McNeal v. Sherwood
McNeal v. Sherwood
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit brought to enforce an agreement to purchase certain land in the city of Providence which *315 at one time was owned by Elizabeth McNeal, who died July 11, 1838.
It is agreed that all the sisters died before Henry, intestate, and leaving no issue or husbands surviving them, and that whatever estate of inheritance came to Henry passed by his will to the complainant. There is no question that Henry was intended by the word c ‘brother ” in the will, and took by devise the portions of the fee given him by its terms on the successive deaths of tlife father and sisters. It appears, however, that he was a son of John, but not by the same mother with the sisters ; hence the question arises whether as brother by the half blood, though descended from the same grandmother— the common source of descent for this estate — he inherited the portions of the fee which vested in the sisters respectively on the termination of the life estates of the father and of the two sisters who died before the last; and we are further asked to determine whether, under the last clause of the will, he took a devisable estate.
We think that both these questions must be answered in the affirmative. The first was so decided by Judge Story in Gardner v. Collins, 3 Mason, 398, in a charge to the jury, and the decision was repeated by the Supreme Court of the United States, in an exhaustive opinion in the same case in 2 Peters, 58. *316 In 4 Kent’s Commentaries, 12th'ed. 403 and 404, it is said that in Rhode Island, as in other States mentioned, there seems to be no essential -distinction left between the whole and the half blood. They are equally of the blood of the intestate. We are not aware that these statements of our law have ever been doubted.
Under the rule in Shelly’s case, he thereupon became owner in fee simple absolute, and had full power to devise his estate in like manner.
The case presented is the one stated in 2 Washb. on Real Prop. 6th ed. § 1009, where it is said: “The mere circumstance that the remainder was contingent does not prevent the operation of the rule the moment the remainder vests. Thus an estate limited to A. for life, and if A. survives B'., then to his heirs, would be a contingent remainder in A., depending upon- his surviving B. If he does, his estate becomes at once vested and his term for life merges in the inheritance.”
No question arises as to his power to alieiiate during his lifetime, as he did not attempt to make any conveyance to take effect during his life.
■ We conclude, therefore, that a fee simple in the whole estate passed under Henry’s will, and that the complainant can convey to the defendant good title to the land in question, and that the defendant is bound to fulfill his agreement to purchase the same.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Elizabeth R. McNeal v. David F. Sherwood.
- Status
- Published