5 App. D.C. 59 | D.C. Cir. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The question in the case is, whether a deed of conveyance in fee simple to husband and wife, expressly declared in what is known as the habendum clause of the deed to be a tenancy in common, and not a joint tenancy, does, in fact and in contemplation of law, create a tenancy in common, or the peculiar estate known to the common law as a tenancy by the
We concur in the determination of the question that was made by the court below. The express language of the deed itself in the habendum clause creates a tenancy in common, with all the rights and incidents of such an estate; and if the intention of the parties is to count for anything, they have not left the matter in doubt. But the argument is that a grant or conveyance to husband and wife is, by an inexorable rule of the common law, to be construed in all cases as creating an estate by the entirety; and that it is not competent for them, even by express words in the deed, either in the body of the deed or in the habendum clause, to provide that the estate shall be a different estate, a tenancy in common or a joint tenancy. It is claimed that this is an inexorable rule, inherent in the legal relations of husband and wife, under the common law, and which no intention of the parties can contravene.
Undoubtedly there is respectable authority for the appellant’s contention, and some show of reason. But we cannot regard either the reason of the rule, if such was the rule, or the force of the authorities, that have been cited on behalf of the appellant, as being applicable in this jurisdiction at the present time.
In the case of Hunt v. Blackburn, 128 U. S. 464, the Supreme Court of the United States, by Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, said: “Undoubtedly, at common law, husband and wife did not take, under a conveyance of land to them jointly, as tenants in common or as joint tenants, but each became seized of
The quotation in this opinion from Preston on Estates "is the statement of the common law which was criticised and repudiated by Assistant Vice Chancellor Hoffman in the case of Dias v. Glover, 1 Hoffman’s Chan. Rep. 70, 77; and by the Supreme Court of the State of Pennsylvania in the case of Stuckey v. Keefe, 26 Penn. St. 399, as being unsupported by any authority. We may say that, if it had no authority before this to support it, it. has now abundant support. The authority of) the Supreme Court of the United States is sufficient for us. Moreover, we regard Mr. Preston’s statement as founded in reason and common sense. There never was any good reason for carrying the feudal notion of the unity of husband and wife, which was not the Christian notion, to the absurd extreme to which it has sometimes been pushed. We may note, also, that the decision in the case of Dias v. Glover, 1 Hoffman’s Ch. 70, was overruled by the subsequent case of Hicks v. Cochran, 4 Edw. Ch. 111, in which Mr. Preston’s statement of the law was distinctly and unequivocally adopted; and it is believed .that there is nothing in any of
As is said in the case of McDermott v. French, 15 N. J. Eq. 78, and by Mr. Washburn in his work on Real Property (4th Ed.), Vol. 1, p. 674, “it is always competent to make husband and wife tenants in common by proper words in the deed or devise by which they take, indicating such an intention.” And in Fladung v. Rose, 58 Md. 13, the Court of Appeals of Maryland, after a full review of all the authorities, including those now cited before us, announced the same doctrine. The last mentioned case, it is true, was one where a joint tenancy was expressly created and not a tenancy in common; but the principle is the same; and the authority of Mr.. Preston is fully sustained in that case.
We are of opinion, therefore, without further statement of our analysis of the adjudications that are supposed to bear upon this point, most of which will be found, upon close investigation, not to be inconsistent with the position here assumed, that it is competent, at common law, independently of all married woman’s acts, to make husband and wife tenants in common by proper words in the deed under which they take, indicating such an intention? Are there such words, and is there such intention in the'deed under consideration in this case? Of this there is not room for doubt. There could not be more apt words than those that are used ; and the intention is too plain to be questioned. And it does not seem to be claimed on behalf of the appellant, and we do not suppose that it could successfully be claimed, that it makes any difference that the words indicating the intention of the parties appear in the habendum clause and not in the body of the deed. It is the special function of the habendum clause to set forth such limitations. 3 Washburn on Real Property (4th Ed.), Vol. 3, 436.
Inasmuch as from what we have said, it is apparent that we regard the deed in question as creating a tenancy in common under the common law, and not a tenancy by the
But the answer to this is, that the spirit and purpose of the Married Woman’s Act are to destroy the arbitrary and fictitious unity of husband and wife upon which the peculiar estate of a tenancy by the entirety was founded. The peculiarity of a tenancy by the entirety did not consist so much in the nature and extent of the estate conveyed, as in the absence of capacity on the part of either husband or wife to dispose of it without the concurrence of the other. When that incapacity is removed, and when husband - and wife are, by the statute, virtually constituted separate and independent persons in respect of their rights of property, there is no reason to limit the power of disposal which the statute confers. Most undoubtedly there is no longer any reason to hold that, under the statute a wife may not be a tenant in common with her husband, if the deed of conveyance of the estate specifically so provides'.
In the case of Fladung v. Rose, 58 Md. 13, already cited, the Court of Appeals of Maryland, construing the statute of that State, which is not perhaps as broad in that respect as our own, said: “ Modern legislation in this country has to a very great extent removed the common law disabilities of
Much more is this applicable to the statute law of the District of Columbia, which, as we have intimated, is even more forcible than the statute law of Maryland in its assertion of the absolute right of married women to hold and control and dispose of their separate estates with entire independence of their husbands. We do not think that married women were under any disability at the common law from becoming tenants in common with their husbands under deeds of conveyance in which apt words were used to create such a tenancy, and the intention to create it was manifest. And we are satisfied, that, if any such disability
We are of opinion that the decision of the court below in this case was right, and that its decree should be affirmed; and it is accordingly affit'med, with costs.