130 P. 729 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Section 7100, L. O. L., reads thus: “Conveyances of lands, or of any estate or interest therein, may be made
As we construe this deed, the grantor conveyed at the time the fee simple estate in the realty mentioned, subject to his own life estate therein. As indicating a grant in praesenti, we have only to look at the words of the instrument, “have bargained and sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell and convey.” These are words of present grant, and consequently indicate an intention of the grantor to convey at the time a then actual interest in the lands mentioned. Indeed, he retains “the control of the'estate for the term of my natural life, with full power of control and management as such tenant for life.” An estate for life, although one of freehold, is not one of inheritance, and it will be observed that it does not reserve the right to convey the property, but only the power to control and manage; and not only so, but those functions are to be exercised only as such tenant for life. If Deckenbach and the defendant had been divorced after the execution and delivery of the deed in question, without any adjustment of their holdings in realty, no one would contend that a clear title to the property described in the instrument could have been acquired without a conveyance from Johanna Deckenbach.
It is argued that because the exception and reservation appear in what is technically known as “the premises” in the deed it must be construed as retaining the whole estate, postponing all title to the grantee until after the death of the grantor; but, as said in Bryan v. Bradley, 16 Conn. 474, 481: “A reservation differs
The canon of construction in cases like this is thus laid down by Mr. Justice Eakin in Sappingfield v. King, 49 Or. 102, 108 (89 Pac. 142, 144, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1066): “Did the maker intend to convey any estate or interest whatever to vest before his death and upon the execution of the paper, or, upon the other hand, did he intend that all the interest or estate should take effect only at his death? If the former, it-is a deed; if the latter, it is testamentary and revocable.”
Taking it by its four comers, considering the words of present grant, remembering that the grantor retained only the control and management of the property as tenant for life, not as owner of the fee, and taking into account its actual present delivery and record, the effect of the instrument in question was- to convey a present estate to the grantee; and it must be construed as a valid deed: Saunders v. Saunders, 115 Iowa, 275 (88 N. W. 329); Cone v. Cone, 118 Iowa, 458 (92 N. W. 665); Cross v. Benson, 68 Kan. 495 (75 Pac. 558, 64 L. R. A. 560); Christ v. Kuehne, 172 Mo. 118 (72 S. W. 537); Stamper v. Venable, 117 Tenn. 557
With the iniquity of the grantor in deserting his family and leaving them dependent on their own resources for so many years, or with the. propriety of his conveying to his wife the great bulk of his property, leaving to his children only about $3,800 worth of personal property, as disclosed by the record, we have nothing to do, any more than if he had wasted his substance in riotous living in a far country. The property was his in fee simple, and it could make no difference in the decision of this case what he did with it, so long as he was competent to act as he chose.
The decree of the'Circuit Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.