Opinion
01-25-1813
Birthright, Lessee of Hall, v. Hall
Williams, for the appellant. Peyton Randolph, for the appellee.
Argued March 3, 1812
A special verdict was found in ejectment, setting forth that a grant issued to William Hall, the elder, for the land in the declaration mentioned; that he duly made and published his last will and testament, in writing, bearing date the 21st day of October, 1764, which was set forth in haec verba, and among other devises and bequests, contained the following clause: " Item, I give or let to my sons, Thomas Hall and Joseph Hall, my new dwelling, plantation, and the mill thereon, during their natural life, and no longer; and then I will and bequeath the same to each of their eldest sons, and their heirs forever; and, if no male issue, to each of their eldest daughters, and their heirs forever: --that the said William Hall, the elder, died on the 10th day of November, 1764, leaving seven sons; viz. William, (his eldest son, and heir at law,) James, Richard, John, Anthony, Thomas and Joseph; and four daughters; viz. Elizabeth, Ruth, Hannah, and Sarah, that Joseph Hall, aforesaid, died on the first day of January, 1797, leaving no child, and never having had any; having first made his last will and testament, (which was also found in haec verba,) devising to his wife, Mary Hall, the tract of land on which he resided, containing 396 acres, during her life, with remainder in fee to Elizabeth North, wife of George North, and John Hall, son of his brother, John Hall, deceased, to be equally divided between them: that Mary Hall, w dow of the said Joseph, before the 1st of September, 1797, entered upon the lands in the declaration mentioned, by virtue of the said devise to her, and continued possessed thereof ever since her said entry, until the month of October, 1799: that the lands devised to the said Joseph and Thomas Holt, by the will of the aforesaid William Hall, (being the lands in the declaration mentioned,) were divided by the said Thomas and Joseph, soon after the death of the said William Hall, the elder; that they, and those claiming under them, had held the parts severally allotted to them, separately; that the said Thomas Hall, by deed, bearing date the 20th of February, 1792, conveyed the part assigned to him to John Potts: that neither the said Joseph nor Thomas were married, or had any child, at the time of William Hall's making his will, or at the time of his death: that William Hall, the heir at law of the said William Hall, the elder, after the decease of the said Joseph Hall, to wit, on the 12th day of September, 1797, entered into and upon the land in the declaration mentioned, formally and peaceably, and then and there, in the presence of two good and lawful witnesses, took possession of the said land, and all things thereunto belonging or appertaining, claiming the said land as heir at law, and eldest son, of William Hall, the elder, deceased; and that, after making the said entry, to wit, on the 17th of October, 1797, he conveyed the said land by deed of bargain and sale, to the lessor of the plaintiff: that Mary Hall, devisee, as aforesaid, of Joseph, was in actual and adverse possession at the time of the said entry, and so continued until the month of October, 1799; that the said Thomas Hall was still living, and had a legitimate son by the name of Thomas, who was living at the date of this verdict, and was the first son he ever had.
The jury found the lease, entry, and ouster, & c.; and if the law was for the plaintiff, they found for him the land in the declaration mentioned, & c. in the usual form.
By consent of parties, George North, the defendant in the cause, was withdrawn, and Thomas Hall was admitted defendant in his room; and thereupon, the plaintiff released all the land in the special verdict mentioned and found for him, except the land of which Joseph Hall was possessed in his lifetime, being the moiety assigned to the said Joseph Hall, upon the division of the land devised to the said Thomas and Joseph, by the will of William Hall, the elder.
The Superior Court of law entered judgment for the defendant; whereupon the plaintiff appealed to this Court.
Judgment reversed.
Williams, for the appellant.
Peyton Randolph, for the appellee.
Judge Coalter. Judge Roane.
OPINION
Coalter Judge
January 25th, 1813, the judges pronounced their opinions.
