Alice R. COLEMAN, also known as Alice R. Jackson, Appellant
v.
Thomas William JACKSON, individually in his own right, and
as administrator of the Estate of Thomas H. Jackson,
deceased, and Susie Williams Jackson, and Susie Jackson
Crutchfield, Administratrix of Estate of Joseph I. Jackson, Appellees.
No. 15636.
United States Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Oct. 10, 1960.
Decided Nov. 17, 1960, Petition for Rehearing En Banc Denied
Jan. 6, 1961.
Mr. Dale L. Button, Washington, D.C., for appellant.
Mr. Paul Lee Sweeny, Washington, D.C., for appellees.
Before Mr. Justice REED, retired,* and EDGERTON and WASHINGTON, Circuit Judges.
Mr. Justice REED, sitting by designation.
Decedent Thomas H. Jackson and appellant Alice R. Coleman, also known as Alice R. Jackson, lived together in the district of Columbia, ostensibly as man and wife, from 1926 until decedent's death on January 9, 1957. They had 11 children. Thomas and Alice were not legally married. Thomas was the husband of Susie W. Jackson, one of the appellees, to whom he was married in 1903 in a ceremonial marriage which was never dissolved. Thomas had lived with Susie in Virginia until 1926, and two children were born of this marriage. After 1926 Susie continued to reside in Virginia. Thomas visited her regularly and sent her regular cash support until his death.
In 1952 certain realty in the District was conveyed to decedent and Alice. In the deed it was stated that the property was conveyed to 'Thomas H. Jackson and wife, Alice R. Jackson * * * as Tenants by the Entirety.' At decedent's death intestate, dispute arose as to the ownership of the property. Alice claimed that the conveyance created in her a right of survivorship and that she became the sole owner of the realty. Appellees, who are decedent's administrator and members of his legitimate family, claimed that the conveyance created a tenancy in common between Thomas and Alice and that on Thomas' death they were entitled to his share.1
The District Court, in an action brought by appellees for declaratory and equitable relief, held that Susie W. Jackson was the lawful widow of decedent and that, since Thomas and Alice were not married, the conveyance to them created only a tenancy in common without right of survivorship. Alice had sold the property in question before the commencement of this suit, and therefore the court impressed so much of the proceeds as was derived from purchase payments made by Thomas with a constructive trust in favor of appellees. From this judgment Alice appealed.
It is clear that Alice cannot take as a surviving tenant by the entireties, for this tenancy can exist only between husband and wife. Fairclaw v. Forrest, 1942,
From this theory followed-- or were said to follow-- the two great attributes of tenancy by the entireties, the right of survivorship and the inability of either spouse acting alone to alienate an interest in the property during the joint lives of the two. The right of the survivor to take all is an attribute of joint tenancy as well, but only in tenancy by the entireties is it impossible for one cotenant to sell or pledge his interest or to compel a partition of the property. Tenancy by the entireties exists today under the law of the District. Settle v. Settle, 1925,
Our issue, then, is whether in the District of Columbia a conveyance to A and B, as husband and wife and as tenants by the entireties, when it if impossible for them to take that estate because the husband is married to another living woman, creates a joint tenancy enabling the paramour to take by right of survivorship.
Title 45, 816, of the District of Columbia Code, so far as relevant, provides:
'Every estate granted or devised to two or more persons in their own right, including estates granted or devised to husband and wife, shall be a tenancy in common, unless expressly declared to be a joint tenancy * * *.'
The form of this section, as originally enacted, 31 Stat. 1352, 1031 (1901), followed the draft of Walter S. Cox, D.C.Code, Cox's Draft, p. 393 (1898). See id., Preface, at vii and xii. No legislative discussion on the original section has been found. The amendment of 1902, 32 Stat. 538, does not affect this litigation.
Nevertheless, it appears reasonably clear that the passage of 816 in 1901 was intended primarily, and perhaps solely, to reverse the common law rule that a grant or devise to a number of people, without more, created a joint tenancy. Seitz v. Seitz, 1897,
'* * * it is an inflexible and inexorable rule of the common law, repeatedly declared to be in force in the District of Columbia, and become an absolute rule of property, which could not be disregarded without disturbing a vast number of titles and unsettling the whole law of real estate, that a conveyance of land to two or more persons, without any sufficient indication of intention in the instrument of conveyance that the grantees are to hold in severalty, is to be construed as a joint tenancy, and not as a tenancy in common, whatever may have been the true intention of the parties in that regard. We know that this rule of the common law has been changed almost everywhere else by statute; but the Congress of the United States has not yet thought proper to change it in the District of Columbia, notwithstanding that its attention has been called to the subject; and we are bound by the rule as it stands.'
