Court Opinion

ID: 1206538
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 04:59:59.095828+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:42.626085
License: Public Domain

130 S.E.2d 666 (1963)
259 N.C. 387
Marcellite Pool HICKS
v.
Unborn children of Marcellite Pool HICKS, and Charles O'H. Grimes, guardian ad litem.
No. 457.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
May 8, 1963.
*667 Mordecai, Mills & Parker, Raleigh, for plaintiff-appellee.
Charles O'H. Grimes, Raleigh, guardian ad litem.
DENNY, Chief Justice.
The sole assignment of error is to the signing of the judgment for that such judgment for that such judgment is contrary to law.
The appellant contends there is an irrebuttable presumption that the possibility of issue is not extinct until death. Therefore, he argues the court was in error in its conclusion with respect to the inability of the plaintiff to conceive and bear children, and, as a consequence of this erroneous conclusion, the court below erroneously held that the plaintiff, Marcellite Pool Hicks, is the owner of the bonds and cash balance now held by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Wake County, as custodian, under the provisions of the last will and testament of S. C. Pool, deceased, citing Shuford v. Brady, 169 N.C. 224, 85 S.E. 303; Prince v. Barnes, 224 N.C. 702, 32 S.E.2d 224; McPherson v. First & Citizens Nat. Bank, 240 N.C. 1, 81 S.E.2d 386 and Security Nat. Bank of Greensboro v. Hannah, 252 N.C. 556, 114 S.E.2d 273.
Ordinarily, the law presumes that the possibility of issue is not extinct until death. Security Nat. Bank of Greensboro v. Hannah, supra; McPherson v. First & Citizens Nat. Bank, supra, However, this presumption is rebuttable.
In McPherson v. First & Citizens Nat. Bank, supra, Johnson, J., speaking for the Court, said: "While in many jurisdictions, including England, the question whether the possibility of issue is ever extinct, has been re-examined in the light of exact processes of medical science by which in given cases sterility or impotency may be shown as matters of scientific certainty, nevertheless, thus far this Court has not been presented with a situation sufficiently compelling to warrant relaxation of the common-law rule."
It is said in 57 Am.Jur., Wills, section 1249, at page 827: "Where a testamentary gift is in some way conditioned upon a designated woman's having issue or further issue, as, for example, in a gift to the child or children of a named woman, the question sometimes arises whether the gift may be distributed prior to that woman's death. Although it is a recognized legal presumption that the possibility of issue is never extinct as long as a person lives, the courts nevertheless have on occasion sanctioned distribution of a testamentary gift prior to the death of the woman on whose failure of issue or further issue it was conditioned, upon the theory that, because of her age or physical condition, the improbability of her having children (or more children) has been established to such a degree that such distribution is permissible."
*668 In United States v. Provident Trust Co., 291 U.S. 272, 54 S. Ct. 389, 78 L. Ed. 793, the identical question involved on the appeal now before us was raised and considered. The lower court had held that the woman involved was incapable of bearing children since she had undergone surgery for the removal of her "uterus, Fallopian tubes, and both ovaries." The Supreme Court of the United States said: "(T)he presumption here involved had its origin at a time when medical knowledge was meager, and many centuries before the discovery of anaesthetics and, consequently, before surgical operations of the kind here involved became practicable. It was not until a comparatively recent period, therefore, that the effect of such an operation was disclosed to observation, and the incontrovertible fact recognized that a woman subjected thereto was permanently incapable of bearing children.
"* * * Whether in particular instances so-called irrebuttable presumptions are, in a more accurate sense, rules of substantive law rather than true presumptions, is a matter in respect of which a good deal has been said by modern commentators on the law of evidence. (Citations omitted) But it is unnecessary to consider that interesting distinction, since, as will appear, the presumption in question in this instance must be dealt with as open to rebuttal and therefore, in any aspect of the matter, as a true presumption.
"The presumption generally has been held to be conclusive when the element of age alone is involved, albeit Lord Coke's view that the law seeth no impossibility of issue, even though both husband and wife be an hundred years old (Coke Littleton 551; 2 Blackstone Commentaries 125), if now asserted for the first time, might well be put aside as a rhetorical extravagance. But the presumption, even where age alone is involved, has not been universally upheld as conclusive or applied under all circumstances. * * *" The judgment of the court below was affirmed.
We hold that the medical evidence adduced in the trial below was sufficient to rebut the legal presumption that the possibility of issue is not extinct until death and to support the conclusion of the court below that the plaintiff, Marcellite Pool Hicks, is now physically incapable of bearing children; that as to her, the possibility of issue is now extinct.
The Possibility of Issue Extinct is the topic of annotations in 67 A.L.R. 538 and in 146 A.L.R. 794.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.