Doe v. Roe

97 A. 233, 29 Del. 91, 6 Boyce 91, 1916 Del. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 24, 1916
DocketNo. 22; No. 3
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 A. 233 (Doe v. Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Roe, 97 A. 233, 29 Del. 91, 6 Boyce 91, 1916 Del. LEXIS 6 (Del. 1916).

Opinions

Curtis, Ch.,

delivering the opinion of the majority of the court:

In the court below the case was heard on an agreed statement of facts submitted for the opinion of the court. The land of a tenant in tail, Ira D. Hazzard, was sold by the sheriff on an execution on a judgment recovered against the tenant in tail, and the land was purchased by Henry D. Hazzard and a deed made to him therefor by the sheriff. Afterwards, and in the life of Ira D. Hazzard, the sheriff’s grantee conveyed the land to David H. Hazzard, the defendant. Ira D. Hazzard, the tenant in tail, made no conveyance of the land, died without issue and afterwards the tenant in remainder after the estate tail, Alphonzo Hazzard, brought an action of ejectment. The court below were of the opinion that the effect of the sale and conveyance by the sheriff was to bar the entail and as the vendee took such an estate as the debtor might or could have conveyed, he took an estate which he could and did convey to the defendant, and gave judgment for the defendant below. By writ of error the case is brought to this court. A further statement of the facts appears in the report of the case below.

[94]*94The court below construed the statute as giving the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale the same estate as that which the debtor could convey. In giving this construction of the statute the court below erred. The language of the statute is that “the grantee * * * shall hold the premises * * * as fully and amply; and for such estate and estates * * * as he or they for whose debt or debts the same shall be sold might or could do at or before the talcing thereof in execution.” In this case Henry D. Hazzard, the sheriff’s grantee, was entitled to hold the premises as fully and amply and for such estate as Ira D. Hazzard, the defendant in the judgment and tenant in tail, might or could do, i.e., might or could hold the premises, which is quite different from that view expressed by the court below.

[1] It is a settled principle of the common law that a tenant in tail cannot charge the estate with his debts so as to affect it after his death, and the entailed property cannot be made liable for his debts for a period longer than his life. 1 Washburn on Real Property, *80; 1 Tiffany on Real Property, § 28, p. 67; Williams on Real Property, § 57. The reason is plain. The tenant in tail has but a life estate and the person who takes the estate at his death takes through him, though not from him, but under the instrument creating the estate; that is to say, per formam doni.

[2] In the case before the court it is unnecessary to consider whether at common law the grantee of a tenant in tail takes an estate for the life of the tenant in tail, or a base fee, which was liable to be defeated on the death of the tenant in tail by the entry of the remainderman (which question was discussed in Waters v. Margerum, 60 Pa. 39), for the plaintiff in the ejectment here is the remainderman and his bringing the action of ejectment has the effect of an entry.

[3-5] Estates tail still exist in Delaware. In modern times, and in Delaware for many years by statute the tenant in tail may convey a larger estate than he has and may convey a fee simple. Revised Code of 1915, p. 1495, par. 3235.. But his estate is not increased because of this power to convey a larger estate. If he does not exercise the power in his life, the tenant in [95]*95remainder takes the estate under the instrument by which the estate was originally created.

In this case the tenant in tail, Ira D. Hazzard, made no conveyance. The land of which he was tenant in tail was sold on an execution on a judgment against him, and by the words of the statute Henry R. Hazzard, the grantee in the sheriff’s deed, was entitled to hold the premises thereby conveyed as fully and amply and for such estate as Ira D. Hazzard might or could do, i:e., might or could hold the premises, for Ira D. Hazzard made no conveyance of the premises. By a strict interpretation of the statute, inasmuch as the tenant in tail could hold the premises for his life only, the grantee in the sheriff’s deed could hold it no longer.

But it is not necessary to rely on a construction so narrow. There are no decisions in the courts of Delaware which throw any light on the question. There are, however, cases in Pennsylvania, where the statute relating to the estates, rights and powers which the grantee in the sheriff’s deed take is identical with the Delaware statute. Purdon’s Digest, 199. In Pennsylvania it has been decided that that statute did not change the common law rule, and that the grantee in the sheriff’s deed did not take more than the defendant in the judgment had, viz.: a life estate, and notwithstanding the sale and conveyance of bis estate in the premises by the sheriff on a judgment against him, the tenant in tail under another statute could by proper deed convey the remainder after his life estate. This was so held in an early case in 1844. Elliott v. Pearsoll, 8 Waits & S. 38. It appeared in that case that E. had an estate tail and the land was sold on a judgment against him to S., and afterwards E. made a deed to S. to bar the entail. Held, that S. took a good title as against the heirs of E.

“Tenant in tail is seized of an estate of inheritance which cannot be devested by any conveyance under the Statute of Uses or by a sheriff’s deed, which passes no more than he could legally convey himself. He may part with the enjoyment of the land during his life by a deed of bargain and sale, or the sheriff may sell it on execution; still he continues to be seized of the inheritance; and it is he and not the purchaser who transmits it to the issue claiming through him, per formam doni, at his death. Why cannot he then do any act to bar it after his immediate interest had been sold which he could have done before it? A conveyance by the sheriff’s deed, which, unlike a [96]*96feoffment, passes no more than the debtor can legally pass, works, no discontinuance of the estate; and the tenant in tail still being seized of the inheritance may bar the issue by a common recovery * * * or as effectually by a deed acknowledged in court.”

[6] Inasmuch then as notwithstanding the sheriff’s deed the tenant in tail could convey to the grantee of the sheriff, the tenant in tail could convey the fee to some other person than such grantee, and therefore the grantee from the sheriff did not take a power to convey as fully as the tenant in tail could. This principle was in fact established in the case of Doyle v. Mullady, 33 Pa. 264. There the interest of M. as tenant in tail was sold by the sheriff on a judgment against him and the land conveyed to L. by the sheriff. Afterward the tenant in tail conveyed the land to F. for the purpose of barring the entail and F. then reconveyed to M. and M. to the defendant. It was held, that the sale under the judgment did not bar the estate tail, and that the deed from M. to F. was good and also the deed from F. to M. and by M. to the defendant who became the legal and equitable owner in fee simple. The authority of the two cases above cited was recognized in Waters v. Margerum, 60 Pa. 39 (1869). The decisions in Massachusetts, Williams v. Hichborn, 4 Mass. 189, and Cuffee v. Milk, 51 Mass.

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Related

Brockson v. Brockson
130 A. 32 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 A. 233, 29 Del. 91, 6 Boyce 91, 1916 Del. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-roe-del-1916.