In order to determine the questions raised in this case, it is important, in the first place, to ascertain the true construction of those parts of the will which relate to the premises in question, and to settle the precise nature and extent of the power and authority thereby granted to the executor. It is not controverted that the power to sell, being given solely to the executor, in case of his death or inability to act, was not transmissible to the administrators with the will annexed. It was a personal trust or confidence, not given to
The next question which it becomes important to consider and determine is, whether, by the terms of this will, any estate
But it does not follow, in case of the failure to execute the power by the donee, so that it is defeated at law, that the heir holds the estate discharged of the trust. On the contrary, it is laid down in Sudgen on Powers, 394, and the rule is well supported by numerous authorities, that in such case the heir holds the estate in trust only, and if the power becomes extinguished by the death of the person to whom it is given, equity acting upon the trust will compel the heir to join in the sale of the estate for the purposes designated by the testator. This principle is one of very ancient origin. In Garfoot v. Garfoot, 1 Ch. Ca. 35, decided as early as the time of Charles II. the case was thus: lands were devised to the wife for life, afterwards to be sold by the executor for younger children’s portions; the executor, and the wife die; and the younger children prefer their bill against the heir ; he demurs, because but an authority in the executor, which is dead with him; but the demurrer was overruled. So too in another case, two persons were empowered to sell lands; one died; survivor and heir were compelled to sell, because “ the lands were tied with a trust,” which will survive in equity. 1 Ch. Ca. 35. The case at bar clearly falls within this principle. The executor had become civiliter mortuus in this commonwealth by his flight and subsequent outlawry, so that the power had become as effectually defeated as it would have been by the actual death of the donee. So much, therefore, of the demanded premises as were to be sold by the executor for the benefit of the testator’s daughters and which descended to the ancestor of the demandants, Benjamin Hall, was held by him, subject to the trusts declared by the testator, and which were to be created and carried into effect by the sale and conveyance of the estate. This view of the nature of the power and of the duty which
It was clearly the intent of the testator to give to the daughters, by means of the power of sale vested in his executor, the entire beneficial interest in the demanded premises. That portion which vested in the son, Benjamin Hall, was held by him, subject to the trust declared by the testator in respect of the estate. He was, therefore, a trustee, holding a legal title, charged with specific trusts, to be carried into effect by an immediate conveyance of the estate. Now, it is a well settled rule, founded-on the highest principle of equity, that courts will always freely presume grants of real estate according to the duty of trustees, it being a reasonable and just presumption, in the absence of controlling evidence, that every one will do all acts required of him in the performance of a duty or trust. This rule prevails both at law and in equity. And so readily are presumptions of this kind made that courts do not wait twenty years, or any precise period, after the duty arises. In England v. Slade, 4 T. R. 682, trustees having been directed by a will to convey to a devisee on his attaining twenty-one years of age, the court instructed the jury to presume a conveyance at any time afterwards, though considerably less than twenty years. Lord Kenyon says: “ It was what they were bound to do, and what a court of equity would have compelled them to do, if they had refused. It is to be rather presumed that they did their duty. And as to the time, the jury may presume a surrender or conveyance in much less time than twenty years.” So too in Doe v. Sybourn, 7 T. R. 2, it is laid down that “ in all cases where trustees ought to convey to the beneficial owner, a jury might presume a conveyance according to the purposes of the trust, in order to prevent a just title from being defeated by matter of form.” In all such cases the law grounds the presumption on the fact that a court of equity would compel the execution of the trust, and, in this respect, seems to approximate to the rule in chancery, that what ought to be done, shall be con
Another circumstance of great significance, which goes to confirm this presumption of a grant from Benjamin Hall to his sisters, is the fact that, as early as 1787 we find them, jointly with their husbands, conveying by deeds to William Gridley, with full covenants of seisin and warranty, the whole of a lot of land in the westerly part of Boston, which was included in the codicil of the will, and was to be sold by the executor in the same manner as the premises now in controversy. This shows quite conclusively that, at that time, they and others regarded the legal title to the estates which were by the will to be sold for the benefit of the daughters of the testator as being then vested in them, and affords strong ground to believe that prior to this period the right of Benjamin, as heir at law, had been granted to them. The same inference may be drawn from the deeds of Hobby and wife to Otis, and Hobby and wife to Walter, in which they convey, with covenants of seisin and warranty, one undivided half of the demanded premises, to which they were not entitled, except by a grant of Benjamin’s interest as heir at law.
It was urged that this clause in the deed to Gridley “ being the same which the said Elizabeth Welch and Sarah Hobby inherit as heirs to their father, Hugh Hall, Esq. late of Bos
Without going into greater detail to add to the facts and circumstances already enumerated, other proofs of less significance, which tend to aid the presumption of a grant of the premises in dispute from Benjamin Hall, or entering upon a consideration of the other points raised by the parties, we are entirely satisfied, for the reasons already given, that we are not only well warranted in presuming such grant from said Benjamin Hall, but that the conclusion is quite irresistible that such conveyance was actually made.
In the first two cases, judgment for the respondents ; in the last two, judgment for the tenants.
