Summary
In Jenkins v. Fahey, 73 N.Y. 355, which was an action brought to compel a specific performance of a contract, between the plaintiff as vendor and the defendant as vendee, for the sale of certain real estate, the real estate involved was sold in 1838 for an unpaid assessment for street improvement.
Summary of this case from Matter of SheldonOpinion
Argued April 8, 1878
Decided April 16, 1878
John W. Stearns, for appellant.
Theo. F. Jackson, for respondent.
During the pendency of this action the life upon which the particular estates depended has fallen in, and the estate in remainder has become vested in possession, and one serious if not fatal objection to the plaintiff's title, which existed at the time of the commencement of the action, is removed. The remainder in the estate was devised to the issue of the daughter of the testator, the devisee for life living at her death. ( Taggart v. Murray, 53 N.Y., 233.) The plaintiff claims, and, if the conveyances to him are valid and effectual for the purposes for which they were made, has acquired, the title of the three children and only issue of the devisee for life, then or now living; but he has only acquired the title and interest as devisee in remainder which they respectively had at the time of the several conveyances, and by the death of either, without leaving issue during the life of the mother, the estate and interest which he or she would have taken absolutely at the death of the mother, would have become vested in such of the issue as should survive the mother. It follows that during the continuance of the life estate the plaintiff had not a marketable title to the remainder, and could not have made "a good and perfect title in fee simple absolute" to the lands. But the children have survived the mother, and their estates have come into possession. The plaintiff has a title in fee, if the conveyances under which he claims the estate are valid. The fact that at the time of the commencement of the action he could not make a good title is immaterial, except upon the question of interest, if he can make such title at the time of the decree. ( Pierce v. Nichols, 1 Paige, 244; Brown v. Haff, 5 id., 235.)
The first objection to the title, which is urged upon this appeal, is to the jurisdiction of the court to decree a partition or sale of the estate in remainder, then in Bush, the plaintiff taking title under the sale in the action for a partition or sale, brought by Laytin, a tenant for life in possession, against his co-life tenants and Bush the remainderman. Whether the judgment was such a judgment as ought to have been given, or whether the action, whether regarded solely as an action for a partition, or as an action as well to establish a lien for taxes and assessments paid by the life-tenants, might not have been successfully defended by Bush, the remainderman, and the judgment in partition restricted to the life estate need not be considered. If the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the persons, the judgment is conclusive, although it may have been erroneous, until reversed or vacated. The court acquired jurisdiction of the defendants, other than Bush and wife, by the personal service of summons and complaint and their voluntary appearance and consent to the judgment. Jurisdiction was acquired over Bush and wife by service of summons and complaint upon them, pursuant to an order of publication, at Tioga, in the State of Pennsylvania. The service was equally valid for the purpose of giving jurisdiction, whether made upon them personally at their residence in Pennsylvania or by publication. (2 R.S., 319, § 12; Code, § 135.) The Supreme Court has jurisdiction in cases of partition as a proceeding quasi in rem — that is, it had jurisdiction over the general subject-matter of the action. It is not denied that tenants for life can have partition as between themselves, and in all cases of partition all persons entitled to the reversion, remainder and inheritance, after the termination of any particular estate, and every person who, by any contingency contained in any devise, grant or otherwise, may be or become entitled to any beneficial interest in the lands, may be made parties to the action or proceedings, and the judgment in partition is made conclusive on all parties having any interest in the premises, contingent or otherwise, and conveyances upon a sale under a judgment in partition are a bar in law and equity against all persons interested in such premises, in any way, who are named as parties in the proceedings. (2 R.S., 318, §§ 5, 6; 2 id., 322, § 35; 2 id., 327, § 60; Sullivan v. Sullivan, 66 N.Y., 37.) Bush was a proper party to the action and might have appeared and resisted the demand for judgment that his estate be sold, and insisted that the partition should be confined to the life estate. There could have been no partition of the estate in remainder, as Bush was the sole owner of such estate, if the plaintiff's claim is to be upheld, and actual partition could easily have been made between the life tenants, as it was in fact made upon the sale of the lots separately, and striking off seven of the fourteen lots to one purchaser, and the residue to another.
