Clawges v. Clawges

2 Miles 34
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedNovember 19, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Miles 34 (Clawges v. Clawges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clawges v. Clawges, 2 Miles 34 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1836).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Joses, J.

—This is an action of partition, and an application has [35]*35been made to quash the writ and the proceedings had upon it, on the ground that the parties to the action are heirs claiming the lands by descent, under the act of the 19th April, 1794. It is admitted that all the parties to this action make title by descent from John Clawges, who died intestate, on the — day of May, A. D. 1836, and who was the sole owner of the lands to be divided, at the time of his decease. He left a widow and three sons, and several grandchildren, the children of two deceased sons.

The act of the 19th April, 1794, § 22, provides that “ to prevent any doubts which may hereafter arise concerning the manner in. which the partition of the intestate’s estate may be made, it shall be lawful for the Orphan’s Court of the county, upon petition, to appoint seven or more persons, with the consent of the parties, or where the parties cannot agree,” &c. &c. The phraseology of this section, and the recital by which it is introduced, was taken from the act 23d March, 1764, § 3, with some slight variations, into which it had been copied from the act of 4th Feb. 1748-9, entitled “an act for amending the laws relating to the partition and distribution of intestates’ estates,”

The doubts referred to in all these acts must therefore have arisen under the act of 1705, for the better settling of intestates’ estates. By referring to the act of 1705, § 8, we find the following provision concerning the manner in which the partition of the intestate’s estate might be made, viz. “ The surplusage or remaining part of the intestate’s lands, &c., shall be divided between the intestate’s widow and children, or the survivors of them, who shall equally inherit, and make partition as tenants in common may or can do.” This clause, standing by itself, would refer the widow and the children to the writ of partition given to tenants in common by the statute 32d Henry VIII., c. 1: for that was the only means by which tenants in common might compel the partition of real estate. But the subsequent sections of this act of 1705 imply, that the proceeding might be had in the Orphan’s Court for that purpose, although the power is not expressly given. Hence the doubts concerning the manner in which partition might be made, which were removed by the act of 3d Feb. 1748-9. And the act itself, which gave remedy by writ of partition to the widow and children of an intestate, was repealed by the act of the 19th April, 1794, § 22. It may be observed that, previously to the act of 1705, the distribution or partition of the estate of intestates was .made by the Register? Genera], (Hall & Sellers’ Edit, of the Laws of [36]*36Pennsylvania, 1775, appendix, page 13). It would seem, therefore, that the doubts supposed to exist by the 22d section of the act of the 19th April, 1794, had been in fact removed by the act of the 4th Feb. 1748-9 (of which act the act of 1794 was in truth, as it respects this provision, a re-enactment) and that they were yet more effectually removed by the repeal of the act of 1705, in which alone the doubts had originated. It is important also to observe that the repeal of the act of 1705 (which was the first and the only act which could be supposed to give the widow and children of an intestate remedy by a writ of partition) by the act of 1794, which gave them an entirely different remedy, evinces an intention to take away the action of partition, if we should suppose that it might have been mantained concurrently with proceedings in the Orphan’s Court, under the act of 1705, 4th Feb. 1748-9, and 23d March, 1764,

But there is another view of this question. The act of the 4th Feb. 1748-9, provided for the valuation of an intestate’s estate, if it could not be divided without prejudice. This practice was continued by the act of the 23d March, 1764, and the act of the 19th April, 1794. But no such practice in the action of partition was allowed before the act of the 11th April, 1799. It is not correct to suppose that the act of the 11th April, 1799, is the origin of the jurisdiction of the common law courts of the action of partition. The occasion of that act, so far as it respects the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, was the act of the 20th March, 1799, which established Circuit Courts instead of Courts of Nisi Prius; and the use of this act, in this respect, was to continue to that court the powers which it had exercised, before the alteration of its organization by the act of the 20th March, 1799. The act of 22d May, 1722, had given to the Supreme Court and the Courts of Common Pleas, jurisdiction of the action of partition; but the practice in the action was the same in Pennsylvania as it was in England under the statute of 32d Henry VIII., c. 1. There was no authority to appraise the lands to be divided, however much a partition of them would be to the prejudice of the owners. Hence another object of the act of the 11th April, 1799, was to transfer to the action the practice authorized by the acts relating to partition in the Orphan’s Court, of appraising land which could not be divided without prejudice, a practice which wras recommended by the experience of nearly fifty years in that jurisdiction We cannot suppose that courts possessed of such different powers [37]*37or that proceedings which might end in such different results, were indiscriminately resorted to during half a century.

Another distinction deserves notice. The act of 1705, 4th Feb. 1748-0, 23d March, 1764, and the 19th April, 1794, give to the children and heirs of an intestate, the right to take the property in case of a valuation, the right to be exercised in a prescribed order or succession.

By the act of 1705, § 11, the eldest son was allowed ta take the whole estate at the valuation, whether it would admit of partition or not. By the act of 4th Feb., 1748-9, the estate, in case of a valuation, was to be offered to the eldest son, and upon his refusal, to any of the other sons, successively. The act 23d March, 1764, §4, is still more minute in regulating the right of election, and the same system is continued by the act of the 19th April, 1794. But the act of the 11th April, 1799, though it adopted, in substance, the provisions of those laws requiring a valuation in cases where partition of the land could not be made without prejudice, not only omitted those which regulate the right of election, but expressly provided that in case each of the persons interested, or more than one of them, should be willing to take the lands at the appraised value, the court should determine to whom the land should be conveyed. The reason of this discrimination is obvious. The right of election is a remnant of the right of primogeniture, and which it was the purpose of the legislature to preserve, and (upon the refusal of the eldest son, or heir at common law) to transmit it somewhat according to the course by which real estate descends at the common law. The pri-vity of blood between the parties, and the transmission of the estate to them by descent, justified the privilege of election or refusal, given first to the eldest son, and then to the other sons, successively. These reasons do not exist in cases of co-tenancy by purchase; and upon the supposition that the writ of partition is applicable only to such cases, they were properly omitted from the act of 11th April, 1799, and a different provision adopted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Miles 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clawges-v-clawges-pactcomplphilad-1836.