Osborne v. Widenhouse

Decision Date30 June 1857
Citation3 Jones 238,56 N.C. 238
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesCATHARINE OSBORNE and others v. MARTIN WIDENHOUSE and others.
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Where land was devised to a grandson by his paternal grandfather, and the devisee died in the life-time of his father, it was Held that the devisee not being an heir, or one of the heirs, of the devisor, the estate passed to his uncles and aunts on the mother's side as well as those on the side of the father. ( Burgwyn v. Devereux, 1 Ire. Rep. 586, cited and approved.)

CAUSE transmitted from the Court of Equity of Cabarrus county,

This was a petition for the partition of several tracts of land amongst the heirs-at-law of one Noah Furr, and for the purpose of ascertaining the respective interests of the plaintiffs and defendants in the premises. The land in question was originally owned by Paul Furr, who devised the same as follows: “I give and bequeath unto the bodily and lawful heirs of my son Henry Furr, the tract of land whereon he now lives,” (describing it). Previously to the death of the testator, his son Henry Furr had intermarried with Elizabeth Linker, by whom he had one child, the said Noah. Shortly after the death of the testator, Noah died without having had issue, and without brother or sister, or the issue of such. Henry, the father of Noah, then died; and Elizabeth, the mother, also died, and the only question in the case, is whether the brothers and sisters of Henry Furr, (the paternal uncles and aunts of Noah), are entitled to have the proceeds of the land divided amongst them, or whether the brothers and sisters of Elizabeth Linker, (the maternal uncles and aunts), are entitled to participate in the fund, the former class being represented by the plaintiffs, and the latter by the defendants. The facts of the case are not contested by the defendants, who concur in praying a sale for partition, but insist that they are equally entitled with the paternal uncles and aunts of Noah Furr, under the statute of descents.

The cause was set down for hearing on bill and answers, and sent to this Court.

Fowle and Jones, for the plaintiffs .

No counsel appeared for the defendants in this Court.

PEARSON. J.

Noah Furr acquired the land in controversy as devisee under the will of his grandfather Paul Furr. At the death of the devisor, Henry Furr, the father of Noah, was living, and would have taken the land as his heir, had he died without making a will; so Noah at the death of Paul, his...

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7 cases
  • Ex parte Barefoot
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 1 Octubre 1931
    ...Bell v. Dozier, 12 N.C. 333; Felton v. Billups, 19 N.C. 308; Wilkerson v. Bracken, 24 N.C. 315; Gillespie v. Foy, 40 N.C. 280; Osborne v. Widenhouse, 56 N.C. 238; v. Grandy, 66 N.C. 484; Watson v. Sullivan, 153 N.C. 246, 69 S.E. 133; Poisson v. Pettaway, 159 N.C. 650, 75 S.E. 930; Forbes v.......
  • Brown v. Cowper
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 30 Octubre 1957
    ...side as well as to those on the side of his mother. G.S. § 29-1 Rules 4 and 5; Peel v. Corey, 196 N.C. 79, 144 S.E. 559; Osborne v. Widenhouse, 56 N.C. 238; Burgwyn v. Devereux, 23 N.C. W. Herbert Stallings took a one-tenth undivided interest in the Ball Gray Farm as a purchaser in its gene......
  • Ex Parte Barefoot Et Al.
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 1 Octubre 1931
    ...v. Dozier, 12 N. C. 333; Felton v. Billups, 19 N. C. 308; Wilkerson v. Bracken, 24 N. C. 315; Gillespie v. Foy, 40 N. C. 280; Osborne v. Widenbouse, 56 N. C. 238; Dozier v. Grandy, 66 N. C. 484; Watson v. Sullivan, 153 N. C. 246, 69 S. E. 133; Poisson v. Pettaway, 159 N. C. 650, 75 S. E. 93......
  • Reilly v. Mahoney
    • United States
    • New Jersey Court of Chancery
    • 12 Mayo 1941
    ...Greenlee v. Davis, 19 Ind. 60. But the opposite conclusion has been reached in North Carolina. Burgwyn v. Devereux, 23 N.C. 583;Osborne v. Widenhause, 56 N.C. 238. Generally the term "ancestor", when used in the law of descents, is the correlative of "heir", so that the ancestor of a person......
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