,000"; and that by virtue of this clause in her deceased husband's will the defendant Patience upon his death took possession of the tract so devised by the testator to his daughter Joanna, and she and the defendant Jacob, acting under her authority, have ever since cultivated the land, deriving large profits therefrom; have cut down the timber growing on it, and otherwise greatly wasted and impoverished it, notwithstanding the debt to Rice had been long since paid, and notwithstanding the plaintiff Temple had before offered to pay off the part of said debt with which the tract aforesaid was by the will chargeable. The bill proceeds to state that the plaintiffs have applied to the said Patience and requested her to account with them for the rents of the said land and the waste thereon committed, and to surrender the possession thereof; but she hath refused to comply with such request upon the pretense that nothing passed by the devise of the said land unto Joanna, the late wife of the plaintiff Temple, and mother of the plaintiff Everett.

The bill shows that at and before 1807 one Everett Pearce, the father of the defendant Patience, was seized of the said land in fee, and being so seized he duly devised the (249) same unto Jacob Stephens (then the husband of the said Patience) and the said Patience for their joint lives with remainder to the survivor for life, with remainder to their children in fee, and the said Patience and the other defendants now set up and insist upon the legal title in the said land so derived under the said will, and the plaintiffs are therefore unable at law to recover the possession of the land or to call the said Patience to account for the rents thereof or the waste thereon; but the plaintiffs are advised and do insist that the said Joanna, under the devise aforesaid in her father's will, acquired the entire equitable estate in the said land, and upon her death the same vested in the plaintiff Temple as tenant by the curtesy with remainder in fee to the plaintiff Everett, the only child and heir-at-law of the said Joanna, for they charge that in and by the said will the said Jacob Stephens devised and bequeathed unto the said Patience, his widow, and the defendants, his children by the said Patience, other valuable lands whereof he was seized and divers valuable slaves and other personal chattels; and that the said Patience and the said defendants, the children of the said Jacob and Patience, have elected to take and do enjoy the lands and personal property so devised and bequeathed to them respectively, and therefore cannot be allowed to disappoint the said will and deprive the plaintiffs so claiming under the said Joanna of the land so devised to her in the same will; or that if the said Patience and the other defendants have not yet elected whether to take the lands and personal property so devised and bequeathed by the said Jacob under the said will, or to claim and hold the tract of land devised therein to the said Joanna under their legal title, in opposition to the said will, they ought now to make and will be required to make such election. The prayer of the bill is to have the possession of the land surrendered and for an account from the defendant Patience, or if an election has not yet been made that the defendants may be required to make their election, and for general relief. The appellants contend that the demurrer ought to have been (250) sustained, and rest their arguments upon three grounds.

In the first place they insist that upon the matters set forth in the bill it is apparent that the plaintiff Temple hath no interest in the subject-matter thereof, and is improperly joined as a party plaintiff. They argue that he claims to be tenant by the courtesy of the land devised in fee to his wife, but he cannot so be unless his said wife was actually seized of the land, or rather had such enjoyment thereof as in an equitable estate is equivalent to an actual seizin at law, and this seizin was prevented because of the possession of the defendant Patience during the whole time of the coverture. The possession is alleged in the bill to have been holden under the clause subjecting the profits of the testator's estate, so far as might be necessary, to the payment of the debt to Rice. Now it seems to us very clear that if the legal fee had passed under the will to Joanna, such a possession would not have interrupted her actual seizin of the freehold. The interest of the possessor could not have been regarded as of a higher character than a term or chattel interest, and the possession of a termor is the seizin of him who hath the inheritance. See Guavare's case cited, 8 Coke, 96 a. And in analogy to this it was laid down by Lord Hardwicke in Roberts v. Diswell, 3 Atk., 609, that in the case of a trust estate for payment of debts the husband may be tenant by the curtesy, for it is only a chattel interest in the trustee, and the first taker hath the freehold over.

The next objection to the bill is that it is multifarious, for that it improperly joins distinct claims against different persons. In order to determine whether a bill is multifarious the inquiry is not whether each party is connected with every branch of the cause, but whether the bill seeks relief in respect of matters which are in their nature separate and distinct. Vann v. Hargett, 22 N.C. 35. Tried by this test it seems to us that this bill is not liable to the objection of multifariousness. Both the plaintiffs have an interest on one side, and all the defendants have a common interest on the other in the decision of the main matter of controversy, the right of Joanna Stephens in the land devised to her, and all may therefore be joined in a bill brought to decide it. It has also been objected that some (251) of the defendants are femes coverts, and cannot make an election. There are matters, certainly, in respect to which femes coverts are in equity as well as at law under a personal incapacity to act, and one of these is a case of "election." Thus where land is by the law of the court converted into money or money into land such national conversion will not be compelled if the cestui que trust, the absolute owner, elect to take the property in its original character. Such an election a feme covert or an infant has not the capacity to make. But election between two inconsistent rights, where there is a clear intention of him under whom one of them is derived that both shall not be enjoyed, and where therefore it is against conscience to enjoy both, it is every day practice to enforce against femes coverts and infants. See Gratton v. Howard, 1 Swans., 409, and 1 Roper Hus. and Wife, 22; Darlington v. Pultney, 2 Ves. Jr., 544, and 3 Ves. Jr., 384; Wilson v. Townshend, 2 Ves. Jr., 693.

On the whole we see no error in the interlocutory decree from which the appeal has been taken. This opinion will be certified to the court below, and the appellants must pay the costs of the appeal.

PER CURIAM. Interlocutory decree below affirmed with costs.

Cited: McQueen v. McQueen, 55 N.C. 20; Earnhardt v. Clements, 137 N.C. 94.

(252)


Summaries of

Robertson v. Stephens

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1840
36 N.C. 247 (N.C. 1840)
Case details for

Robertson v. Stephens

Case Details

Full title:TEMPLE ROBERTSON et al. v. PATIENCE STEVENS et al

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1840

Citations

36 N.C. 247 (N.C. 1840)

Citing Cases

Wells v. Dickens

See Wilson v. Safe Deposit Trust Co., 183 Md. 245, 37 A.2d 321, 152 A.L.R. 892. [10, 12] The doctrine of…

McQueen v. McQueen

That the parties who are required to elect in this case are infants, will not prevent an election from being…