JUDGE COALTER. The first question arising in this case is, whether, admitting William Hall, the son and heir at law of William, the testator, to have the reversion in fee, after the death of Joseph without issue, the deed of bargain and sale, of the 17th of October, 1797, made by him to the lessor of the plaintiff, passed the estate?
When this case was formerly before the Court, on the first ejectment, it was determined that the defendant held by intrusion, and that, as it did not appear that any entry had been made on the land by the grantor before executing the deed, it passed nothing; and on that ground the judgment was reversed.
3 Call 488.
On this second ejectment, which is brought on this same deed, the question again occurs, but with this difference: it is found in the special verdict, that William Hall, the grantor, on the 12th day of September, 1797, entered into and upon the land in the declaration mentioned, formally and peaceably, and then and there, in the presence of two good and lawful witnesses, took possession of the said land, and all things thereto belonging and appertaining, claiming the said land as heir at law, and eldest son, of William Hall, the elder, deceased; that, after making the said entry, he made the deed in question, to wit, on the day of its date; and which deed is found in haec verba. It describes the grantor as an inhabitant of Newberry county, in South Carolina, and is acknowledged by him on the same day, before the Court of that county.
The jury also find, that Mary Hall, widow and devisee of Joseph Hall, was in actual possession of said land at the time the entry above found was made, and that said possession of said Mary was, at the time of said entry, adverse to that of the said William Hall; and that the said Mary was so actually in possession at the time the said entry was made, and, notwithstanding the said entry, remained so in possession, and continued in such actual and adverse possession thereof, until the month of October, 1799.
This special verdict presents this question, whether, supposing William, the grantor, to be the reversioner after the death of tenant for life, will his entry upon the intruder enable him, a month or two after such entry, to convey by bargain and sale; the intruder being actually in adverse possession, and on the land, at the time of such entry, and continuing such adverse possession at the time, and until after the execution of such deed?
The cases of M'Lean v. Copper, Duval v. Bibb, Tabb v. Baird, and Hall v. Hall, which cases are to be found in 3 Call, and all of which were decided on the ground that there must be possession in the grantor at the time of the deed made, or livery of seisin, actually found, in order to pass the estate, have created considerable difficulty in my mind on this subject.
3 Call 367.
Ibid. 362.
Ibid. 475.
Ibid. 432.
Here a grantor, residing in South Carolina, makes a conveyance of land of which another, at the time, is in actual adverse possession, and, therefore, to a mind not conversant either in the practice or the theory of the ancient feudal investiture, this case would seem to be similar to those above referred to. To prove, therefore, that this grantor was in possession, notwithstanding another was living on the land, we must resort to technical reasoning, arising from the nature of feudal tenures and investitures, in opposition to that evidence of the senses, arising from the facts found in the special verdict.
An intrusion is the entry of a stranger, after a particular estate of freehold is determined, before him, in remainder or reversion. The reversioner, or remainderman, by this act, is ousted, (if I may use the expression,) and the intruder becomes tenant to the lord. The reversioner or remainder-man, however, may purge this intrusion by summary proceeding, without suit, to wit, by a formal and peaceable entry, such as is found in this verdict; which notorious act of ownership is equivalent to a feudal investiture by the lord, and gives him that hath right of entry a seisin; making him complete owner, and capable of conveying from himself either by descent or purchase. This is called his right of entry; and if he lies by until the death of the intruder, when the land descends to his heir, then his right of entry is tolled or taken away, and he has only a right of action. The maxim of the common law, then, which is, " that a right of entry or chose in action cannot be granted or transferred to a stranger," or, as Blackstone has it, that " a party in possession may convey, but, if he has only the right of possession, or of property, he cannot," must be considered as applying to these rights, before they are exercised so as to gain possession, by entry in the first case, or suit in the second.
3 Bl. 168.
Ibid. 174, 175.
Co. Litt. 214, 266.
