Fullam v. Brock, 117
Decision Date | 24 July 1967 |
Docket Number | No. 117,117 |
Citation | 271 N.C. 145,155 S.E.2d 737 |
Parties | Algie J. FULLAM, Individually and in his capacity as Administrator c.t.a. of the Estate of Lillian Clark Brock v. Deaver Dunsmore BROCK, Incompetent et al. |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Gudger & Erwin, by Lamar Gudger and Ronald W. Howell, Asheville, for Everett Clark, defendant appellee.
There is no common-law right to make a will. The right to make a will is not a natural, inalienable, inherited, fundamental, or inherent right, and it is not one guaranteed by the Constitution. The right to make a will is conferred and regulated by statute. Paul v. Davenport, 217 N.C. 154, 7 S.E.2d 352; 94 C.J.S., Wills § 3.
In Irving Trust Co. v. Day, 314 U.S. 556, 62 S.Ct. 398, 86 L.Ed. 452, the Court said, Inter alia:
The General Assembly has power to enact a statute not authorized by the present Constitution where the statute is passed in anticipation of a constitutional amendment authorizing it or provides that it shall take effect upon the adoption of such constitutional amendment. 16 Am.Jur.2d, Constitutional Law, § 180.
In Bennett v. Cain, 248 N.C. 428, 103 S.E.2d 510, the Court said, with plenary citation of authority to support the statement: 'The power of the Legislature to determine who shall take the property of a person dying subsequent to the effective date of the legislative act cannot be doubted.'
This is said in Annot. 171 A.L.R. 1075: 'A Legislature has power to enact a statute not authorized by the present Constitution where the statute is passed in anticipation of a constitutional amendment authorizing it or provides that it shall take effect upon the adoption of such a constitutional amendment.' In support of the statement, cases are cited from the Supreme Court of the United States, and from nine states.
In Druggan v. Anderson, 269 U.S. 36, 46 S.Ct. 14, 70 L.Ed. 151, the Court considered the Eighteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution which was ratified and became effective 16 January 1916, but provided that prohibition therein declared should not become operative until after one year. The National Prohibition Act was passed after the ratification of the amendment, but before the expiration of the year, and provided that it was not to go into effect until after the amendment did. The Court in upholding the act and holding that it went into effect on 16 January 1920, made the incidental observation that '(i)ndeed it would be going far to say that while the fate of the Amendment was uncertain Congress could not have passed a law in aid of it, conditioned upon the ratification taking place.'
In Dudley v. Staton, 257 N.C. 572, 126 S.E.2d 590, (opinion filed 10 July 1962), this Court held, as correctly summarized in the headnote in the North Carolina Reports:
To abrogate the effect of that decision, and to make the rights of husbands and wives the same in each other's separate property, the General Assembly in its 1963 Session enacted Chapter 1209 which is entitled: 'AN ACT TO AMEND ARTICLE X, SECTION 6 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF NORTH CAROLINA, WITH RESPECT TO A MARRIED WOMAN'S RIGHT TO TRANSFER HER SEPARATE PROPERTY BY DEED AND BY WILL AND TO EXERCISE POWERS OF ATTORNEY CONFERRED UPON HER BY HER HUSBAND. This Act of the General Assembly directed the submission of a constitutional amendment at the next general election whereby Article X, Section 6 of the Constitution would be amended to read, in substance: The real and personal property of any female in this State may be devised and bequeathed by her 'subject to such regulations and limitations as the General Assembly may prescribe.' Section 4 1/2 of this Act provided in substance that in the event a majority of the voters in such general election be in favor of the amendments hereinbefore provided for, G.S. § 52--4 shall be repealed and said repeal shall be effective on the date the Governor certifies the amendments to the Secretary of State. Section 4.1 provided: 'From and after the date of certification of the amendments set out in Section 1 of this Act, wherever the word 'spouse' appears in the General Statutes with reference to testate or intestate successions, it shall apply alike to both husband and wife.' This Act was ratified on 26 June 1963. A majority of votes cast by the qualified voters of this State on 14 January 1964 were in favor of the amendments, and such result was duly certified by the Governor of the State of North Carolina on 6 February 1964.
The General Assembly at its 1965 Session enacted Chapter 849, which is entitled: 'AN ACT TO RE-ENACT G.S. 30--1, 30--2, AND 30--3, RELATING TO DISSENT FROM WILLS.' Section 2 of this Act reads as follows:
'This re-enactment of G.S. 30--1, G.S. 30--2 and G.S. 30--3 shall not be construed as a legislative determination that, with respect to the right of a husband to dissent from his wife's will, these Sections were invalid between the date of certification of the amendments to Article X, Section 6 and the date of ratification of this...
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