48 Mo. 325 | Mo. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the court.
The whole merits of this case depend upon two questions : first, what is the true meaning and intent of the granting clause in the deed conveying the property in controversy; and, second, whether an estoppel could be predicated upon the facts disclosed by the evidence. The action was ejectment for a part of lot 3 in block 87, in the town of Macon; and the defendants, who are in posses
The defendants now contend, and the court so instructed, that this description passed the fee to the whole lot. The old books contain a great deal of refined and technical learning on this subject. They say that if there be two clauses or parts of a deed repugnant the one to the other, the first part shall be received and the latter rejected, unless there he some special reason to the contrary; hut in the case of a will containing two repugnant clauses or parts, the first shall be rejected and the last received. That the first deed and the last will shall operate, is an ancient maxim. (Plowd. 541; Co. Lit. 112; Shep. Touch. 88.) Upon the rules as laid down in' the old authorities, Judge Metcalf, in 23 American-Jurist, makes some very sensible remarks. “In modern times,” he says, “ this maxim has very limited operation. A reason to the contrary is almost always found. The rules of construction now applied in cases of repugnancy give effect to the whole and every part of a will, deed, or other contract, when that is consistent with the rules of law and the intention of the party; and when this is impossible, the part which is repugnant to the general intention, or to an obvious particular intention, is wholly rejected. Parts which were once regarded as repugnant are now deemed consistent.”
Greenleaf, in his edition of Cruise on Real Property, lays down the doctrine that the modern rule is to give effect to the whole and every part of the instrument, whether it be a will or deed, or other contract; to ascertain the general intention, and permit it, if agreeable to law, whether expressed first or last, to overrule the particular; and to transpose the words, whenever it. is necessary, in order to carry the general intention plainly manifested into effect. (2 Greenl. Cr., tit. Deed, ch. 12, § 26,
In Lodge v. Lee, 6 Cranch, 237, the description was, “ all that tract or upper island of land called “Eden,” and then it was added, “beginning at a maple tree,” and describing the land conveyed, by bounds, courses and distances, but so as not to include all the island. The court held that the whole island passed.
In Keith v. Reynolds, 3 Greenl. 393, the description was, “ a certain tract of land or farm in Winslow, included in the tract which was granted to Esq. Pattee,” and afterward there was added a particular description of courses and distances, which did not include the whole farm. It was contended that, the particular description should prevail in preference to the other, which was more general and uncertain; but it was decided that the first description was certain enough, and that it was to be adopted rather than the description by courses and distances, which was more liable to errors and mistakes.
In Jackson v. Barringer, 15 Johns. 471, the grant was, “ the farm on which J. J. D. now lives,” which was bounded on three sides, and “ to contain eighty acres in one piece.” The farm
This conclusion is. decisive of the whole case, and renders it unnecessary to examine the other point in reference to the .law of
Judgment affirmed.
This description actually embraced a less area than lot 3