5 Denio 35 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
It was agreed by the counsel for both parties on the argument of this case, that it presented but a single question, and which was admitted to be identical with the main point decided by this court in the case of Vanderheyden v. Crandall, (2 Denio, 9.) We were asked to reconsider that question, because, as suggested, an element indispensable to a right decision, and of itself conclusive on the point, had been overlooked on the argument and in pronouncing judgment in that case. Although a point once solemnly adjudged must, ordinarily, be held conclusive by the same court and so preclude further discussion, we thought it but proper in this case to hear a re-argument of the question; and it was discussed by the counsel for the respective parties, as all who were present will bear witness, with learning and
When the case of Vanderheyden v. Crandall was before the court, it was argued that there could be no seizin of a remainder in fee tail expectant on an estate for life, when merely vested in interest; that it must first vest in possession, and consequently cease to be a remainder, before the owner could be seized so that the statute would change the estate tail into an estate in fee simple. On the argument of the case at bar, however, it was admitted that a person may be seized of such a remainder when vested in interest only; but it was argued that the seizin required by the .act of 1786, to abolish entails, must be a seizin of lands, tenements or hereditaments, as distinguished from an estate therein, and which as alleged is not the condition of one who is seized of a remainder in tail limited on an estate for life, while it is merely vested in interest.
This seems to us but another form of stating the same ob jection which was made, argued and overruled in the Yanderheyden case ; for it amounts only to this, that no person can be so seized as to fall within the provisions of the statute on which the question arises, unless he has actual as contradistinguished from legal seizin of the estate. When actually seized, or seized in fact, which is the same thing, the owner, according to the argument in the present case, is seized of the land, tenement or hereditament in which the estate exists, and so is within the statute. Such a seizin can only be had of a present estate in point of enjoyment as well as in interest, and where that exists the owner, as was conceded on the argument of the Vanderheyden case, has the seizin required by the statute. According to the argument in that case, the statute works no change in an estate tail until it vests in possession and enjoyment; that is, w'hen actual seizin is acquired. And then, as was admitted in (he present case, the owner is seized of the land, tenement or hereditament, as distinguished from
One error, as we think, in the- argument on the part of the-plaintiff in this1 case, and that a fatal oñ'é, consists in the-supposition that there c'án be a seizin of land’s, tenements or hereditaments,- distinct from and irrespective of an estate in such land's, tenements or hereditaments. Seizin, as we understand the term', has reference to the estate, and not to the thing' in which the estate exists.. In strictness therefore, the ownér of land',- &c. is not seized of the land, &c. but only óf an estate therein.
Lands, tenements affd' hereditaments, áre the subjects of real property; the only things in which estates of that nature caff éxist. An estate in land is the interest which the owner has' therein'. Such estates may greatly vary in quantity or duration, as they also may in respect to the time of possession ór enjoyment. - As to' quantity, they’ are less than freehold, as terms for years; or freehold, as for life ór in fee. The latter class is also divided into estates in fee simple and fee tail! These-' rules á'nd distinctions are familiar. (I Cruise’s Dig. 57, ch. 3, tit. 1; 2 Bl. Com. 16, 103; 1 Prest, on Est. 7, 20,22; 2 Crabb’s Law of Real Prop. 2, ch. 1; Com. Dig. Estate in Fee Simple, A. 1.)
