80 Ga. 374 | Ga. | 1888
This deed was made in 1877, and to determine its effect requires a construction of certain sections, especially section 2250, of the code. The conveyance was by deed of gift, to which the father was party of the first part, and the daughter party of the second part. He conveyed to her and the lawful heirs of her body begotten, to her and their sole and separate use, and free from all debts, liabilities and contracts of her present or any future husband,” to have and to hold unto her and her heirs . . . to her and them, and their- own proper use, benefit and behoof forever in fee simple ”; and warranted title to her, and her heirs and their assigns.” Had the deed omitted the words, “ the lawful heirs of her body begotten,” and used in lieu thereof the words “her heirs,” there could have been no question that an absolute fee simple estate would have vested in the daughter alone; that is, she would have been sole tenant in fee simple as to the whole of the premises conveyed. With this supposed modification, the entire instrument would have been consistent with itself throughout; not a-word would have presented any conflict, literal or legal, with any other word or collection of words. The whole problem before us, therefore, results from the insertion of the phrase, “ the lawful heirs of her body begotten”; and so we set out With the certainty that the gift is either to the daughter alone, or to her and the heirs of her body. That the heirs are to be lawful and begotten, adds nothing substantial to their description, since to be heirs of the body at all they must have both of these attributes. Legally speaking, the precise equivalent of the lawful heirs of her body begotten ” is “ heirs of her body.” The more extended description only serves to show that the donor consciously intended to restrict the range of heirs ” to such persons as the law embraces in the terms heirs of the body.”
“ An absolute or fee simple estate is one in which the owner is entitled to the entire property, with unconditional power of disposition during his life, and descending to his heirs and legal representatives upon his death intestate.” Code, §2246. “The word ‘heirs,’ or its equivalent, is not necessary to create an absolute estate; but every conveyance, properly executed, shall be construed to convey the fee, unless a less estate is mentioned and limited in such conveyance. If a less estate is expressly limited, the courts shall not, by construction, increase such estate into a fee, but disregarding all technical rules, shall give effect to the intention of the maker of the instrument, as far as the same is lawful, if the same can be gathered from its contents ; and if not, in such case the court may hear parol evidence to prove the intention.” Id §2248. “ Limitations over to ‘ heirs,’ ‘ heirs of the body,’ ‘ lineal heirs,’ ‘ lawful heirs,’ ‘issue,’ or words of similar import, shall be held to mean children, whether the parents be alive or dead; and under such words children, and the descendants of deceased children by representation, in being at the time of the vesting of the estate, shall take.” Id. §2249. “ Estates tail are prohibited and abolished in this State. Gifts or grants to one and the heirs of his body, or his heirs male or heirs female, or his heirs by a particular person, or his children or his issue, convey an absolute fee. Estates tail beiug illegal, the law will never presume or imply such an estate. Limitations which, by the English rules of construction, would create an estate tail by implication, in this State shall give a life estate to the first taker,
Section 2246, in what we have quoted from it, though new as statute law, makes no change in the definition or the incidents of an absolute or fee simple estate. Section 2248 is a reproduction of the act of 1821 (Cobb’s Dig., 169,) in so far as it declares words of inheritance, such as “ heirs,” etc., needless to create an absolute estate, and makes every conveyance, properly executed, have that effect, unless a less estate is therein mentioned and limited. The rest of the section is new as statute law, and as a universal rule, new in the law generally; for, prior to the code, there'was no inhibition, in all oases, against enlarging a less estate expressly limited, into a fee by construction ; nor any absolute requirement to disregard technical rules in order to arrive at intention; nor was the door so wide open to the admission of parol evidence to clear obscurities and explain patent ambiguities. Section 2248 is wholly new, and works a radical change in the prior law by making certain wprds and phrases, or other like words, always import purchase and not limitation when used in limitations over. According to the rule in Shelly’s case, such words, so used, would generally be taken as words of limitation and not of purchase. The code totally extirpates that celebrated rule, and establishes the very reverse of its doctrine, as to all limitations over. Wilkerson vs. Clark (this term), ante, p. 367.
