66 N.Y. 37 | NY | 1876
Originally, partition could only be enforced between co-parceners, but by statute in England, as early as the thirty-first of Henry VIII, compulsory partition was allowed between joint tenants and tenants in common of any estate or estates of inheritance in their own rights or in the right of their wives; and by a further act, passed the thirty-second *39 year of the same reign, it was allowed, where some of the tenants had estates for a term of life or years with others that had estates of inheritance or freehold in lands. But it was only allowed where there was an actual tenancy or holding of the parties to the writ, and where any of the parties were seized or possessed of a particular estate for life or years, the partition was necessarily as to such parties temporarily only and commensurate with their estates. To make the partition absolute another writ against the remainderman was necessary when his estate fell into possession. (Allnatt on Partition, 32 et seq.;Cole v. Aylott, Litt. R., 300; Broome Had., Com., 71.)
A writ of partition would not lie at the instance of a remainderman seized of an estate subject to a term for the life of a tenant in possession. If an action for partition will lie at the suit of one in remainder it must be by virtue of the statutes regulating the proceeding for partition in this State. Prior to the Revised Statutes it was well understood that to entitle one to institute proceedings for a partition of lands he must be in the actual or constructive possession of the lands sought to be partitioned. There are obvious reasons why a remainderman should not, especially as against tenants in possession, whether of a term for years, for life or in fee, be entitled to institute the proceeding. Any partition which might be made at his instance, although equal when made, might be very unequal when his estate should vest in possession. So, too, if actual partition could not be made, and a sale should be necessary, the tenants having a less estate than a fee might be deprived of the substantial benefit of their terms. (Brownell v. Brownell, 19 Wend., 367;Clapp v. Bromagham, 9 Cow., 530; Burhans v. Burhans, 2 Barb. Ch. R., 398.) Since the Revised Statutes, although not expressly decided, the impression has been that none but a tenant in actual possession, or having the right of possession, and the constructive possession, could maintain the action. (Florence
v. Hopkins,
Judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.