15 Vt. 344 | Vt. | 1843
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The importance of the question in this case appears from the fact that it has been three times before the court, and the case is, probably, the first and only one in which it has been the subject either of discussion or adjudication in our judicial tribunals. Several points have been made in the argument, and it may be proper to notice them, as the court have deliberated upon them, and are prepared to express their opinion.
An objection was made to the will of Daniel Harris as not being properly executed, or proved. The objection to the execution of the will has not been much insisted on; and it seems to be unobjectionable. The will was executed by the testator in the presence of three witnesses, who signed their names as witnesses, in the presence of the testator and also in the presence of each other.
At the time this will was proved, no directions were given in the statute, in what manner the court of probate should proceed.
The executor was required to present it for probate, under a penalty, and jurisdiction over the subject-matter was given to the court of probate. The judge, who was, also, a justice of the peace, swore the witnesses before him as justice, from a doubt then entertained whether, as judge of probate, he could administer an oath; and, having considered the testimony, he approved the will and it was recorded. If there was any apparent irregularity in his proceedings, which, however, we do not perceive, we should think that, at this distance of time, the regularity of the previous proceedings of the court, should be presumed, according to the decisions in Collard v. Crane, Brayton, 18; and Judge of Probate v. Fillmore, 1 D. Chip. 420.
An old will, even when it appeared not to be proved and recorded, as the law directed, was allowed to be read as evidence, as an ancient deed, although actual possession did
The next question is, what estate was given by the will to Elizabeth Harris, the mother of the present plaintiffs, who, it appears, intermarried with Christopher Bates, and with him, in 1797, executed the deed to Issachar Reed, under which the defendants are in possession. The will was dated June 9, 1774, and approved May 2, 1781. The devise is in the following words : “ I give to my well beloved daughter, Elizabeth Harris, and to the lawful heirs of her body, one hundred acres of land,” &c. The land in controversy is part of the land devised to her. The intention of the testator, at the time he made the will, is to be learned, and when ascertained to be carried into effect. This intention must be the one he had at the time he made the will. For although it has been said, that a will must be made to speak from the testator’s death, and be looked on, not only as his last will, but as his last words ; yet it cannot be made to speak any thing different, or more than what the testator said when he made it. If it does, the "law would make the will and not the testator; and an intention, other and different than his, and other and different from what he expressed, would be carried into effect.
The technical effect of the words of a will is presumed to be intended, unless the contrary appears from the will. The instances are numerous, where words of purchase are made words of descent. The words, issue — son—children, are words of purchase, yet they have been made words of descent in a will. The word here is a word of descent, and yet in Mandeville’s case, Co. Litt. 266, it was a word of purchase, In the case before us, there is nothing to show that
The doctrine of conditional fees, as it was considered in England before the statute de donis, and which called for, and caused the enactment of that statute, was expressly repudiated in Connecticut, in the case of Allen & wife v. Bunce, before mentioned, and rejected in the other cases there mentioned, and does not appear ever to have been recognized in New England or New York. The policy which induced .the courts of justice to give them a construction inconsistent with their original intention, does not appear ever to have prevailed in this country, except in the slate of South Carolina. This view of the case is, we apprehend, abundantly sufficient to shew what was meant, and what the testator meant, at the time he made his will, by the terms “ lawful heirs of her body.”
We are, then, to inquire whether there was any change in the government, policy, or laws existing at the death of the testator, to prevent his intention from being fulfilled, and which would avoid the devise and prevent the devisee from taking the estate intended to be given her ; for I apprehend the statute could not make a will for the devisor, and give the land, directly contrary to his will as expressed at the time of its execution.
