37 Ky. 74 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1838
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This action of ejectment was brought upon the demise 0£ James Logan, who claimed title to the land in con- ° .„ . . . test under a sheriff s sale and deed, made in 1829, m virtue of two executions which issued on a judgment and decree for costs against the heirs of Richard Steele, in their own right.
i The plaintiff, to show title in the defendants in the execution, exhibited a patent to, Jacob Myers, for one thousand acres, on a preemption warrant, covering the land in controversy, and several deeds, by which the ' title was transmitted from him to David Logan, and read the record of a suit in chancery by Barnard Mc-Nitt against David Logan, for a conveyance, which resulted in a decree and commissioner’s deed conveying one half of the preemption, including the land in contest, to the complainant, in 1816. Pie also read the record of a suit in chancery, by Martha Steele, the widow, and her children, the heirs of Richard Steele, against, Barnard- McNitt, alleging that Barnard McNitt had sold the land to Joseph McNitt, and that he had . sold it to Richard Steele, and that he, by his will, proved in 1809, had devised it to the complainant, Martha Steele, and the other complainants, his. children; and exhibiting, in support of these allegations, a writing purporting to be the deed of Barnard McNitt, conveying one half of the preemption to Joseph McNitt, in December, 1803, and a writing - purporting to be the deed of J. McNitt, by attorney in fact, conveying the same land to Richard Steele, in October, 1809; also, the will of Richard Steele, devising the land now in contest to Martha Steele. This suit resulted in a decree directing a conveyance to the complainants, and a commissioner’s deed, made in 1817, purporting to convey
The defendants read the will of Richard Steele, devising the land to Martha Steele, and also her will and the codicil thereto, proved in 1822 and 1825, by which she directs the land to be sold by her executors, and the proceeds to be vested in another tract, for the use and benefit of the children of her son John Steele. From the orders of the County Court in relation to this will, it appears that William Steele, one of three executors therein named, qualified as executor in 1824, and that in 1830, an order was made appointing William Mayo administrator with the will annexed, of Martha Steele; and Mayo, as a witness for the defendants,-stated that he had sold the land to Moore, as administrator with the will annexed, and. had conveyed it to-McCalla. It was also proved, that the land had been in the possession of Richard Steele for some years before his death, and remained afterwards, until the sale under the plaintiff’s executions, in possession of or under the family, or some of them, one of the witnesses stating that it had been held under Mrs. Steele, during her life, and that the heirs had not claimed it since.
Other evidence was introduced not necessary to be detailed. And the plaintiff moved the Court to instruct the jury, “ that, if they find'from the evidence, that no sale of the estate had been made as provided for by the will of Martha Steele, the land descended to her heirs, and if they further find that said one hundred acres of land devised to Martha Steele by the will of Richard Steele, was embraced in the deed from Barnard McNitt to the defendants in the execution and judgment (Steele’s aforesaid,) and that the defendants in that judgment and execution were the heirs both of Richard and Martha Steele, deceased,,the land was liable to the execution- and sale given in- evidence.”
But the Court refused this instruction, and instructed the,jury that, by the will of Richard Steele, the land
To this opinion of the Court the plaintiff excepted, and a verdict and judgment having passed against him, he prosecutes a writ of errror.
The substantial question on these instructions, is w[letiier the heirs of Richard Steele, who were also the ... heirs of Martha Steele, had such title and interest in lan-d as was su^ject to the plaintiff’s executions. In determining this question we shall consider the exhibits above referred to, contained in the record of the su¡t of Steele’s Heirs &c. against Barnard McNitt, and which were read m evidence by the plaintiff, as being— what they purport to be — the deeds of Barnard and _ . * -~±. T „ , . . T Joseph Mclmt — the power of attorney under which the iatter deed was made having been also read as evi- . . ° dence by the plaintiff, and for no other purpose, as it wou^ seem, but to support the deed. This being premised, we'are of opinion that, although, when those deeds were made, neither of the grantors had the legal title, yet when afterwards, in 1816, the title was conveyed by a commissioner to Barnard McNitt, that 6on-
veyance inured by operation of law to the benefit of his grantee, so as to pass the legal title to him. This was virtually decided in the case of Logan vs. Steele’s Heirs, 4 Mon. 430, and is to be deduced from the principles established in the cases of Aldridge vs. Kincaid, 2 Litt. 393, and Massie vs. Sebastian, 4 Bibb, 436. The consequence is, as stated in the case of Logan vs. Steele’s Heirs, supra, that Barnard McNitt had not the legal title when the commissioner’s deed was afterwards made, purporting to convey his title to the heirs of Richard Steele, and consequently, that it passed nothing from McNitt to the grantees.