The passage of 816 seems thus to have substituted a presumption in favor of tenancy in common instead of a presumption in favor of joint tenancy. But the new presumption applies, as did the old one, only when there is no expression to the contrary in the conveyance. It was even said in Perrin v. Harrington, 1911,
The situation which confronts us is not unique, and a few cases have been found dealing with similar conveyances. Mitchell v. Frederick,
"The most important incident of tenancy by the entireties * * *.' The intention to secure this incident by describing the estate as one by the entirety is with us clear beyond all question. Specifying tenancy by the entirety is the fullequivalent of declaring in so many words that there shall be a right of survivorship.'
The court did not find itself compelled to decide that form of cotenancy was created by the ineffectual attempt to create tenancy by the entireties, but said that, whatever form the cotenancy took, the intention to create survivorship would be effected.3
In Maxwell v. Saylor, 1948,
Justice Stearne entered a vigorous disent in Maxwell v. Saylor. He cited and adopted the reasoning of the New York Appellate Division in Perrin v. Harrington, 1911,
Justice Stearne's dissent did not bear fruit in Pennsylvania. In 1959 the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Bove v. Bove,
We agree with the majority of the Pennsylvania court and do not find the reasoning of Perrin v. Harrington convincing. Of course, joint tenancy lacks the feature of inalienability which tenancy by the entireties possesses. It is impossible, however, to say that, with tenancy by the entireties barred by lack of a valid marriage, the parties preferred tenancy in common, which has neither the incident of inalienability nor the incident of survivorship. Nor does it suffice to strike the inappropriate words, 'tenants by the entireties,' and apply so much of the deed as is left. Such an approach would ignore the element of intent which the New York court admits to be dispositive. The words 'tenants by the entireties' are an expression of intent that the court cannot ignore.7
What the parties intended in this case is clear if we accept the words of the conveyance as representing the intention of the parties. This must necessarily be done where, as here, no contrary evidence of intention exists.8 The words used, 'tenants by the entirety,' mean in law that the parties wanted the property to be inalienable by either during their joint lives, and on the death of one they wished the survivor to take all. Because they were not married and because inalienability is an incident only of estates by the entireties, the law denies them the first of these wishes. Bu it does not follow that it must deny them the second as well. Survivorship, the salient feature of joint tenancy, is also perhaps the most important feature of tenancy by the entireties; the other major attribute of the latter estate, inalienability, is in part only a means to protect the right of the survivor to take. Although there are differences between joint tenancies and tenancies by the entireties,9 the marked similarities between the two forms of cotenancy cannot be ignored. In Settle v. Settle, 1925,
The court below found that both Alice and Thomas knew that Thomas had another living wife and that Alice 'did not live with him in good faith as his wife.' However, this is not relevant to the question whether they were joint tenants. Whatever society and we may think of the illicit relationship, the law recognizes the right of the participants to hold property jointly and to give or bequeath property to each other without limitations imposed because of the relationship.
Thus we reverse the judgment below so far as it pertains to the proceeds of the real property conveyed to Thomas and Alice. Since there appears to be other property affected by the judgment, in particular a bank account owned by Thomas, as to which no error appears, we remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
Sitting by designation pursuant to Sec. 294(a), Title 28, U.S.Code
Under the statute of descent in force at decedent's death, his interest in the real property would devolve, subject to dower, to his children and their descendants. D.C.Code (1951 ed.) 18-101, 18-201
See 2 Blackstone, Commentaries 182; Hunt v. Blackburn, 1888,
Again in Maryland, in 1935, in the case of Hutson v. Hutson,
Cf. Little River Bank & Trust Co. v. Eastman, Fla.App.1958,
And see Morris v. McCarty, 1893,
It should be noted, however, that this question has never been before the New York Court of Appeals and that Perrin v. Harrington has last cited by the Appellate Division on this point in 1927, Armondi v. Dunham,
In 1950, in Teacher v. Kijurina,
See Kepner, The Effect of an Attempted Creation of an Estate by the Entirety in Unmarried Grantees, 6 Rutgers L.Rev. 550, 557 (1952)
There is evidence in the deed that the words 'Tenants by the Entirety' are not the result merely of a whim of the draftsman but reflect the conscious intention of the parties. The deed contains the following sentence, after which appears the signature of Thomas, the deceased grantee: 'Sale of the above described property was ratified to said Thomas H.Jackson who has directed that conveyance be made to the parties hereto of the second part as Tenants by the Entirety, as evidenced by his signature hereto.'
Thus, e.g., partition of land is made available by D.C.Code 16-1301 to joint tenants but not to tenants by the entireties
