Stevenson v. Cofferin

20 N.H. 150 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1849

Gilchrist, C. J.

By the common law there were certain serious embarrassments which would have attended the joinder of tenants in common in real actions. Although their possession was joint, their estates and titles might have been wholly different; and as these were in many cases required to be stated, and might have been traversed or avoided by plea, it is easy to perceive that numerous issues might have been joined in a single action, to some of which some of the parties to the suit might have been strangers, and yet bound to maintain them under pain of failing in the action. This afforded sufficient ground for the rule which not only permitted but required tenants in common to sever in such actions.

This rule still prevails in this State, although, by reason of material changes which have supervened upon the system of real actions, which we have derived from the ancient common law, the necessity of it is less cogent; and, as was suggested in Campbell v. Wallace, 12 N. H. 370, in many cases does not exist at all. Rand v. Dodge, 12 N. H. 68.

With respect to coparceners, the case was otherwise. The manner in which such estates originated, which was *152always by descent, rendered it practically more convenient for them to join, and their estate being the same, one issue •only, of course, could be made. These, therefore, the common law rigidly required to join in real actions for the recovery of their estate. But because it sometimes became impracticable, either from the refusal of some of the parties, or from other causes, for all to prosecute a joint action, provision was made by summons and severance for such as chose to prosecute, by which they were enabled to proceed without the defaulted parcener. Arch. Plead. 59.

To avoid this necessity, perhaps, and other incidents of estates in coparcenary, displayed in what Lord Coke denotes the “ cunning learning” of the old books, the estates themselves have been abolished by our Revised Statutes, ch. 129, sec. 3, and their elements brought by more intelligible affinities under the head of tenancies in common.

But although some theoretical distinctions have been annulled by the statute referred to, it would be difficult to name a change, of any practical consequence whatever, that has been effected in the law of this State, except in the mere matter of requiring the parties to sever, in real' actions, who, before the statute, would have been required to join, and might have been driven to their writ of summons and severance upon the contingencies which have been named.

The statutes of some States have made provision for such cases, by allowing joint heirs to join or sever, at their election. Jackson on Beal Actions 33. But a different course was pursued here, by which parties standing like the plaintiffs in this suit have simply been declared to be tenants in common. The rights and disabilities incident to that estate attach to them of course together.

The statute thus changing the nature and incidents of the estates of joint heirs, embraces, in its terms, all existing as-well as future estates; and a question has been made whether interests so vested, as was the interest of the *153plaintiffs in this suit, would have been so changed without their consent. But we think, upon the authority of Miller v. Dennett, 6 N. H. 109, and for the reasons there assigned, that there is no room for such a question. The parties here are in by descent, which exempts this from objections urged in that case, which was a joint tenancy, created of course by a contract.

The facts upon which the questions discussed here have arisen, all appear in the declaration. John M. Stevenson and Lucinda Norris are the joint heirs of James Stevenson, and James Norris is the husband of Lucinda, and claims in her right. The general demurrer is therefore a proper and sufficient form in which to raise the objection, and must prevail. Arch. Civ. PI. 61.

Judgment for the defendant on demurrer.

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