68 Md. 606 | Md. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The property, the subject of contract between these parties, and the title to which it is the object of this case stated to have settled, consists of two lots on Whetstone Point in the City of Baltimore, which were disposed of by the tenth paragraph of the will of William Patterson, who died in 1835, thus:—
“I give and devise” said lots “to my son Edward” for life, “and after his decease, I give and devise” the same “to all and every, the child and children of him, my said son Edward, in equal proportions and equally to be divided between them and to the heirs of such child or children of the blood of their father forever, and for default of such child or children at the death of my said son Edward” he devises the property over to his other three sons for life, and upon their death to their children and “to the heirs of such child and children of the blood of their fathers forever.”
Edward Patterson died in 1865 leaving several children, and the question is what estate these children took in this property ? The Court below by the decree appealed from decided they took a fee simple, and after a careful consideration of the question we are of the same opinion.
Lord Coke says, if a man giveth lands to a man to have and to hold to him and his heirs on the part of his mother, yet the heirs of the part of the father shall inherit, for no
An estate like the one created by this will “to the heirs of the blood of the father,” or to heirs ex parte paterna, is an estate limited to a class of heirs, but to a class more numerous than those in an estate-tail general, and therefore would probably be of longer duration. It may continue for many generations, hampered all the while with this restricted,power of alienation, and then cease. Such an estate, whether called a “qualified fee,” or a “fee simple conditional,” is clearly within the mischiefs which it was the object of the descent laws to remove. The purpose oí those statutes as declared in the preamble to the Act oí 1786, was to abolish the law of descents which originated with the feudal system and military tenures, because it was contrarj' to justice and ought to be abolished, and we are clearly of opinion that by the operation of these descent laws this estate has been converted into an unqualified fee simple. Nor can we discover in sec. 28, Art. 47, of the Code (which is a codification and re-enactment of the 6th section of the Act of 1820), anything which saves
Decree affirmed.