delivered the opinion of this court.
A preliminary question has been raised in this case, upon the ground that the record was not filed in this court within nine months from the day the appeal was taken; and a certificate has been read by the appellant’s counsel, in which the clerk of Charles county court declares, it was by a verbal order of the appellant’s counsel that the record was detained in his office.
Upon an inspection of the record, we find it to state, that an appeal was duly taken at the time the judgment was rendered, and we find in it nothing to indicate a default on the part of the appellant..
We therefore think the case protected by the act of 1842, chap. 288, and overrule the motion to dismiss the appeal.
The only question arising on the bill of exceptions is, whether the sealed instrument of the 8th September, 1832, executed by W. W. Hannon to his son W. W. Hannon, Jr., and Henry M. Hannon, was admissible as evidence in the •cause, under either of the issues joined.
In a former trial of this cause, that paper was given in evidence, as a testamentary paper, but the subsequent proceedings in the case make it impossible to regard it now in that character.
The appellee’s counsel in one part of the argument, seemed to assume, that because it was decided not, to be operative as a part of the last will and testament of W. W. Hannon, therefore it could not, have any legal operation. This does not by any means follow.
It is a solemn deed, executed with due formality, for a consideration just as sufficient, against the party and his legal representative as a full and ample pecuniary consideration, actually advanced; and is not impeached by any pretence of fraud or imposition.
Clearly, every sane man has authority to give away his property, unless he attempts to give it upon terms which the law repudiates as against sound policy. He cannot give it to be held in perpetuity, or by any tenure not consistent with the rules of law, nor may he devote if. to impolitic or criminal objects.
This deed professes to transfer personal property to children of the grantee. It does not profess to create a perpetuity, but but is to be held by them as their absolute property. It is said, that the grantor did not. grant what he then had in possession,
There a mother gave specific property to her child, reserving to herself, during her life, the use of the property and its increase, and this court sustained tile title of the child derived under that instrument.
If then, the deed was sufficient to pass any part of the property of the grantor, had it been specifically described, it would we think of necessity, operate upon any article of property which, by parol testimony, could have been proved to have been in the grantor’s possession at the date of the deed, and which remained in his possession at the time of his death.
According to this theory, then, the testimony should have been admitted as a first link in a chain of testimony, to be, thereafter, followed by parol proof.
It is, however, objected, that the state of the pleadings did not justify .the production of such evidence, because the sole question was, whether ■“ payment” had or had not been made? If this be so, then, upon this issue, there would not only be no necessity to furnish proof of the amount of assets to be distributed, but if, on the face of the will itself, it should appear, that the plaintiff was to receive one-tenth of the surplus, he might recover one-third of the estate, provided his pleadings .claimed a third.
Now what is the issue in this cas.e? The defendants in their ¡rejoinder allege, that they, the executors, had fully paid to the plaintiff u the full amount of his proportion of the estate of her father.” In this language the issue is joined. The terms of this issue bring before the jury, in the broadest form, the consideration of what was “ the amount of plaintiff’s proportion of the estate.” Admitting, for the sake of this argument, that the rejoinder, which tenders an issue of payment of the precise sum now mentioned, would exclude all evidence
The present record does not, perhaps, strictly present the question, “ What did pass by the deed of the 8th September, 1S32?”
It must, of necessity, arise at the trial of the cause on the procedendo, and we deem it proper to say, that on the best consideration we have been able to give, it was competent to pass to the grantees one-half of the personal estate of the grantor, which should remain in his possession at (he time of his death, after payment of his debts and other proper expenses and charges of administration. Taking into view the relations in which the parties stood to each other, it must be regarded as intending to secure to the grantees their proportionate share, as children and co-representatives of their father’s estate, at his death. In many cases, such a proceeding might not only be justified, but required by every equitable consideration. Wre know of no rule of law which is violated by thus securing to a child, by deed, the proportion of the estate which the law would give him as a distributee, in case of intestacy.
The case of Hope and Hutchins, has declared the law in the case of a deed for specific property, and if the enumeration of all the articles of personal property possessed and owned by the grantor at the date of the deed, had been given, then those enumerated articles, and the natural increase from such as were capable of such increase, would, according to adjudged cases, have been passed to the grantees. But it is said, this deed is too uncertain for the want of such description, and is therefore void.
In 7 H. & J., 147 Coale and Harrington, the court have said, that a deed transferring to a grantee all the personal
Nor do we find any authority to forbid the transfer of such personal property subsequently acquired, as the grantor may leave at his death. He could have given his bond, payable at his death, for any specific sum. He could have bound himself in a penalty, to coerce his executors to transfer any specific property to the obligee, at his, the obligor’s, death. Why will not the same principle apply to such a deed as the present?
On the whole, we conclude, that consistently with the pleadings, the deed should have been admitted, and should have the legal effect to reduce the amount of the estate, which was to prove the aggregate sum, out of which the plaintiff was to receive her proportion.
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND PROCEDENDO.