What is a “ limitation over ” ? In a large sense, and no
Instances more strict of “ limitation over,” as the phrase is commonly used, are the following: A gift or grant to A for life, and upon failure of issue or heirs of bis body, then to B in fee. Or a devise to A forever, but if he should die without issue or heirs of his body, to B in fee. These instances might be multiplied and varied indefinitely. In both these examples the idea of substitution, as well as succession, is embraced, that is, B is not only to take, if at all, after the first estate granted, or the interest therein of the first taker is exhausted, but in lieu of other persons (issue or heirs of the body) who would take or continue to hold (it matters not whether by purchase or by descent) were they in being. It may be that in a first or any single limitation over, the element of substitution is essential in rigid propriety of legal language, but we are well satisfied that the code, in the section under consideration, uses
Section 2251 is almost a literal reproduction of the act of February, 1854, (acts of 1853-4, p. 72,) requiring that certain phrases, or any terms equivalent thereto, in limitations over, be construed to import always a definite, and not an indefinite, iailure of heirs or issue — a failure at the death of the first taker. The conclusion of the section, providing that such limitations shall convey the estate in the manner prescribed in section 2250, is new matter, the act of 1854 being silent as to where the estate shall go.
We are ready now to enter upon the analysis and exposition of this section, to-wit, §2250. Its subject-matter is estates tail, and estates tail only, together with the incidents under the order of things, established partly by prior legislation and partly by the changes introduced by the code itself, of attempts to create them, or of the use of formulas in conveyancing which would create them in England, either expressly or by implication. The first clause of the section declares them abrogated and abolished. This was done both by constitution and by statute before the close of the last century. The next clause, instead of referring to the statute de donis, as a criterion or standard, as did the act of 1821, (Cobb’s Dig. 169,) annexes the consequence prescribed by that act, namely, the creation of an absolute fee to “ gifts or grants to one and the heirs of his body, or his heirs male or heirs female, or his heirs by a particular person, or his children, or his issue.” Though this enumeration of words may comprehend some not
“Estates tail being illegal, the law will never presume or imply such an estate.” This clause, taken literally, is as old in our law, though not, prior to the code, inserted in any statute, as the abolition of entails by the constitution of 1777. But if it means, as it probably does, that the law will not imply an intention to create an estate tail, even when such intention can be ascertained by clear inference, it is either new law or a somewhat doubtful exposition of the old.
“ Limitations which by the English rules of construction would create an estate tail by implication, in this State shall give a life estate to the first taker, with remainder over in fee to his children and their descendants as above provided” (that is, as provided in §2249); “ and if none are living at the time of his death, remainder over in fee to the beneficiaries intended by the maker of the instrument.” This carving up of any and all estates tail by implication into a particular estate and a remainder is wholly new. A large part of the limitations here spoken of were embraced in the act of 1854, now embodied in section 2251 of the code, but certainly not all. The universality here established is, however, consistent with, indeed a necessary incident of, the two sections 2249 and 2251 taken together, for the materials to which these two sections, one or both, apply, exhaust, I apprehend, the whole stock in trade of estates tail by implication. I do
We have seeu already what'the code provides concerning all estates tail and concerning estates tail express; we now see its treatment of estates tail implied; it resolves them into an estate for life and a remainder over in behalf of children or their descendants alive at the time of the vesting of the estate, and if none, then a remainder over in behalf of others, if any, appointed to take. It will be noticed that the first, as well as the second, of these alternative remainders is called a remainder “ over,” which fact tends to support the construction above advanced as to the code-meaning of “ limitations over.”
Finally, it may be observed that the scheme of the code seems to be to leave what it deems forms of entail express just as it found them under the uniform construction of the act of 1821, but to disengage from that act all other forms, and annex to them the invariable consequence of a life estate with remainder over.
We now return to the clause touching express entails to subject it to a still more minute and critical examination. “ Gifts or grants to one and the heirs of his body, or his heirs male or heirs female, or his heirs by a particular person, or his children, or his issue, convey an absolute fee.” According to the English law, all the words here enumerated are primarily words of entail except “ children,” which is primarily a word of purchase. The other words when used alone are not ambiguous, this one is; and its introduction into the clause with the others upon an apparent equality, as though it were as free as they from ambiguity, is what makes the chief difficulty of construction. According to Wilde’s case, when this word is coupled in the gift or grant immediately with the ancestor, as in the language of the code, it imports limitation, and conse
In discussing briefly each of the four constructions, we shall treat them, not in the direct, but in the inverse order to that in which they have been numbered.