The owner of a fee simple estate in possession in land, has áll the property therein of which the thing is susceptible. Such an owner is sometimes'said to be seized of the land, but which only means that the- entire property of the land is in him ; or in other words, that he is Seized in fact of a fee simple estate
A seizin of land should never be pleaded, but of an estate in land. This is conclusively shown by legal ánt'horities on the point. (1 Ch. Pl. ed. of 1837, pp. 395, 396; 2 id. 560, 568, 569, and notes ; 3 id. 1330,1365; 2 Saund. 233, (2,) 235, 236; 2 Saund. Pl. and Ev. 561, 562; Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 22; Saunders v. Hussey, Lutw. 1231,1232, Carth. 9, S. C. ; Bonoyon v. Palmer, 5 Mod. 72.) It- is true the objection to a pleading that it does not allege the estate of which the party was seized, can only be made by demurrer, for where seizin of land, or of a" tenement or hereditament, and' not of an estate therein, is alleged, the defect is cured by pleading over and á verdict on the issue joined between the parties. This was so held in the case of Harris v. Beavan, (4 Bing. 646. See also 1 Ch. Pl. 395, 396.) Regularly, however, a seizin of the estate, and not of the land, tenement or hereditament in which the estate exists, must be alleged, and the objection to a pleading in the latter form, if made in proper time and manner, will be insuperable.
Bearing in mind that the term seizin has reference to an es- > tate in land, and not to the land itself, we will examine the first section of the act of 23d February, 1786, upon which the question arises. (3 R. S. 1st ed. App. 48; 1 R. L. of 1813, p. 52.)
The first clause of the section declares “That all estates
“ and the present act had not been passed, at any time hereafter become seized in fee tail of any lands, tenements or hereditaments, by virtue of any devise, gift, grant or other conveyance heretofore made, or hereafter to be made, or by any other means whatsoever, such person and persons, instead of becoming seized thereof in fee tail, shall be deemed and adjudged to become seized thereof in fee simple absolute.”
This clause applied directly to the particular estate in ques- ( tion in this case. The devise of Col. John Van Rensselaer, by which an estate tail was limited to the first son of the body of his grandson, John J., was made in 1782. John J. then had no son, nor had he any prior to the passage of the
Take this section of the statute as it is, a connected and complete provision on a single subject; it should be understood and interpreted as it would be if the words “ an estate in” were inserted immediately before the words “ any lands, tenements
The argument' we are now' examining wholly overlooks the first clause of the section-, and, in utter defiance of the terms of that clause, assumes-that the section is limited and confined in its application to casés- where, in the words of the section, a person' is “ seized in fee tail of any lands, tenements or heréditaments.” The whole strength of the Argument is made to depend upon the force and meaning of these- words. It has Already been remarked that in strictness there is no such thing As a seizin of land ; the seizin is of an estate in the land, and not of the land itself. And although the expression, seized of
That part of the revised statutes which applies to this subject, tends strongly to confirm this interpretation. of the first
So far as respects the point now in question, the revised statutes were not intended to work any alteration in the then law of the state. This is quite obvious from the words of the clause to which reference has been made, and is fully confirmed by a note of the revisers on the subject. (3 R. S. 568,2d ed.) The revised statutes therefore may be understood as affirming the accuracy of the construction we here put on the first section of the act of 1786. And in holding that the estate tail in remainder, of John Van Rensselaer the younger, was changed to an estate in fee simple, we do but conform to the express words
The legislation of other states was appealed to on the argument of this cause, with a view to show what must have been the object and design of the legislature in the enactment of the first section of the act of 1786. But no light, as we think, can be derived from that source. The acts passed by different states for the purpose of abolishing estates tail, were by no means in harmony with each other: some required a seizin in fact, and others but a seizin in law, of the estate tail, in order to admit of its being changed to an estate in fee simple. No just inference as to policy or design could be deduced from such discordant legislation, even if it were admissible to infer the intent of the legislature of this state, expressed in their own words, from what was done on a similar subject by the legislatures of other states.
We think the case of Vanderheyden v. Crandall was rightly decided, and it must be followed. The defendant is entitled to judgment on the demurrer, with leave to amend on the usual terms.
Ordered accordingly
For the recent legislation of the British Parliament on this subject, seo the act of 3 & 4 Wm. 4, ch. 74; 1 Sleph. Com. 514, 530 to 534 ; 2 Sug. on Vend. 6th A msr. from lOi/i Land. ed. p. 2G8, et supra; 3 id. p. 397.