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Feimster v. Tucker

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1859
58 N.C. 69 (N.C. 1859)

Opinion

(December Term, 1859.)

1. Where a testator willed that four slaves, a husband and his wife and their children, should be freed, and directed that they should be under the especial care of one of his sons, and bequeathed to the husband things that could not be carried out of the State with any convenience or profit, it was Held to be the intention that they should remain in the State, but that such of them as were over 50 years of age, and could show meritorious services, might be emancipated under section 49, chapter 107 of the Revised Code.

2. Where it appeared from the fact of a will that certain slaves directed to be emancipated (ineffectually) were not intended to be included in a clause bequeathing a residue, it was Held that such slaves would go to the next of kin as property undisposed of by the will.

CAUSE removed from the Court of Equity of IREDELL.

Mitchell for plaintiff.

Sharpe for defendant.


This bill is filed by the executor of William Feimster, praying for advice and direction from the court in relation to his duty in executing the trusts, and paying the legacies declared in the will of the said William Feimster. The second clause in the said will is as follows: "I will and bequeath to my beloved wife, Jerusha, the use of the following property as long as she remains a widow or lives in the county of Iredell; and at her death, marriage, or removal from the county of Iredell, then my will is that the property herein so left shall return to my estate and be be disposed of by my executor as hereinafter directed, . . . my negro man January, and Esther, also my negro man Lindsey and his (70) wife Lucy and her two youngest children, Lindsey Walton and Louisa."

"Fourth. My negro man Lindsey and his wife Lucy and their two youngest children, Lindsey Walton and Louisa, at the death, marriage, or removal of my wife out of the county of Iredell, then my will is, and till not then, that each and every one of them be freed by my executor under the especial care of my son Abner. I now give and bequeath to my servant Lindsey one-half of my smith tools, my rifle gun and shot bag, subject, nevertheless, to the use of my wife as long as they live together, as this my will hereafter directs."

"Sixteenth. I will and desire that all of my estate, both real and personal, not herein bequeathed shall be sold by my executor on a credit of one year, and after discharging all my just debts and funeral charges, all my moneys from debts due me and sales here authorized, after discharging the several devises above named, my will is that the remainder be equally divided between my wife and my sons Elon and Abner and the heirs at law of John Morrison and John Feimster, deceased."

"Seventeenth. I will and devise that all the property left to the use of my wife that is not herein otherwise directed be sold by my executors at the death, marriage, or removal out of the county of my wife, on a credit of one year, and proceeds of the same be equally divided between my sons Elon and Abner, the heirs at law of John Feimster, deceased, and John Morrison, deceased."

The bill alleges that the testator's widow, Jerusha, had lately died, and that there were several slaves descended from the female Louisa above mentioned.

The questions propounded on the foregoing will were, whether the slaves Lindsey, Lucy, Lindsey Walton, and Louisa, and the children of the last mentioned, born since the death of the testator, were entitled to the boon of freedom intended for them by the testator. Two of them, Lindsey and his wife Lucy, are stated in the bill to be over 50 years old, and that they were faithful, obedient and trustworthy, and rendered meritorious services, both to the testator and his late widow, (71) and they submit whether, if the provision in favor of the slaves be void, from the intention that they shall remain, they may not still be liberated under section 49 of the act of Assembly, Rev. Code, chap. 107. Also, whether if the said slaves be not entitled to their freedom under this will, they are to be considered as falling into the residuary fund provided in the sixteenth clause of the will; and if not, whether they can be considered as falling into that under the seventeenth clause, or whether they are undisposed of by the will and to be divided under the statute of distributions. Again, they ask to be directed and instructed whether the divisions made among the legatees mentioned in the sixteenth and seventeenth clauses are to be per capita or per stirpes.

The several legatees and next of kin are made parties, and the cause was set down for hearing on the bill, answer, and exhibits and transmitted.


If the testator had, by the fourth clause of his will, directed simply that the slaves therein mentioned should, at the death, etc., of his wife, be "freed" by his executors, then it would have been their duty to see that the wish of their testator should be carried into effect at the expense of his estate in one or other of the modes prescribed, sections 46 and 47, chapter 107, Revised Code. See Hogg v. Capehart, decided at June Term, 1857, which is reported as a note to this case ( vide Note.) Such a provision for emancipation would not (72) be contrary to the policy of our law, because, under it, the slaves would be removed from the State. In the present case there are expressions in the clause of the will under consideration which exclude the idea of a lawful emancipation because it indicates the intention of the testator that the slaves should remain in the State. The executors are required to "free" the slaves, but they are to be under the especial care of one of them, to wit, the testator's son Abner. The testator then gives to Lindsey, one of his slaves, who is the husband of another and the father of the remainder of those to whom he designed the boon of freedom, one-half of his blacksmith tools and his rifle gun and shot bag. These provisions, slight as they may be, show that the testator had no idea that Lindsey was to be carried out of the State to a distant country; and if he were not to be sent away, it is very certain that the testator did not intend to have his wife and children separated from him. See Greene v. Lane, 45 N.C. 102.

