Carroll v. Reidy

5 App. D.C. 59, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3367
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1894
DocketNo. 358
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 App. D.C. 59 (Carroll v. Reidy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. Reidy, 5 App. D.C. 59, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3367 (D.C. Cir. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The question in the case is, whether a deed of conveyance in fee simple to husband and wife, expressly declared in what is known as the habendum clause of the deed to be a tenancy in common, and not a joint tenancy, does, in fact and in contemplation of law, create a tenancy in common, or the peculiar estate known to the common law as a tenancy by the [61]*61entirety, which arises when an estate is conveyed to husband and wife as grantees, and in which there is, as in joint tenancy, the distinguishing feature of survivorship. If the estate created in this case was a tenancy by the entirety, the complainant had no interest in the property and no standing in court. If, on the other hand, the estate was a tenancy in common, the complainant aiid the defendant were owners each of an undivided half of the property, and as such entitled to partition.

We concur in the determination of the question that was made by the court below. The express language of the deed itself in the habendum clause creates a tenancy in common, with all the rights and incidents of such an estate; and if the intention of the parties is to count for anything, they have not left the matter in doubt. But the argument is that a grant or conveyance to husband and wife is, by an inexorable rule of the common law, to be construed in all cases as creating an estate by the entirety; and that it is not competent for them, even by express words in the deed, either in the body of the deed or in the habendum clause, to provide that the estate shall be a different estate, a tenancy in common or a joint tenancy. It is claimed that this is an inexorable rule, inherent in the legal relations of husband and wife, under the common law, and which no intention of the parties can contravene.

Undoubtedly there is respectable authority for the appellant’s contention, and some show of reason. But we cannot regard either the reason of the rule, if such was the rule, or the force of the authorities, that have been cited on behalf of the appellant, as being applicable in this jurisdiction at the present time.

In the case of Hunt v. Blackburn, 128 U. S. 464, the Supreme Court of the United States, by Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, said: “Undoubtedly, at common law, husband and wife did not take, under a conveyance of land to them jointly, as tenants in common or as joint tenants, but each became seized of [62]*62the entirety, per tout et non. per my, the consequence of which was that neither could dispose'of any part without the assent of the other, but the whole remained in the survivor under the original grant. 2 Blackstone’s Com. 182; 2 Kent’s Com. 113; 1 Washburn, Real Prop. 672. Nor had this rule been changed at the time of these transactions by the constitution or statutes of Arkansas. Robinson v. Eagle, 29 Ark. 202. But it was also true at common law that, as ‘in point of fact, and agreeable to natural reason, free from artificial deductions, the husband and wife are distinct and individual persons . . . when lands are granted to them as tenants in common, thereby treating them without any respect to their social union, they will hold by moieties, as other distinct and individual persons would do.’ 1 Preston on Estates, p. 132; 1 Inst. 187b; 1 Washburn, Real Prop. (4th Ed.), p. 674; McDermott v. French, 15 N. J. Eq. (2 McCarter) 78, 80.”

The quotation in this opinion from Preston on Estates "is the statement of the common law which was criticised and repudiated by Assistant Vice Chancellor Hoffman in the case of Dias v. Glover, 1 Hoffman’s Chan. Rep. 70, 77; and by the Supreme Court of the State of Pennsylvania in the case of Stuckey v. Keefe, 26 Penn. St. 399, as being unsupported by any authority. We may say that, if it had no authority before this to support it, it. has now abundant support. The authority of) the Supreme Court of the United States is sufficient for us. Moreover, we regard Mr. Preston’s statement as founded in reason and common sense. There never was any good reason for carrying the feudal notion of the unity of husband and wife, which was not the Christian notion, to the absurd extreme to which it has sometimes been pushed. We may note, also, that the decision in the case of Dias v. Glover, 1 Hoffman’s Ch. 70, was overruled by the subsequent case of Hicks v. Cochran, 4 Edw. Ch. 111, in which Mr. Preston’s statement of the law was distinctly and unequivocally adopted; and it is believed .that there is nothing in any of [63]*63the subsequent decisions in the State of New York antagonistic to the position taken in the latter case.

As is said in the case of McDermott v. French, 15 N. J. Eq. 78, and by Mr. Washburn in his work on Real Property (4th Ed.), Vol. 1, p. 674, “it is always competent to make husband and wife tenants in common by proper words in the deed or devise by which they take, indicating such an intention.” And in Fladung v. Rose, 58 Md. 13, the Court of Appeals of Maryland, after a full review of all the authorities, including those now cited before us, announced the same doctrine. The last mentioned case, it is true, was one where a joint tenancy was expressly created and not a tenancy in common; but the principle is the same; and the authority of Mr.. Preston is fully sustained in that case.

We are of opinion, therefore, without further statement of our analysis of the adjudications that are supposed to bear upon this point, most of which will be found, upon close investigation, not to be inconsistent with the position here assumed, that it is competent, at common law, independently of all married woman’s acts, to make husband and wife tenants in common by proper words in the deed under which they take, indicating such an intention? Are there such words, and is there such intention in the'deed under consideration in this case? Of this there is not room for doubt. There could not be more apt words than those that are used ; and the intention is too plain to be questioned. And it does not seem to be claimed on behalf of the appellant, and we do not suppose that it could successfully be claimed, that it makes any difference that the words indicating the intention of the parties appear in the habendum clause and not in the body of the deed. It is the special function of the habendum clause to set forth such limitations. 3 Washburn on Real Property (4th Ed.), Vol. 3, 436.

Inasmuch as from what we have said, it is apparent that we regard the deed in question as creating a tenancy in common under the common law, and not a tenancy by the [64]*64entirety, it is unnecessary to inquire what the effect is upon such deeds of the so-called Married Woman’s Act in force in the District of Columbia, the act of Congress of April 10, 1869 (16 St. 45), incorporated into the Revised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia as Sections 727 to «730. But we may remark that', whatever may have been the case at common law, it was the plain purpose of that act to destroy the fictitious unity of person upon which, at common law, the peculiar estate by entirety was based. It is argued quite plausibly, on the part of the appellant, that the effect of that legislation was merely to enlarge the power of a married woman to dispose of her estate, not to enlarge the estate that might be granted to her.

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5 App. D.C. 59, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-reidy-cadc-1894.