Den v. Jones

8 N.J.L. 419
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 8 N.J.L. 419 (Den v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Den v. Jones, 8 N.J.L. 419 (N.J. 1826).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered by the court:

Ewing, C. J.

Lydia Austin Delaplaine was, at her decease in the year 1822, seized in fee simple of the premises in question, which came to her by descent from her mother, Lydia, to whom they came by descent from her father, Nathaniel Andruss. Lydia Austin Delaplaine died under two years of age, and in somewhat more than a year after the death of her mother, and her father, Nicholas [422]*422Delaplaine, of the former of whom she was the only child. By the first marriage of her father with Mary Andruss, who was the sister of her mother, and another daughter of her grandfather, Nathaniel Andruss, he had three children, Henrietta Delaplaine, Ann Maria Delaplaine and Nicholas Delaplaine, who are the lessors of the plaintiff, and who insist that the premises in question on the death of Lydia Austin Delaplaine descended to them,' and not to Isaac Andruss, Pamelia Todd, Phebe Colt and Henrietta Marvin, who are the real defendants, and who are the brothers and sisters of Mary and Lydia Andruss, the successive wives of Nicholas Delaplaine, the uncle and aunts of Lydia Austin Delaplaine, and the only surviving children of the said Nathaniel Andruss.

On the one hand are the brother and sisters of the half blood of Lydia Austin Delaplaine, by the same father and different mothers, and on the other are her uncle and aunts.

It is agreed that the canon of descent governing the present case is to be found, not in the common law, but in our “act directing the descent of real estates,” passed the 29th of January, 1817, Lev. Laws 608. Lydia Austin Delaplaine died seized of the premises in question, without devising the same in due form of law and without leaving lawful issue and without leaving a brother or sister of the whole blood, or any lawful issue of any such brother or sister, and without leaving a father capable of inheriting the said ” premises by the said act, and did “ leave a brother ” and “ sisters of the half blood.” By the plain-words and unquestioned intent of the 5th section of the act aforesaid, the “inheritance,” the premises in question did “ descend to such brother ” and “ sisters of the half blood, as-tenants in common in equal parts,” unless the case is within the proviso annexed to that section and by its influence a different course of descent is required. The proviso is in these words: “ Provided always, that in case the said lands, tenements or hereditaments, came to the person so. [423]*423dying seized, by descent, devise or gift of some one of his or her ancestors, all those who are not of the blood of such ancestor shall be excluded from such inheritance.”

The premises in question came to Lydia Austin Delaplaine, “the person so dying seized,” “by descent,” and of “ some one of her ancestors,” from her mother Lydia Lelaplaino. They are then within the operation of the proviso, and the just construction and effect of this proviso, becomes the subject of careful and anxious examination.

First—The proviso does not nor was it intended to form any new, distinct or independent canon or rule of descent. Its sole purpose is to limit and restrain in certain cases the generality of the body of the section. By the body of the section without the proviso, the half blood would in all cases have inherited. Such however was not the design of the legislature. Endor certain circumstances it was intended to exclude them from the inheritance; and the purpose of this proviso is to evince this design, and to declare under what circumstances they shall be excluded. This result is proved, 1st. By the general nature of a proviso in a statute; its general object is to qualify, limit or restrain the general enactment which has preceded it. 2dly, By the style and purport of the proviso in question which is manifestly in its style merely exclusive, and in its purport solely framed to limit and restrain what otherwise would have been general. Such being the scope of this proviso, it may not be safely carried farther. Where the person last seized became so, by descent, devise or gift from ah ancestor, the proviso simply declares that those who are not of tho blood of such ancestor, shall not inherit, leaving those who are of the blood of such ancestor to inherit by force of the general language of the body of the section.

Secondly—The person dying last seized is the propositus in the cases within the proviso, as well as in those within the body of the section. The ancestor mentioned in the proviso does not in the former cases become the propositus.

[424]*424There is nothing in the language of the proviso to shift the character of propositus from the person last seized to the ancestor.

To make the ancestor the propositus would totally exclude the half blood, as such, from the inheritance where the lands came to the person last seized by descent, devise or gift from some ancestor. The half blood, as such, could never take. As heirs of the ancestor, if they were such, they might, but as half blood, never. It would be precisely the same thing, as if the statute had declared that the half blood should never inherit where the lands came by descent, devise or gift. Yet, clearly such was not the intention of the legislature. The inheritance is to descend not from the ancestor, but from the person last seized, subject however to this restriction, that in the specified case they are not to take, the descent is not to be cast upon them, unless they are of the blood of the ancestor, but is in all cases to fall on them, andón them exclusively, when they are of such blood.

The consequences which result from making the ancestor the propositus and requiring those who take to be his heirs, are such as the legislature did not anticipate or intend, and serve to prove that such is not the principle they designed to establish.

1. The half blood of the person dying seized, though of the blood of the ancestor, will have no preference.

2. A brother or sister of the person dying seized, though born of the same father and of the blood of the ancestor will not-be prefered to, but may be compelled to divide with, an uncle or aunt or even a grandchild of an uncle or aunt.

3. If lands are given by an uncle to a nephew, and after they have been greatly improved and enhanced in value by the labors and expenditures of the nephew, the uncle dies leaving a son, and the nephew dies leaving a brother of the half blood by the same father, the son of the uncle must inherit all, and the brother of the nephew nothing.

[425]*4254. They who take the inheritance, will not be responsible as heirs for the debts of the person dying seized, because they will not take as his heirs, but the heirs of the ancestor; and thus the inheritance will be assets by descent and thereby render the heirs responsible for the debts of a person who was not seized at his decease, but had disposed of the lands, at some perhaps remotely antecedent period.

Again.—To make the ancestor the propositus and to seek simply his heir, is to overlook not merely the spirit, but the very letter of the statute. The word “ those,” in the proviso is a relative term. It respects the half blood previously mentioned, and is the same as if it had been said, all of the half blood who are not of the blood of the ancestor shall be excluded. The obvious spirit of this clause too, is not satisfied by the single quality of heir of the ancestor.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.J.L. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-v-jones-nj-1826.