27 Ind. 484 | Ind. | 1867
The question presented in this case is upon the construction of the language of a deed, and the nature of the estate conveyed. The conveyance was “ to Sarah M. Tipton, and the heirs of her body by George T. Tipton,” who was her husband.
By section 86, p. 266,1 G. & H., “estates tail are abolished; and any estafe which, according to the common law, would be adjudged a fee tail, shall hereafter be adjudged a fee simple; and if no valid remainder shall be limited thereon, shall be a fee simple absolute.” The estate at common law would have been an estate tail special, as it ascertained the person by whom the heirs inheritable to the entail should be begotten. Preston on Estates 412. The conveyance complies with the legal requirement, that “the gift by which an estate tail is to arise must, either in terms or in legal construction, he made to the heirs of the body,
This was the construction placed upon the language of the deed by the Circuit Court, and the judgment will therefore be affirmed, with costs.