Wednesday, May 28, 2025

North Carolina Supreme Court Case~Laura A. Page vs. Mary Ford et al.

 North Carolina Supreme Court Case Transcription

Case: North Carolina Supreme Court

Date: October Term 1883

Citation: 89-2 Rowan County

Parties: Laura A. Page vs. Mary Ford et al.


Case Summary

SMITH, C. J. The plaintiff, the widow of John A. Page, who died intestate and without issue, brings this suit against the four defendants, his sisters and heirs-at-law, and their husbands to procure an assignment of dower in the land described in her petition, whereof she alleges the intestate was seized and possessed of an estate in fee.

The defendants resist the plaintiff's claim and say that the intestate derived title to the land under the will of his father, Dempsey Page, made in 1879, by the provisions of which an estate for life only was devised to the said intestate, if he died without issue, with remainder to the defendants, Mary and Laura, in fee.

The solution of the controversy in respect to the title depends, therefore, upon the construction of the testator's will, so much of which as bears upon the issue is contained in the first four clauses, and is as follows:

"Item 1. I give and devise to my beloved son, John Allison, the plantation on which I now live, containing about 94 acres, lying on the north side of Sherrill's Ford road, adjoining Mrs. Krider, Mrs. Kesler, and others; also one-half of my old plantation, containing about 78 acres, lying on south side of Withcrow's creek and joining M. A. File, Mrs. Krider and others; also, my two-horse wagon and harness, together with two mules (his choice), one bedstead and furniture (his choice), one bureau (his choice), and provisions enough to last him and mules until he can make and save a crop."

"Item 2. I give and devise to my beloved daughter Mary May, seventy-five acres of land, to be taken off from the Shop place, on which they now live, to be taken off from said place next to M. A. File's fifty acres, being that run off by W. A. Houck and the other 25 acres, joining James F. Cowan and M. A. File; to have and to hold during their life-time, and then to go as hereinafter provided."

"Item 3. I give and devise to my beloved daughter Laura E., one-half of my old home place, of which mention is made in item 1; also, what will remain of the Shop place, after Mary's share is taken off; also, she is to have one good provision laid off to her for her and her two children."

"Item 4. It is my will that if any of my children die without legal bodily heirs, or children, then, and in that case, the effects herein willed to them to return to the balance of my children then living, or their children, if they are dead and have left my legal bodily heirs. In case of Mary and her husband, should she die first, her husband is to have the use of her effects during his lifetime and then return as afore stated."

The result of the controversy depends upon the interpretation put upon the word "effects," used by the testator in the contingent dispositions made in the event of the death of any of the devisees without issue. If it comprehends the lands previously given as well as the personal estate, the title of the intestate ceased at his death, and the right to dower does not attach; if the term is used in its more restricted and common acceptation, and confined to the personal property bequeathed, the plaintiff would be entitled to an allotment of dower in the lands devised to her husband.

"The fundamental rule in the construction of wills," as is said by BATTLE, J., "is to ascertain the intention of the testator, and for that purpose all the parts of the will are to be taken in view, and effect is to be given, as far as possible, to every clause." Owen v. Owen, 74, 124.

It is also a well-established rule of construction that a testator is presumed to use the words in which he expresses himself, according to their strict and primary acceptation, unless from the context it appears that he uses them in a different sense; in which case, the sense in which he thus appears to have used them, will be the sense in which they are to be construed. Wig. Wills Prop., 1 page 58.

That the term effects is capable of expansion, so as to embrace real and personal estate, when it is seen that such is the testator's intention, from an inspection of the provisions of the instrument, is established by just adjudications.

"I take effects," says LORD MANSFIELD, in interpreting a residuary disposition of all the testator's effects, both real and personal, "to be synonymous to worldly substance, which means whatever can be turned to value; and that, therefore, real and personal effects mean all a man's property." Hogan v. Jackson, Cowp., 294.

So, SIR WILLIAM GRANT, master of the rolls, declares in Colwell v. Prescott, 15 Ves., 507, "there is no case for the restricted sense which the grandchildren put upon the words 'all my effects whatsoever';" adding, "LORD MANSFIELD says, that the word 'effects' is equivalent to property or worldly substance."

