131 A. 54 | N.J. | 1925
The suit is in ejectment, and the motion is to strike out the complaint. Mary Elizabeth Miller and John Miller, her husband, conveyed the premises known as 389-391 Grove street, in Jersey City, by deed dated September 19th, 1891, and thereafter duly recorded, to George Miller, their son, and Beata K. Miller, his wife. After the statement of the usual habendum, the deed contained the following limitation, viz.: "To the only proper use, benefit and behoof of the said party of the second part, and the survivor of them during the lifetime of the survivor, and, after the death of the survivor, to the child or children of the parties of the second part, and of the survivor of them, share and share alike, their heirs and assigns forever, and in default of any such child or children then to the heirs-at-law of said parties of the second part, in the following manner: One undivided half part to the heirs-at-law of the said George Miller, their heirs and assigns forever, and one undivided half part to the heirs-at-law of said Beata K. Miller, their heirs and assigns forever."
The life tenants died without children, but on May 24th, 1895, as a result of proceedings duly instituted for the purpose, in the Hudson Orphans Court, John A. Miller, then five years of age, one of the defendants herein, was adjudged under the provisions of our adoption statute to be their adoptive child, and thereafter he resided with his adopted parents as their only child, and thereafter married the other defendant herein. George Miller, the son of the grantor, died about August 7th, 1914, and Beata, his widow, died about November 12th, 1922, leaving her surviving her brother, the plaintiff herein.
The defendants are in possession of the locus in quo, claiming title under the statute of adoption, as the child and only heir-at-law of his adoptive parents, as well as under the provisions of the statute of "Descent," and the common law "rule in Shelley's case."
The main contention, however, is centred upon the effect of the provisions of the adoption statute (Pamph. L. 1902, p. *56 259; Pamph. L. 1912, p. 53), declarative of the legal status of the defendant John as the only surviving child of his adoptive parents.
The adoption statute has been before our courts in various factual phases, but never, so far as has been disclosed, has the precise question now at issue been presented in this jurisdiction for determination. The act received a liberal construction by the Court of Errors and Appeals, the present Chief Justice writing the opinion; In re Book's Will,
Vice Chancellor Howell had previously given this provision of the act a construction in Stout v. Cook,
Cases are invoked from other jurisdictions in support of this construction, but the adjudication of the Court of Errors and Appeals, so far as the rule of law in this state is concerned, like the decretae of the Roman Curia, is a finality. *57 Roma locuta est causa finita est. But when we are concerned, as in this instance, with the additional inquiry, i.e., whether the Adoption act is sufficiently comprehensive to include a grant of a life estate to the adoptive parents by a deed of conveyance, with a limitation over "to the child or children of the parties of the second part," and "in default of any such child or children then to the heirs-at-law of said parties of the second part," we are manifestly confronted with a legal inquiry entirelyres nova, in the determination of which decisions of other jurisdictions may be invoked as illuminative of the discussion.
It will be observed that the cases in this jurisdiction, where the effect of the adoption statute was considered, were cases arising under wills, and where, as a rule, the testator occupied the status of the adopting parent, whereas the question now presented arises under a covenant of a deed of conveyance, and concerns the effect of a limitation created by the grantor, a third party, in nowise related by the enabling statute to the adopted child.
The legal construction accorded to a covenant in a deed of conveyance has always differed from the liberality of view accorded by courts of equity to the same terms in a will, the reason being that the sole purpose of testamentary construction is to invoke the intention of the testator, while the language of the grantor employed in a common law deed of conveyance has, by centuries of judicial construction and interpretation, been settled, until in this day the difference has become axiomatic.
Thus, Chief Justice Whelpey, speaking for the Court of Errors and Appeals, in Adams v. Ross,
The defendant John A. Miller had not been adopted by the grantees for over three years after this conveyance had been *58 made, and these defendants were then without children, and in the light of that fact the limitation over by a third party to their children or heirs-at-law was legally intelligible, as not comprehending a stranger to the blood in default of lawful issue.
In those jurisdictions where the question has been presented for adjudication, and where similar adopting statutes exist, the result has been adverse to the claim of the defendant. Thus, inWilder v. Wilder,
From this analysis it results that the deed of conveyance in question does not legally include the defendant, John A. Miller, as a child of his adoptive parents, the grantees mentioned in the deed, and that the title to the locus in quo has not, in virtue of such conveyance, vested in him as an adopted child.
The remaining questions presented involve the application of the statute of descents; the rule in Shelley's case, and the construction of the deed so as to vest a contingent remainder in the defendant, as a child and heir-at-law of the grantees, within the terms of the grant.
It is generally conceded that section 11 of the Descent act (2Comp. Stat., p. 1921, amended Pamph. L. 1915, p. 64) abolishes estates tail, but in reality it simply defines the legal character of an estate thus transmitted, so that an estate in fee tail may still be created by the use of appropriate language, as at common law, its legal effect being defined by the statute. James v. Dubois,
But in any circumstances no such estate can be created without the use of the word "heirs," and neither the words "children," "issue," "descendants," "seed" or "offspring" can supply its place, while as to conveyances the word is indispensable to create any character of a fee. Co. Litt. 20a; 2 Bl. Com.
115; Adams v. Ross,
It is also elementary that to invoke the rule in Shelley's case, the use of the words "heirs" in the conveyance is indispensable. But, obviously, further pursuit of this phase of the controversy, while interesting in the abstract, can be of no practical utility in the disposition of the case sub judice, since the conveyance in question obviously contains no such *60 limitation, the words "child" or "children" therein contained in the habendum being primarily under the settled rules of construction words of purchase, and not words of limitation.
Upon this phase of the subject the Adoption act itself lends controlling emphasis in declaring that "such child shall not be capable of taking property expressly limited to heirs of the body of the adopting parent or parents," thus expressly excluding from its operation titles by descent under the well-settled rules of the common law, applicable to fees tail and titles derivable under the rule in Shelley's case.
The deed in this instance manifestly, therefore, created a life estate in the grantees, with a remainder over, contingent upon the birth of children, and upon failure thereof to the heirs of the grantees, respectively, as at common law. 4 Kent. Com. 210;Butler v. Huestis,
Finally, as was declared by the Missouri Supreme Court inHockaday v. Lynn,
The result reached, therefore, is that the motion of the defendants to strike out the complaint is denied, and since the motion is tantamount in legal effect to the interposition of a demurrer at common law, judgment will be ordered to be entered upon the pleadings in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants. *61