13 Wend. 578 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1835
By the Court,
It has already been decided that a plaintiff in ejectment may recover a less estate than he claims in his declaration ; and that when he claims the whole, a verdict may be rendered for him for an undivided part. Whether an ouster was sufficiently proved in the case against George Spraker may be doubtful, but propably more proof would have been given, had not the judge nonsuited the plaintiff, upon the ground that he must recover a fee, or nothing. The main question, that is, whether the sons of the testator, Martin and Cornelius, took under the will an estate in fee or for life, seems not to have been raised upon the trial of the suit against George Spraker; in the suit against Daniel Spraker that question was distinctly presented, anda verdict taken, subject to the opinion of this court.
It is well settled that to convey by deed an estate of inheritance, words of perpetuity must be used; but in regard to wills,a contrary rulehas been established,and the result of the common law decisions on this point is contained in our revised statutes,2 R. S. 57.§ 5 : “ Every will that shall be made by a testator,in express terms,- of all his real estate or in any other terms denoting his intent to devise all his real property, shall be considered to pass all the real estate which he was entitled to devise, at the time of his death.” Where express terms are used, denoting the intention of the testator, there is no difficulty; but where the appropriate terms are omitted, then the doubt arises as to what other terms do denote his intent to devise all his real property. Several decisions are to be found in the books, from which rules have been adduced, though they are not all uniform. Chief Justice Tilghman says, in Morison v. Semple, 6 Binn. 97, “ The rule is this ;
In the case of Jackson v. Bull, 10 Johns. R. 148,this subject was elaborately discussed. The testator says,“I give to my two sons, Joshua and Ephraim,the farm I now live on,to be equally divided between them,and for Joshua and Ephraim to pay my daughters, L., B., M. and S., £20 apiece, to be paid by my executors out of my money and moveables; the debts to be paid out of my estate that I.shall die seized of.” And he appointed his wife and son Joshua executors. Kent, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the court, and remarked, that as there were no apt words of limitation, Joshua and Ephraim took only an estate for life, unless a fee can be implied by reason of the charge of the debts upon the estate. It is there said that the distinction which runs through the cases is, that where the charge is upon the estate, and there are no words of limitation, the devisee takes only an estate for life; but where the charge is on the person of the devisee in respect of the estate devised, he takes a fee, on the principle that he might otherwise be a loser. It is added that when the charge is on the person, he takes the estate upon condition of paying the charge; and if he refuses to accept and perform, the devise is void, and the heir may enter. As to what words constitute a. charge upon the person and what upon the estate,
In the case against George Spralcer, the nonsuit must be set aside, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event; and in the case against Daniel Spraker, the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment upon the verdict.