At what time the testator deceased does not appear; but probably it was a short time before the will was approved, at which time there had been a change of jurisdiction over the territory now comprised in the state of Vermont, and in which the land devised was situated; and nothing can be found in the constitution or laws of the state of Vermont which, as we can discover, should prevent this devise from taking effect. In 1777, Vermont established a separate government, and adopted a constitution, and from that time was, de jure, and defacto, an independent, sovereign state. In this constitution, they recognize entails as existing, and do not abolish them, but require that “ a future legislature shall regulate entails in such a manner as to prevent perpetuities.” A similar provision has been introduced in every constitution since made, and is now an article in the existing constitution of this state. The legislature have passed no acts upon the
After the first constitution was adopted, at the session of the legislature holden in 1778, they had recourse to Connecticut for their laws, and from the journal of the legislature we learn they passed several acts as the said acts stand in the Connecticut lau) book. They voted that the fees of the court of probate be “ three times as much as established in the Connecticut law. In February, 1779, they enacted “ that common law, as it is generally practiced and understood, in the New England States, be, and is hereby established as the common law of this state.” This statute was in force at the time the testator deceased. It is not necessary to examine the provisions of the statute particularly, as we do not consider them as making any alteration in the nature of the estate in question. Common law, as practiced and understood, probably meant, as considered or altered by statute or by judicial constructions, and as it was adapted to our local circumstances and usages, generally adopted. It is most probable they had reference to the common law as understood and established by usage, or the determination of the courts in Connecticut, as that appears to be the state to which the legislature had particular reference in passing laws.
It may not be necessary to pursue the history of our laws on this subject further, as these were all the laws existing when the devise took effect; and it appears to us, very clearly, that, as estates tail were then known and recognized in New England, and in most of the states of the Union, and in the constitution of this state, no alteration was made by our law to prevent the devise to Elizabeth Harris from taking effect according to the will of the testator.
But if we follow the history of our law from that time to
In view of the law, as it existed when the testator made his will, and as it has continued to exist, with the alterations and explanations, we have no doubt, but that, by the words of the will, Elizabeth Harris took an estate tail, secundara formam doni.
The question then arises whether, by any act of Elizabeth Harris, the estate has been barred or aliened, so as to prevent it from vesting in the heirs of her body, the present plaintiffs.
By the law, as existing before the statute de donis, and while conditional estates were recognized, if a feme tenant in tail, had taken husband, and had issu?, and the husband and wife had aliened, in fee, by deed, yet the issue might have a formedon in descender, for the alienation was not lawful; but otherwise if it had been by fine. Co. Litt. 19, a. By the law of New York, until 1782, and by the law of Massachusetts, until 1786, and by the law as existing in England, an estate tail would not be barred by a deed, but only by a common recovery. In Connecticut, the first donee could not bar, or convey, the estate, except during his or her life. In Rhode Island it could be barred by a deed, executed and acknowledged agreeably to the directions of their statute. No such statute has ever been passed in this state; and if in New York it was necessary to pass the statute of 1782, and in Massachusetts to pass the statute of 1786, and in Rhode Island their statute, for the purpose of enabling the tenant in tail, by deed, to convey the estate, the same necessity exists in this state; and, for want, of such statute, the
It is, however, urged that the statute of conveyancing,' which was passed in 1787, and which was in operation at the time Christopher Bates and his wife, the devisee under the wili, executed the deed to Issachar Reed, authorized them to bar the issue as well as the reversion. The statute was'as follows: “ All deeds or conveyances of any houses or lands ‘ within this state, signed, sealed, and delivered by the par- ‘ ties granting the same, having good and lawful authority, ‘attested, acknowledged, and recorded, &c. shall be valid ‘ to pass the same, without any other act or ceremony in the ‘ law whatsoever — want of livery of seizin or attornment of the ‘ possessors, notwithstanding.” By a subsequent section, it is further provided that no real estate whereof a feme covert is or shall be seized, shall henceforth pass by deed of herself and her baron, without a previous acknowledgment made by her, apart from her husband, before a counsellor, a judge of the supreme court, or of the county court. Haswell’s Stat. 32. This statute only authorized those to deed and convey, who had good and lawful authority so to do, and dispensed with livery of seizin and attornment. This act does