The grantor, here, before his entry, had only a right of entry, or right of possession: this right he could not convey: by his entry, which is equal to a feudal investiture, he became tenant of the freehold--in England, tenant to the lord. He holds, then, not a bare right of entry, or of possession: he, by this open and notorious act, has done away this wrongful intrusion, and is seised and may convey: the party on the land no longer holds by intrusion, and would be no longer considered tenant to the lord: another is now seised of the fee, and would be considered such tenant. Had he made a conveyance, when thus on the ground, I apprehend it would have been good; for it is not necessary, in order to purge the intrusion, to turn the intruder out. This might require violence; and, indeed, if the remainderman cannot enter through fear, he may make claim near the land, and this has the same effect with the entry. A person then may be in possession of the fee, when another is on the land; and this fee he may convey. He may be deprived of his freehold again, though by disseisin; what that is, perhaps, at this day, is a nice question, and the doctrine will not now be much considered: it will suffice, at present, to say, that every possession of another's land, even by a person claiming adverse, I apprehend, is not a disseisin, which, when effectual, ousts the party of his freehold, and makes the disseisor tenant thereof, and answerable to the lord. When the freehold becomes thus wrongfully in possession of another, then the party is put again to his right of entry, and cannot convey, and may even lose this right of entry by a descent cast. But this continued possession, in Mary Hall, is neither found to be a disseisin, by the verdict, nor are such facts found, as, according to my present impressions, would enable the Court to adjudge in a disseisin. It is true the jury do not find that the party being seised conveyed, but having found an entry, which gave him seisin, and not finding a disseisin, the maxim, " that what appears not is to be taken as not having existed," must apply; and we must consider the grantor, if he had a right of entry, as having reduced his right to possession; and that at the time the deed was made, he was seised of the freehold, and could convey.
1 Wash. (VA) 37.
This brings us to the second question, to wit, whether he had such right of entry?
This will depend on the construction of the will of William Hall, the elder, made in the year 1764, and in which is this clause relative to this land:
" Item, I give or let to my sons, Thomas Hall and Joseph Hall, my new dwelling plantation, and the mill thereon, during their natural life, and no longer, and then I will and bequeath the same to each of their eldest sons, and their heirs forever; and, if no male issue, to each of their eldest daughters, and their heirs forever."
Partition between Thomas and Joseph was made. Thomas aliened his moiety, has had a son, and both he and his son are found to be alive. Joseph never had issue, male or female, but has departed this life, having devised his moiety to his wife.
The testator had several other sons, as also other tracts of land, which, when an entire tract was devised to two, and the proper division between them was known, was devised to them severally, by metes and bounds, & c. This circumstance; the improbability that the testator intended the survivor to take in exclusion of the eldest son of the deceased, if he had left one, and the use of the words, " to each of their eldest sons," induced me to suppose it probable, that a tenancy in common was intended as to them; in the same manner as if the will had been " to my sons, Thomas and Joseph, and each of them, & c. and to each of their eldest sons, & c." This point, however, is perhaps immaterial, as partition has been made, and in which case, if it was a joint tenancy for life, and no more, each would, on partition, take an estate for his own life in his moiety, which, on his death, would go to him in remainder or reversion.
The great doubt in my mind is, whether an estate tail was not created in Joseph and Thomas, which, by the act of Assembly, was turned into a fee? If land be given to two brothers, A. and B., and the heirs of their bodies; as they cannot have the same heirs of their bodies, they take a joint estate for life, and several inheritances. The question is, whether these brothers did not take such estates in this case? or, in other words, whether they did not take as tenants in common, or joint tenants, for life, with several remainders in tail-male, remainder to each of their eldest daughters in fee?
Bac. Abr. Title Estate Tail C.
I incline to think they did take such estates as last described, although I advance the opinion with very great diffidence and distrust, not only because of the contrary opinion expressed by one of the Court before, when this cause was formerly heard, but because, on a further and patient examination, that judge adheres to his former opinion, in which he is also joined by the presiding judge. Considering, however, that the case is open for decision, it becomes my duty to give my opinion.
