51 Md. 180 | Md. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In defining the office and effect of the habendum clause in a deed, Blackstone, in his Commentaries (Book 2, page 298,) after stating that it cannot totally contradict or be repugnant to the estate granted in the premises, puts an illustration of such repugnancy thus: “ If a grant be to one and his heirs in the premises, habendum to him for life, the habendum will be utterly void, for an estate of inheritance is vested in him before the habendum comes, and shall not afterwards be taken away by it,” and for this the authority of Lord Coke, found in the third resolution in Baldwin’s Case, 2 Rep., 23, and in Earl of Rutland’s Case, 8 Rep., 56, is cited. In the notes to Baldwin’s Case, found in Thomas’ edition of the Reports, other authorities sustaining the same position, are referred to, and it is there said: “This doctrine proceeds upon the principle that where there are two clauses in a deed repugnant to each other, the first shall prevail, Leicester vs. Biggs, 2 Taunt., 113 ; and every deed is expounded most strongly against the grantor and most for the advantage of the grantee, and therefore the grantee shall take by the premises if that be most beneficial for him and not by the habendum, and the grantor shall not be allowed by any subsequent part of the,deed to retract the gift, made in the premises : post, 8 Co., 54 b; 1 Inst., 299 a, and 2554.” More recently the same doctrine was affirmed in Goodtitle vs. Gibbs, 5 Barn. & Cress., 709. In that case the distinction as to the effect of the habendum in deeds in which the premises expressly mention an estate or interest, and in
Again, Chancellor Kent (4 Kent’s Com., 468,) states the proposition very clearly and tersely, that the habendum “ cannot perform the office of devesting the estate already vested by the deed; for it is void if it be repugnant to the estate granted.” The same doctrine has been recognized and adopted by express decisions of this Court. Thus in
We must therefore apply the doctrine thus long established and supported by the highest authority, to the deed of the 9th of October, 1858, under which the appellants claim an interest in the leasehold property which that deed conveys. It is a deed executed by Henry Newman, by
That no actual intention of the grantor has been violated by the construction we have placed on this deed is apparent from the deed by the same party of the 13th of December, 1860, which is called in the bill a confirmatory deed, and is referred to for the purpose of showing that Amaryllis R. Winter is the same person as Emma R. Winter mentioned in the bill and one of the defendants thereto. In this latter deed, the grantor recites that it was his intention by the first deed to give his daughter an absolute interest in the property without remainder or interest therein of any description to her children or the children of the grantor, and that such provisions were inserted in that deed by mistake and without any intent to do so on the part of either of said parties, and that the purpose of the present deed is to correct these mistakes and to confirm the property to the said Emma R. Winter absolutely. The deed then conveys the property to “ the said Emma R. Winter, her personal representatives and assigns.”
Order affirmed.