18 F. Cas. 1213 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1833
The sole question arising under the special verdict is, whether James Bowdoin, the grantor, was at the time of the conveyance seised in fee tail of the estate in controversy. If so, then, under the statute of Massachusetts, of the 8th <u March, 1792 (Act 1791, c. 61), as he was Of full age, he was capable of passing a fee simple to the grantee, there being nothing to impeach the bona fides of the deed of conveyance. See I.ithgow v. ICavenagh, 9 Mass. 161. The question, whether he was so seised in fee tail, turns altogether upon the true interpretation of the will of Mrs. Sarah Bowdoin, made on the ISth of July, 1812, which has been duly proved and approved by the proper court of probate. I pass over all consideration of her subsequent marriage with the late General Dearborn, and the trust deeds and settlements executed upon that occasion; because it is admitted that they do not change the legal posture of the case, the will being expressly upheld by them. The clause in the will, on which the case turns, is in the following words; “Eighthly. 1 give and devise to my beloved, affectionate, worthy niece, Mrs.' Sarah Bowdoin Sullivan, wife of Geoi’ge Sullivan, Esq., of said Boston, for and during the tern of her natural life, all my real estate in Milk street, in said Boston, with the house, stables, coach-house, and all the other buildings, and all the lands thereunto belonging, which I at present possess, agreeable to the last will of my late worthy husband; and at her death I give the said estate to her 'second son,- James Bowdoin Sullivan, he dropping the name of Sullivan, and taking and retaining the name of Bowdoin, and to his lawful begotten children in fee simple for ever. But in case he should die without children lawfully begotten, I hereby give the estate to the oldest son of the said Sarah B. Sullivan, now named George Richard Sullivan, on condition of his dropping the name of Sullivan, and taking and retaining the name of George Bichard James Bowdoin. and to his lawful begotten children in fee simple for ever. But in case of the death of the above named James Bowdoin Sullivan and George Richard Sullivan, without lawful begotten children, the said estate shall be a younger son’s of the said Sarah Bowdoin Sullivan, on condition of his raking and retaining the name of James Bowdoin, and to his lawful begotten children in fee simple forever. And in case of the failure of all such sons of the said Sarah Bowdoin Sullivan, and they dying without lawful begotten children, it shall be her oldest daughter’s, or in case of the death of her oldest daughter without children, it shall be her second daughter's and so on to her youngest, "and to her children in fee simple for ever."
Xow, the special verdict finds, that Mrs. Sarah Bowdoin, the testatrix, died in 1826,
The argument for the plaintiff is, that, taking all the clauses together, the intent of the testatrix was, that the devisee, James, should take a remainder in fee simple, with an ex-ecutory devise over to the devisee. George, in fee simple, in the event of the failure of issue of James. But the argument is surrounded with this difficulty, that, if it can be maintained, it may defeat the very intention which it is supposed to support. If the ex-ecutory devise over is to be on an indefinite failure of the issue, then it is too remote, and therefore void. If it is to be limited to a. failure in the life-time of James, then if James should leave issue, who should die without issue, the remainder over to George would wholly fail; for the event would not have occurred, upon which it was to go over. See Bayley, J., Tenny v. Agar, 12 East. 253, 261; Doe v. Webber, 1 Barn. & Ald. 713, 720. It is plain, then, that if the testatrix intended, as I think she did intend, to create successive estates in the children of Mrs. Sarah B. Sullivan upon the total failure of the line in the elder branches, the construction contended for would or might, upon either supposition, defeat it. And I am of opinion, that this construction would directly defeat it; for upon principle, as well as authority, the words, “if he should die without children,” ought to be construed an indefinite failure of issue, for want of suitable words limiting the failure co any other period; and, as I shall presently show, issue and children are in this devise precise equivalents. So that the executory devise over would be utterly void for remoteness.
