Walton's Heirs v. Walton's
Walton's Heirs v. Walton's
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court,
In 1804, Matthew Walton published his last will which was never altered, revoked or republished, (though he lived until 1819, and in the mean time greatly increased his estate,) and by which he devised to some of his collateral relatives some specific legacies, and all the residue of his estate, real and personal, after payment of debts, to his wife.
The testator died without issue ; and his widow ■afterwards intermarried with John Pope. This suit in chancery is prosecuted by his heirs against Pope and wife for a decree against them for the lands and slaves to which the testator was entitled at his death, and which he did not own at the date of his will. The circuit court dismissed the bill; and the only question for this court to decide is, whether, on the’ facts which have been stated, the decree is right.
From the Norman conquest to the reign of H. VIII. land was not devisable, except in particular
Since the enactment of the statute authorizing a devise of after-acquired land, the true doctrine seems to be, according to a proper construction and application of the opinion in Smith et al. vs. Edrington, that whether land acquired after the publication of the will shall pass by the will or descend to the heirs, is a question of intention, to be solved by a proper construction of the whole will. If, from the will itself, it shall appear more reasonable to inferan intention that after acquired land should pass by it, than that it should remain undevised, then it would pass by the will; otherwise, if the contrary intentention shall seem more reasonable, the land will
1st. The statute of 1800 (II Dig. 1247,) did not alter the pre-established mode of construing a devise of slaves. That statute declares that, “ slaves, so far as respects last wills and testaments, símil iiereafter, within this commonwealth, be held and deemed as real estate, and shall pass by the last will and testament of persons possessed thereof, in the same «liinncr a»d under the same regulations as landed property, and nothing contained in the act entitled “an act to reduce into one the several acts concerning distribution of intestates’ estates, and the duty of executors and administrators,” or in the fourth section thereof, which enables persons above the age of eighteen years to dispose of their chattels by will, shall be construed to contravene this act.”
Notwithstanding this act slaves are still, for most purposes, deemed personal estate. The effect of the act is, that, since its passage, a person under twenty one years of age cannot devise a slave • that a will that would not pass land will not pass a slave, and that the devisee of a slave will take under the will, in the first instance, just as a devisee of land would ta]j_e all<i hold ianc[ devised. This is the whole op-oration of the statute. Jrrior to Us enactment, a gen* eral devise of all the testator’s slaves would have passed such as may have been acquired after tbe publication, because, its to staves as well as other chattels, the will spoke at the testator’s death. The statute has not changed this rule of construction. Prior to the statute of 1800, a testator, when ho made a general devise of all his slaves, was presumC({ to have intended all that he might own at his •,__.. ° death. .
There is nothing in the statute which should dc-feat, or was designed to oppose, that legal presump
The case of Mason vs. Mason’s Executors (III Bibb, 448,) does not, as was supposed in argument, contain any intimation inconsistent with this view. In that case, fifteen slaves were devised by name, and, of course, other slaves, afterwards acquired, could not have been embraced in such a specific devise. As to such slaves, the court said in that case, that “ there is no general provision from ivhich the testator's intention to dispose of them can possibly be inferred thus clearly intimating that they might have passed by the will of the testator, had he made a “general devise” of all his slaves.
We are, therefore, of opinion, that all the slaves owned by the testator at his death passed by his will to his wife.
2nd. Even if after-acquired slaves do not pass by a general devise, still there is enough, wc think, in this case to shew that the testator intended that all the slaves that he owned at his death should go to his wife, and he emancipated at her death, if she should concur in his wish to that effect.
It seems that he owned, at his death, no slaves except those whom he owned at the date of his will, and their after-born issue. Hence it is but reasonable to infer, that he desired that the children, as well as their mothers, should be free. Such a construction is fortified by the maxim, that courts should lean “ injetvorem libertatis.''
We are, therefore, clearly of opinion, that the appellants have no right to any of the slaves.
As to the lands claimed in the lull, there is no allegation or prayer which gave the circuit court jurisdiction to decide to whom they belong. If they did not pass by the will, they descended to the heirs, and they would, in that event, have had a
It was proper, therefore, to dismiss the bill for want of jurisdiction to make any decree establishing the right to the lands. We shall not, therefore, intimate whether the general devise of estate, real and personal, and the charge of debts on the whole, should be construed as including all the lands as well as slaves owned at the testator’s death.-The dismissal of the bill will not bar any suit at law to try the title to the land.
Decree affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.