Whether the estate in remainder was properly chargeable with the payment of any part of the taxes and assessments, and if so, what proportion we are not called upon to consider. The Supreme Court had jurisdiction of that subject, as well as of the partition. An equitable lien was asserted in the complaint, and the judgment is conclusive, as in the case of partition. ( Howell v. Mills, 56 N.Y., 226; Sullivan v. Sullivan ( supra). The objections to the judgment do not go to the jurisdiction of the court, but are merely assignments of error, and cannot be heard in this action or any collateral proceeding in impeachment of the judgment, or to impair its effect as the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, conclusive on all the parties to it and their representatives.
The next objection is to the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to direct a sale of the estate in remainder of the infant, Ida C. Phelps, under the statute for the sale of infants' estates, the title of Bush to an undivided third of the remainder having been acquired under a sale pursuant to such order. The contention is, that under the statute, the court has only jurisdiction over estates in possession, and cannot direct a sale of future estates, although vested in interest. The court derives its power over the real estate of infants solely from the statute, and can only exercise it in the cases prescribed. ( Rogers v. Dill, 6 Hill, 415.) Prior to the passage of the first statute on the subject in 1814, application was made to the Legislature, as individual cases arose, for the disposal of infants' estates, and the objection now taken to the proceedings for sale of the estate of the infant Phelps is founded upon the language of the statute. The first act (Laws of 1814) authorized the sale of "the real estate" of infants. In 1815, a revised and more perfect act was passed, authorizing applications for a sale "whenever an infant shall be seized of lands or tenements, or be entitled to a term to come in any lands in this State." (Laws of 1815, ch. 106.) And, by the Revised Statutes (2 R.S., 194, § 170), any infant "seized of any real estate, or entitled to any terms for years in any land may" apply for sale or disposition of his property. Although the language of the several statutes differs slightly in phraseology in describing and characterizing the property subject to the provisions of the act, there is no reason to suppose that any difference in substance was intended. The same description of property — that is, the same estate and interest of the infant in lands, was intended in the several acts. A difference in the phraseology or verbiage of a statute in a revision does not necessarily call for a different construction, or import a change in the law. ( Taylor v. Delancey, 2 C.C. in E., 143; Elwood v. Klock, 13 Barb., 50; Theriat v. Hart, 2 Hill, 380.)
The term "real estate," used in the statute of 1814, and in the Revised Statutes, includes every freehold estate and interest in lands — that is, an estate in fee or for life. By 1 Revised Statutes, 754, section 27, it is declared to include every estate, interest and right, legal and equitable, in lands, tenements and hereditaments, except such as are determined or extinguished by the death of an intestate seized or possessed thereof, or in any manner entitled thereto, and except leases for years and estates for the life of another person. This is but an elaboration of the common law definition of the term. (3 Kent Com., 401; Merry v. Hallet, 2 Cow., 497.)
A remainder in fee in lands is clearly "real estate," as that term is used at common law, as well as defined by the statutes of this State, and the object was to authorize the sale of every and all estates and interests in lands belonging to infants, freehold interests being included in the term real estate, of which the infant is seized, and chattel interests under the designation of terms for years. Every present estate of freehold is capable of a seizin, either in deed or law.