But upon the same principle on which the convey-
If this be so — which however we do not decide — it is apparent that, upon the death of Martha Steele, her heirs, who are also the heirs of Richard Steele, and were the defendants in the executions above referred to, had, by descent from her, such title and'.interest in the land as were subject to execution, unless by her will, either the'title, or the beneficial interest, or both, were so devised as that the land could not be subjected to sale as theirs. Or if the title conveyed to Barnard Mc-Nitt, in 1816, vested by operation of law in the heirs of his remote grantee, Richard Steele, although during the life of Martha Steele, to whom the land was devised, they would have held the title merely as trustees for her, and although such a mere nalted title, bound by an open trust appearing of record, was not subject to execution for their debt, yet, upon her death, the title was relieved from the trust, by a union with it of the beneficial interest by descent from her, except so far as such union was obstructed by the provisions of her will, or defeated by any thing done in pursuance of it. So that in either of these alternatives, the liability of the land to execution in their hands, depends, in the first
Another alternative has, indeed, been pressed in argument for the plaintiff, which, if adopted, would place the liability of the land to the execution against the heirs, and the plaintiff’s right to recover on the sheriff’s deed, beyond question. It is contended that Martha Steele was divested of whatever title or interest she had in the land, or estopped from asserting it, by reason of the commissioners’s deed of 1817, which purports to convey the title of Barnard McNitt to the heirs alone, in a suit and under a decree in which Mrs. Steele was a party. But although there are cases in which the owner of land will not be permitted to assert his title after encouraging the purchase of the land from another, this is certainly not one of them. There was no purchase by the heirs, no consideration passing from them, and in fact no proof, or even presumption, that Mrs. Steele was aware of the omission of her name from the deed. The probability is, that it was a mere error or inadvertence of the commissioner, unnoticed at the time by the Court or the parties. Or' if there was any fraud in the case, it was a fraud upon Mrs. Steele, and not by her. There was nothing, therefore, in the transaction to bind the conscience of Mrs. Steele, or to estop her from the assertion of any title which she had independently of that which passed by the direct operation of the deed. And the deed as already intimated passed nothing by its own force.
The heirs then having had, either no title, or a mere trust title, in the land up to .the death of Mrs. Steele, we return to the enquiry whether, upon her death, any such interest descended to them as rendered the land liable to execution for ■ their debts. And this is to be tested by the following clauses of Mrs. Steele’s will.
The body of the will contains, this provision: “ The “ proceeds of my land, whether sold or rented (and my “ executors are authorized to either sell or rent it, as “ they may think fit,) shall,be applied by my executors, “ to relieve those of my children or grand childi’en that “ may be most in want.” The codicil contains the fob
It is manifest from a comparison of these two clauses that the first, so far as it gives to the executors, either any interest in the land, or any discretion as to the disposition to be made of it, or of the proceeds of rent or sale, is repealed by the second, which leaves in them a mere naked power to sell, and directs peremptorily in what manner and for whose benefit the proceeds shall be disposed of. Looking merely to the fact, that the will makes no other direct disposition of the land but that which is contained in the power and directions given to the executors to sell it — we had at first been inclined to the opinion that, until this power should be actually exercised, whatsoever title or interest Mrs. Steele had, descended to her heirs, subject to be divested by a sale under the will, and subject to no other trust but that it should be surrendered when such sale took place. And such probably would have been the determination of a court of law upon that single fact appearing in the will. Coke Litt. 236, a; 2 Thomas’ Coke, 118.
But the cardinal rule in giving construction and effect to wills, is to ascertain the intention of the testator, not from a single circumstance or provision in the will, which may relate expressly to ttife subject of a particular devise, but from the whole will taken together. And if the intention, thus ascertained, be consistent with the rules of law, it will be regarded as the effective law of the subject to which it relates, in a Court of Law, as well as in a Court of Equity. :
Upon further consideration of the two clauses of the will which have been quoted, we are of opinion that, although the executors have nothing in the land, but a mere power to sell, the will creates, also, an interest in the persons for whose benefit the sale was to be made, and that for the effectuation of that interest, according
We conclude, therefore, that the heirs of Richard Steele had no such interest in the land in question, either as heirs of their father, Richard Steele, or as heirs of their mother, Martha Steele, as was subject to sale under execution against them; and that the.sheriff’s deed passed no such title to the plaintiff as would authorize a recovery of the land, even if it had not been sold under the authority and according to the directions of the will. It is therefore unnecessary to enquire whether there was sufficient proof on the trial, that a sale had been made under the will.
There being according to this review of the case, no substantial error, either in refusing the instruction asked for by the plaintiff, or in giving that which was given, the judgment is affirmed.