On the other hand, if we construe the estate in James to be an estate tail, and, in default of his issue, successive estates tail in the othei' children, according to priority of birth andijsex. the manifest object of the testatrix in'lceeping the estate in the family, so long as there are any descendants, may, by the rules of law, be accomplished. Why, then, should we not give this construction to the terms of the w’ill? Certainly we ought so to do, if there be nothing repugnant to the just sense of the terms used, and it will further the intention of the testatrix; for in all cases of wills, the intention is to govern, if not inconsistent with the rules of law.
Let us, then, examine the terms of the devise. It is to James and to his lawfully begotten children in fee simple for ever. Now, it is plain, that as James had no children at the time, they could not take immediately by way of deseriptio personarum, as joint tenants with their father, a fee simple; and therefore we are driven to construe the word “children” as words of limitation, and not as words of purchase. And this is in conformity to the rule laid down in Wild's Case. 6 Coke, 17, which has been constantly recog-nised as law down to our day.
Now, it cannot be pretended, that James’s children were, under the present devise, to take the estate solely in remainder after his decease, which could only be by a devise to him for life, and to the children after his decease in fee; whereas the devise is to him and his children in fee simple. And if the word “children” is to be construed as words of purchase, and not of limitation, he must take a fee simple jointly with them. And this is doubtless the ground, upon wliieli Oates v. Jackson, 2 Strange, 1172, was decided. There, the devise was “to my wife A for her life, and after her death to her daughter, and her children on her body begotten or to be begotten by N her husband and their heirs for ever.” At the time of making the will, J had one daughter, and afterwards had two. sons and one daughter, who died without issue; and J survived her oldest daughter, who left issue. It was held, that J took a fee, as joint tenant, she having a child at the making of the will; and, as she survived all her children, the whole fee vested in her. And the court relied upon the doctrine stated in Co. Litt. 9: “B having eleven sons and daughters, A giveth lands to B et lib-er!» suis et a lour heires, and father and all his children do take a fee simple jointly by force of the words, ‘their heirs.’ But if he had no child at the time of the feoffment, the child born afterwards shall not take.” That The court rely for their decision upon the fact of J having a child at the time, is very clear from the more full and accurate report of the same ease in 7 Mod. 439, (Leach’s Ed.)
The case of Amiable v. Patch, 3 Pick. 330, turned substantially upon the same considerations; for in that case there were several children born at the time of making the will. In neither ease, either in the argument or the decision, was an allusion made to any supposed distinction between an immediate estate in possession and such an estate in remainder. The case of Buffar v. Bradford, 2 Atk. 220, was a case of personal estate, and turned upon that consideration; for if the parent in that case was held to take an estate tail, under a bequest to herself and the children born of her body, the parent would take the whole to the exclusion of the children. And as the intent seemed clear, that the children should take, though there were no children born at the time of making the will, the court construed the words to be words of purchase, and not words of limitation. In a devise of real estate, there is no such necessity to construe the words as words of purchase; for the children may take under the estate tail. It is well known, that there are great distinctions, in all this class of cases, between bequests of personalty and devises of real estate. This very case states it; and it is recognised in Cook v. Cook, 2 Vern. 545; Forth v. Chapman, 1 P. Wms. 663; Dingley v. Dingley, 5 Mass. 535, 537, and in many otlier cases. See, also, Doe v. Perryn. 3 Term R. 484, 494; Crooke v. De Vandes, 9 Ves. 197; Hawley v. Northampton, 8 Mass. 3, 38, 39. But there is no necessity, in the present case, of relying upon the doctrine in the foregoing cases; because, here, there is a devise over, (which did not exist in any of them,) which has always been held to have a most material bearing upon the construction of the antecedent clause, in making the words thereof words of limitation, and not of purchase. The devise is, “in case he (James) should die without children lawfully begotten,” then the estate is to go over to George, and his children in fee simple. Now, this is utterly inconsistent with the notion of a fee in tlte children of James. For, suppose James should have children, and they should all die in his life-time, leaving issue, the estate would then, if construed to depend upon the contingency of leaving children at his death, pass over to George, thus entirely defeating the prior estate to the children of James, although they left issue. Vet no one can reasonably doubt, that the testatrix intended the devise over to take effect only upon an extinction of the issue of James; for she has added the words, “in fee simple,” after children.
