delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill of complaint was filed in this case to procure a decree requiring the specific performance of a contract for the sale of land. The defence relied on is that the vendor has not a good and marketable title. In disposing of this contention it will be necessary to refer to several of the conveyances filed as exhibits with the bill and answer.
The plaintiff claims title under a deed from Robert H. Smith, Esq., trustee. The outlines defined in this deed embrace the property in question. Mr. Smith was appointed trustee to sell the property under a mortgage executed by Scott R. Hancock, and if the latter had title to the property covered by the mortgage then that title is incontestibly vested, under the conveyance from Mr. Smith, in the plaintiff.
It will not be necessary to go back in tracing the title farther than the year eighteen hundred and fifty-five, as both parties concede that at that time Absolom Hancock acquired from Rev. James Dolan the property in fee-simple. In eighteen hundred and sixty-six Absolom Hancock executed a deed conveying to Rachel S. Hancock, his wfife, “ all his property, real, personal and mixed, of every kind and description, in trust to hold the same for the use and benefit of said Absolom during his natural life, with power, nevertheless, to said Absolom and Rachel jointly to sell and dispose of the same or any portion thereof absolutely
The fee-simple title to the whole of the Dolan lot of two hundred feet front then stood under the deed of 1866, in Rachel in trust for Absolom during his life, with defeasible equitable remainders limited over after his death as to one-half, or one hundred feet, for Clifford W. Hancock; and under the deed of eighteen hundred and seventy, as to the other half, or one hundred feet, in Rachel in trust for Absolom during his life with defeasible equitable remainders limited over to three other sons ; and in the deed of eighteen hundred and sixty-six there was the power of revocation already alluded to, and in the second deed there was a reference to that power and a conveyance made subject thereto. In eighteen hundred and eighty Absolom and Rachel executed a deed to Scott R. Hancock, conveying to him in fee-simple the whole of the Dolan lot, fronting two hundred feet, and made up of the two parcels of one hundred feet each, to which we have referred; and whilst no reference to the power is made in this deed, the property is described by metes and bounds and is declared to be the same that was conveyed by Rev. James Dolan to Absolom Hancock by deed whose date and place of record are particularly given. This conveyance to Scott R. Hancock covers the identical property conveyed by Rev. James Dolan in eighteen hundred and fifty-five, and which was subsequently divided, in the deed of eighteen hundred and sixty-six, into two equal parts, and one of which equal parts was afterwards sub-divided into- three parcels. The only question before us is, does this deed of eighteen hundred and eighty convey any title to Scott R. Hancock ?
Whilst the power reserved under the deed of eighteen hundred and sixty-six and under the deed of eighteen hundred
We agree with the Court below that the title of the plaintiff is good and marketable, and we will therefore affirm the pro forma decree appealed from.
Pro forma decree affirmed with costs above and below.