The proceedings were instituted in the Court of Probate, from whence it was carried by appeal by defendants to his Honor at Chambers, who affirmed the judgment of the Probate Judge. From (346) this judgment defendants again appealed.
The facts pertinent to the points decided are fully set forth in the opinion of the Court. William Crump died intestate in 1873, seized and possessed of real and personal estate, leaving him surviving three grandchildren by a son Joseph, and five grandchildren by a daughter Lucinda, both of whom died before their father. Do these grandchildren inherit per stirpes or per capita, is the question.
This depends on the proper construction of the third rule of Descent, Bat. Rev., ch. 36, rule 3: "The lineal descendants of any person deceased shall represent their ancestor, and stand in the same place as the person himself would have done had he been living."
In 4 Kent, 379, it is said, the law of Justinian adhered strictly to the doctrine of representation, and gave to the grandchildren and other remoter descendants, though all the claimants were standing in equal degrees, the portion only that their parents would have taken if living. This was adhering, in all cases, to the doctrine of representation per stirpes, and the States of Rhode Island, New Jersey, North and South Carolina and Louisiana have followed, in this respect, the rule of the civic law. Thus, if A dies, leaving three grandchildren, two of them by B, a son who is dead, and one of them by C, a daughter who is dead, these three grandchildren, standing all in equal degree of consanguinity to the ancestor, would take only their father's share, and consequently, one grandchild would take half the estate and the other two grandchildren the other half.
Although such has been the construction of our third rule of Descent by commentators, and although such is undoubtedly the construction of a similar rule in England, (2 Bl. ch. 14,) the precise (347) question here has not been before this Court until now. The principle, however, has been repeatedly decided by this Court, and *Page 286 must be adhered to as a fixed rule of property until changed by legislative action.
The question was first raised in Clement v. Cauble, 55 N.C. 82, in a case of collateral descent, where it was held, Pearson, J., dissenting, that the rule of descent was per stirpes and not per capita. It was again before the Court in Haynes v. Johnson, 58 N.C. 124, when the above case was affirmed by a unanimous Court as res adjudicata. The latter decision was subsequent to the Revised Code, which retained the third rule as it was when construed in Clement v. Cauble, and was therefore considered as an affirmance of the construction as sanctioned by the Legislature. Finally, in Cromartie v. Kemp, 66 N.C. 382, the previous decisions are again affirmed, and in delivering the opinion of the Court, Rodman, J., says: "We are now invited by the counsel of the appellants to review the principle of these decisions and overrule them. We by no means wish to be understood, that if the question were open one, we should not concur with the Court in those cases. But we think the law as it was then decided, is not open to doubt or discussion."
These decisions were upon collateral descent under the fourth rule, but they are equally decisions upon lineal descent under rule three, because the rules of collateral descent are "subject to the rules" of lineal descent, and were so considered in the discussion. It would be impossible to adopt the rule insisted upon by the defendants of division per capita, without overruling all our decisions and introducing a new law of property.
As the parties inherit by representation, it follows that they must account for advancements.
There is no error.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Draper v. Bradley, 125 N.C. 74; Ellis v. Harrison, 140 N.C. 445.
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