This case arising on the construction of a will, the great object is to find out the intention of the testator. To do this, the Court must not only put themselves in his place, but suppose the things to have happened, which he expected to happen. It is found, by the verdict, that neither Thomas nor Joseph were married, nor had children, at the time of making the will, or death of the testator; but it is evident he expected them to marry, and to have both sons and daughters, and under this expectation makes a provision for them and their issue. The intention of the testator must govern; and, where he has two intentions, a general and a particular intention, the latter must yield to the former, if they are in conflict with each other, and both cannot stand.
If the object of the testator was, that the male issue of Joseph, which he should leave at his death, whether that should be his eldest son, or the son of his eldest son, or the second or other son in succession, in case of the death of the elder without male issue, should take, before the eldest daughter; and if this could not be effected without enlarging the estate of Joseph to a fee tail-male, then it must be so enlarged.
" The word 'issue' is used in the stat. de donis promiscuously with the word heirs; and, which is a strong reason for the technical sense which it has obtained, it comprehends the whole generation, as well as the word heirs, and is therefore more properly, in its natural signification, a word of limitation than of purchase.
This doctrine is laid down by one of the judges, in the case of Smith and wife v. Chapman, 1 Hen. & M. 291, as extracted from the opinion of Justice Gould, in 2 Wils. Ind. 324. The word children, on the other hand, is generally considered a term of purchase.
At the time of making this will, and at the death of the testator, the law of primogeniture prevailed. I will then suppose that Joseph had had issue, first a daughter and then a son, and that this son had instantly died, and that he had afterwards had another son, and then died, leaving this daughter, his first-born child, and this second son; would the fee, in this case, have vested in the eldest son, and, on his death, in his sister, who was then his heir at law? If this was an estate for life in the father, remainder to the eldest son unborn in fee, the remainder would vest in him when born, and, on his death, would pass to his heir at law, to wit, his sister; and, consequently, the eldest daughter of Joseph would take this estate, although he did not die without male issue, but left a son.
But it will be said that this estate was not to vest on the birth of a son, but on the death of Joseph, and in his eldest son then alive, (who is the person described in the will,) and if no such person, in his eldest daughter. I will then suppose that Joseph had had a son and daughter; that his son died in his lifetime, leaving a son, and that his daughter survived him; that this estate would not go to the grandson, but to the daughter, as it must go to the eldest son of Joseph then alive, and, if none alive, to his daughter, although it was evidently the intention of the testator to prefer the male children, at least, of the eldest son, to this daughter, and which cannot be effected, except by its going to him as the issue male of Joseph; he not being capable to take under the descriptio personae of the male child of Joseph then alive. So such son of the eldest son would succeed (as it was intended he should) in preference to a second son of Joseph, who might be alive at the death of his father.
I had doubts once, whether this might not be considered a devise in strict settlement, to wit, to the father for life, and to the first and every other son, in succession, in tail-male, remainder to the eldest daughter in fee. But, to effect this, we must supply the words, " and if no male issue, to the eldest son," and must also supply the words, " and every other son successively; " and apply these words also to them; whereas the plain reading of the will is, that on the death of Thomas and Joseph, without male issue, & c.; and as giving them estates in fee tail-male would have nearly the same effect as the settlement above supposed, I cannot do such violence to the words, at the same time that I think the great object of the will would be defeated without giving the one construction, or the other. The words " and if no male issue," are important, and cannot be rejected, which would be the case were we to give the eldest son a fee at his birth. If we say they mean, eldest son alive at the death of Joseph, then a second son will take in exclusion of the heir male of the eldest son, and this will exclude the words, " and their heirs for ever," which, if they cannot, consistent with the other words, create a fee in the eldest son, on his birth, had certainly some object. If we consider the word " heirs" synonymous with issue, and this again restrained by the terms issue male of Joseph, which his grandson would be, then every word has a meaning compatible with, and tending to promote, the great object of the testator, which seems to me to be, to perpetuate the estate in the male line of his family, and, in default thereof, to give it to his eldest grand-daughter, in exclusion of any great grand-daughter.
