26 Pa. 227 | Pa. | 1856
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Leaving out all in this will that is irrelevant to these cases, we have an absolute estate in remainder in the children of Mrs. Kuhn. Rut some of them are not sui juris, and we are to decide whether the titles of any of them are placed under the protection of equity forms of procedure, or are left subject to the rules of law only. The devise is to trustees for the use of the testator’s daughter, Mrs. Kuhn, and then in trust for her children, to be divided equally among them “ for their sole and separate use respectively, and that free and clear, if females, of any debts, liabilities, contracts, or engagements of their husbands, and subject as to the income thereof to their own free and absolute control.” There are five children living; four being daughters, two married and two not, and the fifth a minor son. Are they entitled to their shares of the property clear of the trust?
We must bear in mind that our common law takes a higher position than either .English common law or English equity, by adopting a principle that in form and substance harmonizes them both into one system. In relation to titles to land it does so by adopting the forms of both, as legal forms, and treating all complete equitable titles as complete legal ones, where the persons named as trustees have no duty to perform that requires the seisin and possession to be in them; and then our common law enforces the trust as a legal estate. It makes equitable estates the subjects of alienation, devise, and descent, and of actions of ejectment and partition, and liable to debts, curtesy, and dower; in all of which particulars it differs from the common law of England as to both uses and trusts. And this principle, fully carried out, would merge the statute of uses, and produce, of itself, exactly the same result in the execution of the estate, just as English equity disregards the form of a trust when there is no substantial and approved purpose to be gained by it. We do not say that it would do to carry it out; but only indicate its efficacy as a general • principle. We have carried it out generally ; for even those uses that were not executed by the statute, for example, those that are
By that principle, no matter what may be the form of the conveyance, where the whole beneficial estate is granted, all restraints upon its enjoyment are fruitless: As a general rule, such restraints avail only in protection of future interests. In the matter of ordinary trusts for individuals, the principle yields only where there is some sort of disability in the owner, that entitles him to the protection of the court. Neither law nor equity undertakes the special guardianship of all those estates that parties choose to create in a peculiar form. Most of them are with us mere legal estates in all their effects, and as to all the remedies for their protection. In England, the form of a trust not executed by the statute of uses, decides the court that is to administer the remedies relating to it; but even there the equitable estate is treated, in all material respects, exactly as courts of law would treat it if it were in the legal form. English equity strikes out improper restraints on the enjoyment of the estates, and also, when the beneficiaries desire it, all directions to sell land and distribute the proceeds; but it treats such eases as estates not executed by the statute of uses, and retains its jurisdiction for decreeing an account and conveyance. We generally strike down the trust itself, and treat the beneficial estate as the true one: 3 W. & Ser. 216; 3 Whart. 62; 4 Id. 126.
Married women belong to the class of persons over whom courts of equity extend a measure of guardianship, by recognising and protecting what is called their separate property; and therefore trusts for the separate use of married women and of women about to be married are taken under the care of the courts according to the principles of equity. This trust was not executed in favour of women married or contemplating marriage, for some of the devisees were mere children at the testator’s death, and the others were not yet born. Is there any principle of law or equity that sanctions the restriction upon the titles of the women as a means of protecting them from the dangers of the married state ? Such a sanction may be found: 1 Term Rep. 493; but the decided weight of authority is very strongly against it: 1 Rawle 247; 3 Whart. 66; 4 Id. 128; 2 Mylne & K. 174; 2 Russ. & M. 167, 208, 210; 4 Sim. 141; 7 Eng. Ch. R. 317; 6 Id. 72, 74, 457, 463, 464; 19 Ves. 415; 20 State Rep. 302; 23 Id. 30; Atherly on Marr. Settlements 333.
Whenever the estate granted is essentially an estate in fee in law or equity, there may be disabilities in the owner that will prevent or suspend its complete enjoyment by him as such; but no attribution of qualities to the estate itself, that are inconsistent
Trusts, properly so called, are uses that our law does not execute as legal estates, because of circumstances that take them out of the ordinary course of legal administration and place them-under a special guardianship of the courts-; but this is not generally allowed in favour of individual persons who have full competency to act in their own right. A fee simple estate in them is treated as such, whether assured in a legal or equitable form. In other words, persons who are sui juris, men or women, must be satisfied with the ordinary remedies and protection of the law. A trust is nothing, that supports no interest or duty. He takes nothing who gets a mere form of title to a thing, while its absolute disposal is in another. Except for one of the interests, the trust has terminated by its own limitation. Striking out the separate use clause as improper, the duties of the trust and the trust itself- terminated at least when the children arrived at age, and then the absolute title vested in the devisees, just as a trust for a married woman terminates on the death of her husband: 6 Sim. 121, 126; 2 Vern. 270; 1 Jacobs 603; 2 Russ. & M. 208, and cases before cited.
Is the law different in relation to the title of the minor son ? Here we must notice that one of the trusts is, to educate and maintain the children until their arrival at age. If this purpose does not furnish a legitimate reason for preserving the trust from being executed by our law in the beneficiaries, then it is executed.
And surely it is not sufficient; for one of the very first purposes to which our law applies an estate of a minor is to his education and maintenance; the feudal burdens of wardships, reliefs, marriages, heriots, escheats, and aids never having been imposed upon them here; to save which, in England, was perhaps the main purpose of the statute of uses. And the administration of minors’ estates is not committed here to a Court of Chancery, and they have not, therefore, this reason for being called equitable estates. They are administered in the Orphans’ Court according to the rules of law that are applicable to them; rules derived from statutes, bommon law and equity, but not, on that account, anything else than the legal principles pertaining to the subject. That court gets jurisdiction and guardianship of such estates without the aid of trusts, and it does not need them in order to carry out its functions; for it performs them by means of guardians,
What then is the result of all this ? Simply that these devisees took a legal and not an equitable estate, and therefore they have no case for the relief they pray for. If they have not received the conveyances they were entitled to on the partition in the Common Pleas, we cannot correct the error in this form. That court will, no doubt, fully execute their decree of partition.
These bills are severally dismissed at the plaintiffs’ costs.