not determine who has the right, nor give any right where none existed before, but leaves that to be determined by the laws then in force. Elizabeth Bates had no authority, by com-' mon law, nor by statute, to bar the issue in tail, or the reversion, by a deed of herself or baron,- or even to convey her own estate in fee simple, except by a deed executed according to the direction given in the statute; and in the dissertation upon this statute, by judge Chipman, it is neither asserted nor intimated, that the statute was to have any effect similar to the one now demanded for it; and, indeed, it is difficult to see how the words, “ having good and lawful authority,” should be construed as giving authority, when none before existed. In Massachusetts, by their provincial statute, Wil. 3, c. 7, it was provided, that such as have good and lawful authority to convey houses or lands, may deed, by deed acknowledged, &c. Under this statute it would seem as though it might be argued with some degree of plausibility, that all who could convey, by any species of conveyance, could, by virtue of that statute,
But there is a still further objection to the deed executed by Bates and his wife to Reed, presented at this argument for the first time, which, in our view, is entirely fatal to it, as conveying the estate of Elizabeth Bates. The statute of 1797 was the first which authorised a justice of the peace to take the acknowledgment of a deed of a feme covert. This statute was suspended and did not go into operation until September, 1798. The deed in question purports to have been dated in January, 1797, and to be acknowledged before Moses Watkins, justice of the peace, in April, 1797, who took the separate examination of the wife. We have already noticed that, by the act of 1787, in force both at the date, and acknowledgment of this deed, no estate of a feme covert could, thereafter, pass, by deed of herself and her baron, without a previous acknowledgment made by her, apart from her husband, before a counsellor or judge of the supreme, or county court; and it was further enacted that a certificate of such acknowledgment should be entered on the deed, by the magistrate, and that every alienation, &c. not acknowledged, together with a certificate of such acknowledgment, was declared to be ipso facto void. This deed was not so aknowledged, as Mr. Watkins had no authority to take the acknowledgment as justice of the peace, and was, as to her, ipso facto void. The attempt of the legislature to give force and efficacy, by an act of the legislature, to a deed, executed by Job & Theoda Wood, husband and wife, and acknowleged as the law directs, by
The remaining questions, in this case, are few and of easy solution. These plaintiffs are not estopped by the covenant of warranty, contained in the deed of Christopher' Bates and his wife. The deed was void, as to her, as we have already remarked. The wife is never bound by the covenants contained in a deed, except in the case of a fine; and the issue of a tenant, in tail, is not estopped by any deed, with covenants, executed by the ancestor. The plaintiffs claim under the will of their grandfather.
The vendue deed was correctly rejected (as the proceedings were not recorded) on the authority of the case, Sumner v. Sherman et al., 13 Vt. R. 609.
The statute of limitations cannot avail the defendants, as it appears by the case, that both Christopher Bates, and his wife, died within fifteen years before the commencement of this suit. The deed from Bates and wife to Reed, was good to convey all the interest of Bates, according to repeated decisions ; and no one, until his death, could disturb the possession taken under that deed ; and with respect to Elizabeth, the statutes of 1787 and 1797 expressly reserve the rights of a feme covert; and as to her, no statute of limitation would commence, until, by the death Of her husband, the impediment was removed, and she became discovert; and this action was commenced within fifteen years from that time.
On the whole, we think the county court were correct in all their decisions. The will was duly proved. Elizabeth Harris took an estate tail, under it, either as it was understood in England, and most of the states of the Union, or as it was understood in Connecticut. We think that this estate was not barred by the deed of herself and husband to Issachar Reed, and that there is no impediment in the way of the present plaintiffs’ recovering the estate, according to the will of the testator, either from the vendue deed, or the statute of limitations. Moreover, we do not see anything in the
We have said nothing upon the subject of common recoveries, as it was not involved, necessarily, in the decision of the question now before us. They have not been resorted to, nor do I know that it was ever necessary to resort to them in this state.. This is the only case where the subject of entailments has come before the court; and for all future gifts in tail, the statute has declared their effect.
I would only add, in answer to the argument so much dwelt on, that common recoveries are in opposition to, and not consistent with, our recording system, that they are not more so than a title acquired by possession, the effect of a judgment in ejectment, or the lien acquired by a lis pen-dens ; the evidence of neither of which, appears on the records of deeds in the town or county clerk’s office.
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.