The fourth we reject, because to make children always a word of limitation would be not only to abrogate the prior law in a most important particular, but to depart in this clause from all the tendencies and analogies found elsewhere in the code. Had the codifiers intended a change so radical, they would have made it expressly, and not left it to be inferred. We see that such was their practice in treating both of estates tail implied and limitations over generally. Then why, if they contemplated this change also, were they less explicit in dealing with estates tail express ? In so far as they have anywhere attached a restricted sense to any one word or phrase importing offspring, they have made it conform to children as a word of purchase and not as a word of limitation. Their object has been to enlarge and enrich the vocabulary of purchase, and that only. They have not in a sin
The second construction, that which would render the associated words equally ambiguous with the word “ children,” and suffer their ambiguity to be cleared in the same way, to-wit, by resort to extrinsic evidence to ascertain whether children were in esse or not at the date of the gift or grant, has much to recommend it for enactment into law by the legislature, but we think the true sense of the code would not be arrived at by adopting it. We must remember that the section of the code now under review has for its subject-matter estates tail, and all of the enumerated words, including “ children,” are, without any change in them whatever, words of entailment, the only difference being that sometimes “ children ” is not so, but the others when used alone are of that nature invariably. In the clause we are considering, all the words are treated as belonging to one and the same class, the class being that to which they belong as words of entail. The relation of the word children to any other class is wholly out of view, and thus, with reference to the purpose in hand, which is to declare the effect of words of entail, this word is as much one of entail, and as free from ambiguity, as any of the others. Before it can be a word of entail at all, it has already lost its significance in the given instance as a word of purchase, and with that gone it is no less a
We now see that any ambiguity in the word “ children,” which occurs to the mind in reading the clause, results from connecting the meaning of the word outside of the clause with that which is inside. The moment we cease to do this, the moment we confine our attention to the word as a word of entail, the ambiguity of the word, though still existing in the law as a whole, disappears from the clause and ceases to disturb it. As one of entail, the word has but a single meaning, and that alone is within the
The scheme of the code with regard to words of entail pure and simple, used as such, unqualified by concomitant or explanatory terms, is briefly this: In the examples enumerated in this clause and in them only, they are words of limitation, and as our law recognizes but one species of inheritance, that of heirs general, they pass an absolute fee. All other instances of their use, the code treats as limitations over, and converts the words of entail into words of purchase.
The first construction, that which treats all the words as unchanged by the code when they are all words of entail, and any them are used as in the, examples set out in this clause, is the only one left for our adoption. To it we are hedged in by our rejection of all the other constructions, and by the reasons assigned for their rejection. And we adopt it, not with hesitation or reluctance, but with thorough conviction of its soundness. To look at words at all as words of entail, they have to be regarded as words of limitation ; for words of purchase,-as such, are the reverse of words of entail, and no estate tail ever was or could be created by their use. It is immaterial that the same word or words may be sometimes the one and sometimes the other, for when they are considered exclusively in the one character, they are as different from what they are in the other as they would be if they were different words altogether. We remark again, for the fact cannot be too much emphasized, that in the clause we are construing the code deals with the enumerated words solely as words of entail, and declares their effect, as such, when used in the manner indicated in the examples which the clause presents. It does not undertake to make them more or less words of entail when so used than they were before, nor does it, as we think, intend to vary their effect •in any respect from what it was before under the act of 1821 {supra). Although the clause stops with the declara
It follows that the daughter of the donor, and she alone, took an absolute fee in the premises now in controversy, unless there are in the deed other words by which “ the lawful heirs of her body begotten” are converted into words of purchase, and none such appear. Indeed, taking the whole deed together, it seems to have been the intention of the draftsman to abide by the code, and create the very estate in the daughter which the code contemplates as the result of such an instrument, to-wit, an estate in fee simple. It seems impossible not to hold that the conveyance is either to her and her heirs in fee simple, or to her and the heirs of her body in fee simple, and in either case she takes by it an absolute fee.
The chancellor having, in the present case, granted the injunction prayed for, thereby holding that the daughter was not sole owner of the premises in fee, his decision was erroneous.
Judgment reversed.