To the same general purpose are the cases of Childs v. White, 4 East, 394; Holloway v. Laincelbury, 11 East, 200; Franklin v. Frout, 16 East, 394; 2 Williams Exrs., 854; Theob. Law of Wills, 150.

In a recent case which came before the Vice Chancellor, SIR RICHARD MALINS, the authorities were carefully reviewed, and it was decided that by the use of the words "I give all the rest, residue, moneys, chattels, and all my other effects," notwithstanding the association of the latter words with articles of personal property before enumerated, "the testator meant to include everything he had in the world, whether real property or personal property." Smith v. Smith, 5 Law Rep., Chan. Div., 561.

There are cases where the will disposes of "effects" with very comprehensive descriptive terms following, such as "of what nature soever," Hick v. Dring, 2 M. & K., 148; or where the language is, "all my effects," How v. Earle, 15 M. & W., 473, and where the will stated it held that land was not embraced; but in all, it is conceded that a larger scope will be given to the disposition where sense can be collected from other parts of the will that such was the testator's intention.

Thus, in the former of the two cases last cited, it is said: "If the court can see that the testator meant by it to pass his real estate, then the judgment must be for the plaintiff."

The inquiry recurs as to the meaning of the testator in the use of the word found in the clause limiting the property given in remainder, and we are at no loss in arriving at the sense in which he employs it.


Land only is devised to Mary, and in the concluding part of the fourth item it is in direct terms provided that, in case of survivorship, her husband shall have the use of her effects during his life-time. "Effects" are here applied to the devised land, and can have no other significance, for there is no other property to which they can attach.

Land is also given to the defendant Laura, with an allowance of provisions for the support of herself and children for one year. It cannot be supposed that articles intended to be consumed were to return to the other children in the event of the death of Laura without issue, and there is nothing but her land upon which this devise over can operate, so that it must have been in the mind of the testator when he described it as part of the "effects," thus limited.


Whatever may be the significance of the word unexplained by the context, it is plain that in choosing it the testator meant to include the devised lands given to each of his children, and in this sense we must give it operation.

There is error in the ruling of the court, and there must be judgment that the defendants go without day and recover their costs.

Error. Reversed.


A True Copy

Teste:

[Signature]

Clerk




Artificial Intellenfence, Claude.ai, Case Summary

Dower Rights Dispute in North Carolina Supreme Court

North Carolina Supreme Court Case - Page v. Mary Ford et al. Document # North Carolina Supreme Court Case Transcription


**Case:** North Carolina Supreme Court  

**Date:** October Term 1883  

**Citation:** 89-2 Rowan County  

**Parties:** Laura A. Page vs. Mary Ford et al.  


## Case Summary

**SMITH, C. J.** The Detailed Explanation

This is a North Carolina Supreme Court case from 1883 involving a dower rights dispute. Here's what's happening:


Background


John A. Page died intestate (without a will) and without children

His widow Laura A. Page is suing his four sisters (Mary Ford and others) for dower rights

Dower was a legal right that gave a widow a life interest in one-third of her deceased husband's real estate


The Central Issue

The key question is whether John A. Page actually owned the land in fee simple (full ownership) or only had a life estate. This matters because:


If he owned it outright → his widow gets dower rights

If he only had a life estate → no dower rights for the widow


The Father's Will

The dispute centers on interpreting the will of Dempsey Page (John's father) from 1879. The will gave:


Land to his son John Allison (the deceased)

Land to daughter Mary May for her lifetime

Land to daughter Laura E.

Crucially, Item 4 stated that if any child died without "legal bodily heirs," their "effects" would return to the surviving children


The Legal Question

The court had to interpret what "effects" meant in the will:


Narrow interpretation: Only personal property (furniture, livestock, etc.)

Broad interpretation: All property including land


The Court's Decision

The Supreme Court reversed the lower court and ruled that:


"Effects" in this context includes both personal property AND land

Since John died without children, his interest in the land reverted to his sisters

Therefore, John never had full ownership to pass dower rights to his widow

Laura A. Page loses - she gets no dower rights


Legal Significance

This case establishes an important precedent about interpreting wills, particularly that courts will look at the entire context of a will to determine what terms like "effects" mean, rather than using only dictionary definitions. The court's extensive citation of English and American precedents shows this was a well-established principle of will interpretation.

The widow essentially lost her claim to a life interest in valuable farmland because of how her father-in-law's will was written decades earlier.






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