THOMAS D. HOGG, EXECUTOR, v. GEORGE W. CAPEHART.
Where a testator directs in his will that his slaves shall be freed, it is the duty of the executor to see that the wish of the testator is carried into effect at the expense of his estate.
The hires of slaves ordered to be emancipated must be first applied to the expenses of their removal; and if they prove insufficient, the remainder must be paid out of the estate.
Slaves ordered by the will to be emancipated can elect to accept or reject the boon of freedom; and where children are concerned, their parents must elect for them until they are of age, and then they have an election themselves.
This cause came up by consent from the Court of Equity of Bertie.
The points are sufficiently presented in the opinion of the Court.
Badger and Winston, Jr., for plaintiff.
_____________ for defendant.
NASH, C. J. The bill is filed by the executor of James L. Bryan to obtain instructions as to how he shall carry into execution his will. James L. Bryan died in October, 1856, and in his will is this clause: "I give to my slaves their freedom." The bill asks instructions on several points. The first is, is it the duty of the executor to free the said slaves?
We are of opinion that it is; and that having undertaken to execute the will, he is bound to execute all the trusts which are not forbidden by the laws of the State. Here is a clear bequest to the slaves of their liberty. A bequest which is lawful. See Thompson v. Newlin, 41 N.C. 384; Thomas v. Palmer, 54 N.C. 249; Thompson v. Newlin, 43 N.C. 32.
Second. The next question is, If he is bound to emancipate the slaves, where must he carry them to? and with what funds? In Thompson v. Newlin, supra, it was decided by a majority of the Court that, under a devise for emancipation, the executor could emancipate by sending them to a free State, where they would be free, and was not obliged to emancipate them under the act then in force. The opinion was not unanimous, for when the case was before the Court previously ( 41 N.C. 384) a dissenting opinion was filed. A doubt, therefore, rested upon the question. By the act of 1856, Revised Code, ch. 107, sec. 47, this doubt is removed, for it enacts: "Whenever it shall be directed by a testator that any of his slaves shall be emancipated and carried to any State, Territory, or country, and it may not be convenient to carry them to the place specially appointed, the Court shall designate and prescribe to what other place the slaves shall be carried, or for emancipation." By this section, the executor is authorized to send the slaves before emancipation here, to the State or country appointed by the testator, or, in the absence of such designation by him, to such State or country as the proper Court shall direct. Under this act there is no difference of opinion as to the construction. It is the policy of the State that when slaves are emancipated they shall be sent to the place from whence a return to this State is the least likely. In pursuance of this policy, we appoint Liberia as the country to which the executor shall send the slaves.
The third question is as to their hires. The hires of the slaves will constitute a fund for paying the expenses of their removal; and if it shall prove insufficient, the deficiency must be furnished out of the fund contained in the residuary clause.
To the fourth question, we answer that liberty cannot be forced upon any of the slaves who are of age to choose for themselves. If any of them refuse to accept their freedom, the bequest of liberty as to them fails and they remain slaves and sink into the residuum.
A commissioner must be appointed to ascertain from the adult slaves who are willing to go to Liberia and who are not; and if there are children under the age of 14, their parents must elect for them. If there are any who have no parents, or whose parents elect for them not to go, they must have liberty, on coming of age, to make their election. Cox v. Williams, 39 N.C. 15.
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
(75)

(73) We are satisfied, then, that the trust for the emancipation of these slaves is not such an one as can be carried into effect under the provisions of those sections of the chapter of the Revised Code to which we have referred; but as the slaves Lindsey and his wife Lucy are above the age of 50 years, they may be emancipated by virtue of section 49 of the same chapter, if the executor can prove meritorious services and will otherwise comply with the requirements of that section.

As most of the slaves in controversy cannot be emancipated in any way, a question arises whether they fall into the residuum of the testator's estate and pass under the sixteenth and seventeenth clauses of his will to the legatees therein named. They certainly are not mentioned in the sixteenth clause, because the residue therein embraced is expressly directed to be divided among certain legatees, of whom the testator's wife is one, whereas the slaves had been by a previous clause given expressly to the wife for life or widowhood, or, at all events, during her residence in the county of Iredell. It is clear, too, as we (74) think, that the residue given by the seventeenth clause is also a special one and cannot have the effect to dispose of these slaves. The clause directs that all the property left to the use of the testator's wife's that is not "otherwise directed" be sold by the executors at the wife's death, marriage, or removal out of the county, on a credit of twelve months, and the proceeds divided, etc. Now it is quite certain that the testator did not intend that the slaves whom he wished to set free — and two of whom may yet be set free — should be sold at the very moment when their freedom was to accrue. There were many other articles of property upon which the clause could operate, as to which no other direction was given, leaving the slaves unaffected, because as to them there was another direction given. See Lea v. Brown, 56 N.C. 141, in which most of the cases on the subject are referred to, and the principles upon which they were decided discussed and explained. It follows that as the slaves in controversy have not been effectually disposed of by the will they belong to the next of kin of the testator and must be divided among them according to the statute of distributions.

The division of the proceeds of the property other than the slaves directed to be sold by the executors under the sixteenth and seventeenth clauses must be per capita and not per stirpes, as there is nothing in the will to take it out of the general rule. See Roper v. Roper, ante, 16, where the authorities upon the subject are referred to and discussed.

PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.

Cited: Burgin v. Patterson, post, 427; Clark v. Bell, 59 N.C. 273.


Summaries of

Feimster v. Tucker

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1859
58 N.C. 69 (N.C. 1859)
Case details for

Feimster v. Tucker

Case Details

Full title:ABNER FEIMSTER, EXECUTOR, v. THOMAS TUCKER ET ALS

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1859

Citations

58 N.C. 69 (N.C. 1859)

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