after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The important questions presented in this case relate to the nature and duration of the estate condemned and sold by the decree of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio in the proceedings taken for the confiscation of the property of Thomas J. Jenkins, under the act of Congress of July 17, 1862, 12 Stat. 589, and to the power of disposition possessed by him over the naked fee or property in reversion, after the termination of the confiscated estate. The questions must find their solution in the interpretation given to the provisions of that act and to the terms of the decree. The act is entitled “ An act to suppress insurrection, to punish treason and rebellion, to seize and confiscate the property of rebels and for other purposes.”
In one of the earlier-cases in this court under this act, it was earnestly contended-that the act was not passed in the exercise of the war powers of the government, but in the execution of the municipal power of the government to legislate for the punishment of offences against the United States. Such was the contention in
Miller v. United
States,
*554 The joint resolution declares that the provisions of the third clause of the 5th section of the act shall be so construed as not to apply to any act or acts done prior to its passage, “ nor shall any punishment or proceedings under said act be so construed as to work a forfeiture of the real estate of the offender beyond his natural life.” No decree condemning real property of persons seized under the act, could therefore extend the forfeiture adjudged beyond the life of the offending owner. During his life only could the control, possession, and enjoyment of the real property seized and condemned be. appropriated. To that extent the property vested in the United States upon its condemnation and passed to the purchaser to whom the government might afterwards sell it.
What then was the situation of the remainder of the estate of the offending party after the condemnation and sale ? The proceedings did not purport to touch any interest in the property or control of it beyond his life. When that ceased, his heirs took the property from him. They could not take anything from the government, for it had nothing; the interest it acquired by the condemnation passed by the sale to the purchaser. The reversionary interest or remainder of the estate must have rested somewhere. It could not have been floating in space without relationship to any one. The logical conclusion would seem to be that it continued in the offending owner. This, we think, follows, not- only from the language of the act, but from decisions of this court construing its provisions, though some of the latter contain declarations that its possession is unaccompanied with any power of disposition over the future estate during his life.
In
Bigelow
v.
Forrest,
In
Day
v.
Micou,
In
Wallach v. Van Riswick,
Though the ruling in
Wallach
v.
Van Riswick
was followed
*556
in several cases—in
Pike
v.
Wassell,
in 1876,
It is not to be overlooked that previous to the decision of the case of
Wallach
v.
Van Riswick
a general amnesty and pardon had been proclaimed by the President throughout the land to all who' had .participated- in the rebellion, thus relieving them from the disabilities arising from such participation. Estates and interests in land, present and future, which had not for such participation been previously condemned and sold to others, fell at once under the control and disposition of - the original owners, as though the offences alleged against them had never been committed. The pardon and amnesty did not and could not change the actual fact of previous disloyalty, if it existed, but, as said in
Carlisle
v.
United States,
In
Illinois Central Railroad Co.
v.
Bosworth,
The principal question involved in the case was whether,’ by the effect of the pardop and amnesty granted to A. W. Bosworth, he was restored to the control and power- of disposition over the fee "simple or naked property in reversion, expectant upon the determination of the confiscáted estate in the property in dispute. “ The question of the effect of pardon and amnesty,” said the court, “ on the destiñation of the remaining estate of the offender, still outstanding after a confiscation of. the property during his natural life, has never been settled by. this court.” In Wallach v. Van Riswick, the court said it “ was not called upon to determine where' the fee dwells during the continuance of the interest of a' purchaser at a confiscation sale, whether in the United States, or in the purchaser subject to be .defeated by the death of the- offender.” It had* been also suggested that .the fee remained in the person whose estate was confiscated, but without any power in him to dis-, *558 pose of or control it. “ Perhaps,” said Mr. Justice Bradley, in speaking for the court, and referring to those different suggestions, “ it is not of much consequence which of these theories, if either of them, is the true one; the important point .being that tbe remnant of the estate, whatever its nature, and wherever it went, was never beneficially disposed of, but remained, so to speak, in a state' of suspended animation.”