JUDGE ROANE. In considering the devise before us to have created a joint tenancy for life, in the land in controversy, in favour of Thomas and Joseph Hall, with a remainder, in severalty, to the eldest son of each, and their heirs, and not as conferring an estate tail upon the said Joseph and Thomas Hall, I must refer, in general, to my opinion, delivered in the case of Smith and wife v. Chapman, in which this subject was fully considered.
1 Hen. & M. 294.
According to the principles of that decision, the terms, " eldest son and his heirs," would be taken as a word of purchase, and not of limitation, and, consequently, the estate previously granted would be considered only as a life estate. I understand that this construction would be readily acceded to by the judge who has just given his opinion, but for the words, " if no male issue," used after the devise to the eldest son and his heirs for ever; which he supposes converts the estate of Joseph into an estate tail. In considering those words as not having that effect, but as being only a varied form of expression, conveying the meaning that, if the devisee for life should not have a son, or an eldest son, then the estate should go to the daughter, I am supported, among many other considerations, by the construction put upon those words by the testator himself, in at least two several clauses of his will, in a manner not to be mistaken or resisted. The testator has come into this construction, 1st. In his devise of lands to his son, William Hall, for life, and no longer, and then to the eldest son of William Hall, and his heirs: after which, the testator adds, that in case there be no son of William Hall to heir the same, (not male issue, a phrase used in the other devises,) then the estate should go to the eldest daughter; and, 2dly. In the clause devising a tract of land to James Hall, for life, and no longer, and then to the " eldest son" of said James, omitting to add, " and his heirs; " after which is interposed the usual words, " and if no male issue," & c.; and then the testator immediately adds, " but if a son, to him and his heirs for ever." In the first devise, the testator uses the phrase, " and if no son of William Hall," indifferently for the phrase now in question; and in the devise last mentioned, notwithstanding the existence of the words supposed to convert the estate of Joseph into an estate tail, the testator emphatically reprobates that construction, by using words immediately afterwards, expressly giving a fee to the eldest son. It is evident to me, therefore, that the testator has himself expounded the terms, " if no male issue," in a sense synonymous with the terms, " if no son; " a sense consistent with the remainder in fee to the eldest son, and incompatible with the idea of an estate tail existing in the first devisee; and I am for letting this construction run through the whole will; a will in which it cannot be doubted but that the same intention existed towards all his sons, in relation to the present question.
With respect to the question of adverse possession, I was, at first, inclined to consider the verdict uncertain, if not contradictory: but inasmuch as, although it is found that Mary Hall was in actual and adverse possession at the time of the entry of William Hall, the grantor, and so remained in such actual and adverse possession until the month of October, 1799, it is also found that the said William Hall, the grantor, entered formally and peaceably into the premises, and " took possession thereof," and all things thereunto belonging or appertaining, and that the grantee, the lessor of the plaintiff, entered upon the land, and was seised thereof, the verdict must be reconciled, by intending the jury to have considered that as an actual and adverse possession in Mary Hall, which was, nevertheless, a vacant possession at the time of the entry of William Hall, the grantor, and the acquisition of seisin by William Hall, the grantee; an idea countenanced, as not being inconsistent and incompatible, by the decision of this Court in the case of M'Lean v. Copper; and if such be the meaning of the jury as to an adverse possession, as at the time of the entry, it may be taken to be the same as to all the future time, and to justify the grant to the lessor of the plaintiff; especially as no posterior ouster is found, on behalf of the appellees, as to the premises in question.
3 Call 367.
On these grounds, and because the joint estate of Thomas and Joseph Hall was severed in their lifetime, either by the division and the alienation by Thomas, found by the verdict, or by the act of 1786, I am of opinion to reverse the decision of the Court below, and enter judgment for the appellant.
Judge Fleming was of the same opinion.
Judgment reversed, and entered for the appellant.