To give any just effect, then, to the original devise, as well as to the devise over, the word “children” must be construed, as meaning issue or heirs of the body. And, although in its primary sense, the word “children” is a descriptio personaran!, who are to take, there'is not the slightest difficulty in giving
There is a very late case, which is stronger than the present. It was a devise to trustees of all the testator’s real estate, to permit his daughter to take the rents and profits, or to sell, &c., if occasion required; also to settle on any husband she might take, for life, should he survive her. But should she have a child, to the .use of such child from and after his daughter’s decease. Should none of these cases happen, after his daughter’s decease devise over. It was held, that the daughter took an estate tail, the daughter having no child at the making of the will and the testator's death. And Bifield’s Case, cited in 1 Vent. 231, was relied on, where “son” was held to be nomen collectivum, as “child” was here. Doe v. Davies, Mich. T. K. B. 1832; 4 Barn. & Adol. 43, 1 Law J. K. B. (1832) 244. See. also, Sonday’s Case, 9 Coke, .127. It is plain, then, that upon authority there is no difficulty in the present case, in construing the word “children” to be a word of limitation, and not of purchase, if the sense of the devise requires it. And in reason it must be so also; for the intention of the party, when discovered, must in a will control any technical sense of particular words; since the intention, if legal, is universally admitted to govern. The strong ground, upon which the word “children” has been construed to be a word of limitation, •when there is a devise over on failure of children, is, that otherwise, if there should be children bom, who should die during the life-time of the parent, leaving issue, the latter would not take. This consideration has been always held decisive; and it strictly applies to the present ease. Wyld v. Lewis, 1 Atk. 432; Doe v. Perryn, 3 Term R,. 484; King v. Burchall, 4 Term R. 296, note; Tenny v. Agar, 12 East, 253, 261; and Doe v. Webber, 1 Barn. & Ald. 713, 720, — are in point. See, also, Hawley v. Northampton, 8 Mass. 3, 41.
The superadded words, “in fee simple,” in the original devise, so far from impugning, absolutely require this construction. They demonstrate, that the devise over is not to take effect, while there are any issue of James in esse. “In fee simple” means the same as to their heirs and assigns; and the devise over being to a collateral heir, these words are necessarily cut down to heirs of the body, if the devise over is to take effect only upon an indefinite failure of issue; and that it is so, is established by all the authorities. The universal rule is, that a failure of children, issue, or heirs of the body, means an indefinite failure of issue, unless there are other qualifying words, limiting the contingency to the death of the parent, which there certainly are not here. See Denn v. Shenton, Cowp. 410; Ide v. Ide, 5 Mass. 500; Lillibridge v. Adie [Case No. 8,350], The will, therefore, read according to the real meaning of the terms, is, to James and the heirs of his body lawfully begotten, and their heirs for ever; and if he should die without such heirs of his body, then devise over. This- is precisely the devise in Denn v. Shenton, Cowp.
The consequence is, that, upon the special verdict, judgment must pass for the defendants.
Wild’s Case is always referred to with approbation. See Buffar v. Bradford. 2 Atk. 220; White v. White, Willes, 348; Wharton v. Gresham. 2 W. Bl. 1083; Cook v. Cook, 2 Vern. 545; Oates v. Jackson. 7 Mod. 430; King v. Melling, 1 Vent. 231; Hughes v. Sayer, 1 P. Wms. 534; Davie v. Stevens. 1 Doug. 321: Hodges v. Middleton. 2 Doug. 430; Seale v. Barter. 2 Bos. & P. 485: Broadhurst v. Morris, 2. Barn. & Adol. 1.