The sole issue is whether the appellant is the complete and absolute owner of certain real estate. Appellees contracted to buy the property from appellant if she had a good merchantable title to the entire premises. 1 After an examination of the proffered abstract, appellees claimed that appellant’s title was defective; and this litigation ensued.
The facts appear to be undisputed. Prior to October 23, 1947, Louis F. Harms was the owner of the property here involved, and his wife, Meta Harms, had only an inchoate dower interest. On that day, they executed, acknowledged, and seasonably recorded this deed:
‘ ‘ THAT WE, Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, for and in consideration of the sum of-One & No/100-DOLLARS, cash in hand paid by Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, and unto their heirs and assigns, forever, the following lands, (Here follows the described land.) . . . The purpose of this deed is to convey from Louis F. Harms, ... an undivided one-half (%) interest in and to all of the above described property to Meta Harms, his wife, with the distinct understanding that it is intended by this deed, which is made to Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, that the survivor shall take all of said property, meaning that if Meta Harms, the Avife, should precede in death Louis F. Harms that Louis F. Harms or L. F. Harms takes all of the property described herein outright, or that if Louis F. Harms or L. F. Harms should precede Meta Harms in death that Meta Harms takes all the property described herein outright, free from any and all claims of the heirs of either.
“TO HA YE AND TO HOLD the same unto the said Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, and unto their heirs and assigns, forever with all appurtenances thereunto belonging.
“And we hereby covenant with said Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, that we will forever warrant and defend the title to said lands against all lawful claims whatever.
“And I, Meta Harms, wife of the said Louis F. Harms, for and in consideration of. the said sum of money, do hereby release and relinquish unto the said Louis F. Harms and Meta Harms, his wife, all my rights of dower and homestead in and to said lands.
“WITNESS our hands and seals on this 23rd day of October, 1947.
/s/ Louis F. Harms (L.S.)
/s/ Meta Harms (L.S.)”
Sometime after the recording of the deed, the said Louis F. Harms died intestate, survived by his one son, Edward Harms, and his widow, Meta Harms, who later became Meta H. Weir, and is the appellant herein. By virtue of the foregoing deed, Meta Harms Weir claims to be the absolute owner of the property; but appellees claim that Edward Harms has an interest in the land on the theory that the deed was insufficient to create a tenancy by the entirety.
We are thus presented with the question, whether a husband — already the owner — can create an entirety estate in land by executing a deed directly to himself and wife; and this necessitates a review of the nature of an estate by entirety. Some of our cases are: Robinson v. Eagle,
In Roulston v. Hall (supra), Mr. Justice Hughes, speaking for the Court, said:
“Where land is conveyed to husband and wife, they do not take by moieties, but both are seized of the entirety,— the whole in contradistinction to a moiety or part only. Robinson v. Eagle,29 Ark. 202 ; 2 Kent’s Comm. 132; 4 Kent’s Comm. 414. They are called tenants by entirety. Estates by entirety are sometimes spoken of as joint tenancies, but not with strict accuracy. Like a joint tenancy they possess the quality or survivorship. Husband and wife are but one person in law and a conveyance to husband and wife is, in legal contemplation, a conveyance but to one person. Shaw v. Hearsey,5 Mass. 521 ; Dias v. Glover, Hoff. Ch. (N. Y.) 71; Ross v. Garrison,1 Dana 35 ; Gibson v. Zimmerman,12 Mo. 385 ; Boone’s Law of Real Property, § 365.
“The rule of the common law, that a conveyance to husband and wife constitutes them tenants by the entirety — the survivor taking the whole estate — is not changed by the abolition of joint tenancies, nor by the act of the legislature enabling married'women to acquire and hold property separate from their husbands. See Marburg v. Cole,49 Md. 402 ; Diver v. Diver, 56 Pa. St. 106; Jones v. Chandler,40 Ind. 588 ; McDuff v. Beauchamp,50 Miss. 531 ; Garner v. Jones,52 Mo. 68 ; McCurdy v. Canning,64 Pa. 39 ; Bennett v. Child,19 Wis. 362 ; Hulett v. Inlow,57 Ind. 412 , S. C.26 Am. Rep. 64 ; Re Shaver, 31 Upper Can. Q. B. 605; Robinson v. Eagle,29 Ark. 202 .”
In Stewart v. Tucker,
“The Supreme Court of Michigan, in the case of Pegg v. Pegg,
“The common law of England (except where it is inconsistent witli our constitution and statutes) has been put in force in this state by the General Assembly. Section 1679 of Pope’s Digest. Under the common law, as pointed out in Pegg v. Pegg, supra, such an agreement as the one relied on by appellees is not sufficient to create an estate by the entirety, as to the real and personal property of Cordelia "Wilson Tucker, in Cordelia Wilson Tucker and her husband, Prank H. Tucker, as contended by appellees, and as held by the lower court. No statutory enactment has changed the rule of the common law and it must control here. We conclude that the lower court erred in holding that the alleged written agreement entered into between Prank H. Tucker and his wife, Cordelia Wilson Tucker, was sufficient to create in Prank H. Tucker and his wife an estate by the entirety as to the property involved herein.’’
The holding in Stewart v. Tucker (supra) is determinative of the case at bar. While there are authorities from some jurisdictions 3 which hold that an estate by entirety may be created by deed directly from the husband to the wife, yet the weight of authority is in accordance with the case of Pegg v. Pegg (supra) which we followed in Stewart v. Tucker 4 (supra). We continue to adhere to our previous holding.
Neither can it be successfully urged that Mrs. Meta Weir became the owner of all of the property by virtue of the deed of October 23, 1947. In Hicks v. Sprankle,
In j;he briefs attention is called to Act 86 of 1935, now found in § 50-413, Ark. Stats., which allows spouses to convey directly to each other. From that Statute, appellant urges that an estate by entirety can be created by such a conveyance as is involved in this case. We reject that contention. An estate by the entirety partakes of the nature of a joint tenancy to the extent of requiring the concurrence of the four unities of interest, time, title and possession, as previously mentioned; and these unities did not concur in the deed here in question. The interest of a husband in the estate by entirety can he conveyed to his wife by virtue of the said Act 86 of 1935: such was our holding in Ryan v. Roop,
The Circuit Judge correctly held that Mrs. Weir was not the full and complete owner of the premises.
Affirmed.
Notes
The contract permitted a reservation of a portion of the minerals, but that is not germane to this decision.
For other cases, see West’s Arkansas Digest, “Husband and Wife,” § 14.
In a series of well considered annotations, there may be found listed and discussed many of the cases on the point here under consideration. These annotations are:
“Character of tenancy created by instrument purporting to convey one’s own title or interest to himself and another” in 62 A. L. R. 514, 137 A. L. R. 348, 166 A. L. R. 1026; also, “Creation of right of survivor-ship by instrument ineffective to create estate by entireties or joint tenancy” in 1 A. L. R. 2d 247; and, “Validity and effect of conveyance by one spouse to other of grantor’s interest in property held as estate by entireties” in 8 A. L. R. 2d 634.
In Rockamore v. Pembroke,
Some of our cases, following the rule of Beasley v. Shinn, are: Stewart v. Warren,