The only question then is, and upon that the judgment of the court below was adverse to the plaintiff, whether an estate in remainder, although "real estate," is an estate of which an infant can be seized. Seizin denotes, ordinarily, a possession in fact by one having or claiming a freehold interest, which is known as a seizin in deed, or a right of immediate possession, which is a seizin in law. There may be a constructive seizin, the equivalent of a seizin in deed. (Com. Dig., Seizin A., 1, 2; per Ld. MANSFIELD, Taylor v. Horde, 1 Bur. 60, 107; Coke Lit., 17 a; 4 Kent Com., 386, note; Green v. Liter, 8 Cranch; S.C., 229.) It is quite evident that a remainderman, when the particular estate, as in this case, is a freehold, is not seized within this limited definition of the term, for he is not in possession, and has no right of possession. He cannot enter either to take the profits or to make livery of seizin to another. One who has a reversion or remainder in fee expectant upon the determination of a term for years is in the actual seizin of his estate, for the possession of the termor is, in law, that of the remainderman or reversioner. But this does not apply when the particular estate is an estate of freehold, but there may be in the later case a seizin in law which answers the call of the statute under which the proceedings under consideration were had, resting upon a different principle.
A right of present enjoyment of an estate, or an actual possession either by a termor or otherwise, is not necessary to a seizin when there is a fixed vested right of future enjoyment, that is, when there is a vested remainder or reversion. In such a case there is a seizin in law, all the possession of which the nature of the estate is susceptible. In Plowden, 191, it was held that when a reversion is dependent on an estate for life, the reversioner in pleading may state that he is seized of the reversion. The statutes of this State give a right of action for waste to "a person seized of an estate in remainder or reversion," and thus describes the remainderman as one "seized" of the estate. (1 R.S., 1750, § 8.) When the particular estate and the remainder in fee are created at one and the same time, and by one and the same act, if the particular estate is a freehold or one for life, the seizin as well as the possession passes to and stops in the tenant of the freehold, but in such case it is said the livery made to the tenant of the freehold enures to the benefit of the reversion or remainder and passes to the reversioner or remainderman instantaneously upon the determination of the particular estate. The act of livery of seizin is due to the one who takes the first estate with right of possession. One is "seized" of an estate in remainder when the estate is vested. ( Cook v. Hammond, 4 Mason, 467; 2 Bl. Com., 166; 1 Wn. on Real Prop., 38, 47; 4 Kent Com., 386.) Remainders and reversions being future interests, there can be no seizin in deed of those, only a seizin in law until they come into possession, but there is a seizin in law which is all that is required. (Crabbe's Law of Real Property, 1001.) But we are relieved from an extended consideration of this question by the construction of the courts of this State of the same language in another statute, in which the question has been thoroughly treated by learned judges. It was held that the statute to abolish entails, by converting the estates of all persons "seized in fee tail of any lands," etc., into a fee simple, operated upon vested remainders in tail as upon estates tail which had taken effect in possession. ( Vanderheyden v. Crandall, 2 Den., 9; Van Rensselaer v. Poucher, 5 id., 35; Wendell v. Crandall, 1 Comst., 491.) All that is said by judge BRONSON in the latter case in respect to the policy of the law for the destruction of entails, and showing that there was the same reason for attacking a future estate tail as an estate tail already in possession is equally applicable to the case in hand. There is the same reason for subjecting estates of infants in remainder or reversion to the jurisdiction of the court, and authorizing a sale when the interests or necessities of the infant require or make a sale expedient as estates in actual possession. The reasoning of judge BRONSON does not derogate from the force of the arguments in the other cases, or the bearing or weight of the authorities cited in support of the results, but rather gives support to them. Judge BRONSON adopts in his language the same idea of seizin as was adopted in those cases, and refers to a remainderman as one seized in law of his estate.
The court had jurisdiction to order the sale of the estate in remainder of the infant Phelps, so that the title of Bush to the entire remainder was perfect. The learned counsel waives the only other objection to the title on the ground of the sale of the lands in question, by the village of Williamsburgh in 1838, for the non-payment of an assessment for opening and regulating North Eighth street in that village, and concedes that Sharp v. Johnson, 4 Hill, 92; Hassan v. City of Rochester, 67 N.Y., 533; Fisher v. Mayor of New York, id., 73, are decisive that such sale does not constitute an objection to the title.
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial granted.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.