. And again he said,' “ it is not necessary to be ov^r-culrious about the. intermediate state in which the disembodied Shade of naked ownership may have wandered during the peribd of its ambiguous existence. It is enough, to know that it was neither annihilated,! nor confiscated,; nor appropriated to any third party. The owner, as a punishmént for his offences, was disabled from exercising any acts of ownership over it, and' no power to exercise such acts was given .to any other person. At his death, if not before, the period of suspension comes to an end, and the estate revives and devolves to1, his heirs at law.” “It would' seem to follow,” added the learned justice,' “ as a logical consequence from .the decisions in Avegno v. Schmidt and Shields v. Schiff, that after the confiscation of the property the naked fee (or the naked ownership, as denominated in the civil law) subject, for the lifetime of the offender to the interest or usufruct of the purchaser at the confiscation sale,-remained in-the offender himself; otherwise, how could his heirs take it from him by inheritance? But, by reason of' his disability to dispose of, or touch it, dr affect iti in any manner whatsoever, it remained, as before stated, á mere dead estate, or in a condition of suspended 'animation. . We think that this is; on the whole, the most reasonable view. -, There is no corruption of blood ; the offender can transmit-by descent ; his heirs take -from him by descent; why, then, is it not most rational to conclude that the dormant and, suspended fee has continued'in him?” And the court held -after-full consideration that'the disabilities which prevented the offending party — Bosworth — from exercising power over the' suspended fee, or naked property, was removed by the pardon and amnesty, and that he was restored to all his rights, privileges and immunities, as if he had neve^ offended, except as to *559 those things which had become vested in other persons; and that, among other things, “ he was restored to the control of so much of his property and estate as had not become vested ■either in the government or in any other person; especially that part or quality of his estate which had never been for: feited, namely, the naked residuary ownership of the property, subject to the usufruct of the purchaser under the confiscation proceedings.”
In the confiscation proceedings, under which the property in controversy was condemned and sold, the decree of the'United States District Court adjudged, from the proof presented, that •Thomas J. Jenkins, the party whose .property was proceeded against, was, at the date of its seizure, the owner of the property, which consisted of certain real estate described, and had been since July 17, 1862, and was in ,the service of the rebels, in arms against the United States, and that his life estate in the said real estate was justly and legally' forfeited, and it ordered that such life estate be condemned and sold, and that the necessary process be issued to the marshal to make such sale and bring the proceeds into court. Upon this decree a sale and conveyance were made by the marshal of the life estate of said Jenkins to one Edward Bepler. The only sale and conveyance executed, under the decree as thus seen, were of the life estate of Thomas J. Jenkins in the real property in controversy. . No condemnation was had or sale made of any other estate in the premises.
. In some of the cases, as, for instance,
Bigelow
v. Forrest,
Of the reversion or remainder of the estate of the offending party no disposition was ever made ■ by the government. It must, therefore? be construed to have remained in him, but, under the ruling in
Wallach
v.
Van Riswick,
without any power in him to alienate it during his life. That disability
*560
was in force when hp executed, with his wife, the deed of the premises, August 26, 1865. The proclamation of pardon and amnesty was not made by the President until December 25, 1868. This deed, however, was accompanied with a covenant of seizin on his part, and that he would warrant and defend the title against the lawful claims of all persons whomsoever. Admitting that he had no present estate in the premises, and none in expectancy, he was at liberty to add to his deed the ordinary covenants of seizin and warranty, and the same legal operation upon future acquired interests must be given to them as when accompanying conveyances of parties whose property has never been subject to confiscation proceedings. That warranty estopped him and all persons claiming under him from asserting title to the premises against the grantee and his heirs and assigns, or conveying it to any other parties. When, subsequently, the general amnesty and pardon proclamation wás issued, the disability; .if any, that had previously rested upon him against disposing of the remaining estate, which had not been confiscated, was removed, and he stood, with reference to that, estate, precisely as though no confiscation proceedings had ever been had. The amnesty and pardon in removing the disability, if any, resting upon him, respecting that estate, enlarged his estate, the benefit of which enured equally to his grantee. The removal of his disabilities did not affect the purchaser’s right under the decree of confiscation. The latter remained in the full enjoyment of the property during the life of the offending party, but he had no claim upon the future estate, nor did the heirs of the offending party have any such claim upon it as to preclude the operation of any previous warranties by him respecting it.
Van Rensselaer
v.
Kearney,
Judgment affirmed.
