Fish v. Hubbard's Administrators

21 Wend. 651
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 21 Wend. 651 (Fish v. Hubbard's Administrators) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fish v. Hubbard's Administrators, 21 Wend. 651 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1839).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

The learned judge at the circuit, thought the description of the property in the covenant so entirely uncertain, that the instrument was’ inoperative and void. And it is clearly so if «we are bound toj stop with reading it, and cannot go beyond the face of the contract in search of its meaning. Were this a will, 'or deed conveying land, and the reference to the mill dam, carding machine and fulling mill, were used as description of parcels, then it is clear that in its own nature it would refer to some subject matter, in respect to- which we must look out of the instrument, and locate and apply the description if in our power, upon what is called extrinsic evidence. And if it were in proof, that the devisor or grantor owned one mill dam, one carding machine, and one fulling mill, and no • '■ other property of that description, at the date of his will or deed, ought we to hesitate in saying that he intended to pass such property i or, should we say that, possibly he might have intended some property of his neighbor or neighbors,, answering a similar description ? A. location or application of the description of parcels, must always be made by evidence aliunde ; and it seems, to me, that the mind could be left in no more doubt upon such evidence, as to what property was intended, than if it had been described - with the fullest accuracy. The instrument would be of a nature to pass the devisor's or grantor's property, and that • alone. This he would know; and he would also know [654]*654that that was the only property to which the description could be applied. According to the primary meaning of the language, nothing would be described. But it well ' might have a secondary meaning growing out of extrinsic circumstances. It is said, here is a^ patent defect of language, coming within Bacon’s rule as to ambiguities, which, cannot be helped by averment But words canot be denominated uncertain or ambiguous, because the court which is called, upon to explain them, may be ignorant of a particular fact, art, or science, which was known to the person who used them. Wigram on Extr. Ev. 130. Nollekens, the sculptor, made a codicil thus : Memorandum—all the marble in'the yard, the tools in the shop, bankers, Mod, tools for carving, the rasp in the draw, &c., shall be the property of Ales Goblfet.” No one could read this as necessarily meaning the testator’s property; yet no one thought of questioning that the codicil was meant of what he himself owned.. But above all, the judge could not say that Mod meant any thing. And he ordered artists to be examined. They explained the meaning. It was found to signify a certain sort of property which the testator owned, amounting to £700. Goblet v. Beechy, Wigr. on Extr. Ev. 139, App. 3 Sim. 24, S. C. This cause was successively before Sir John Leach and Sir Launcelot Shad well, and I am not aware that, in any stage of the cause, the propriety of receiving explanatory circumstances was at all doubted. The decision of Sir L. Shad well, was afterwards reversed by Lord Brougham; but Mr. Wigram says the, decision did not affect this question. Wigr. on Extr. Ev. 134, 135, 156.

Agaiti : it is the duty of the court to make a will or deed effective if possible. TJt res mag is valeat quarn pereat. A man devises all his real estate : and, on inquiry, it is found that he owned none at the time ; but he had a power of disposition over the land of another. It has been held that the words “ my real estate,” shall apply to and pass such as he had the mere power to devise. Lewis v. Lewellyn, 1 Turn. Ch. R. 104, and see Standen v. Standen, 2 Ves. jun. 589, and Napier v. Napier, 1 Sim. 28 ; Wigr. on Extr. Ev. [655]*65530. The broad principle on which these cases go is, that the will must, if possible, be made operative. A testator devises all his lands in a particular county ; he owns some land there, and over others he holds a mere power. The latter shall not pass, because there is enough beside on which the will, in its direct and primary sense, may take effect. But if there be none there, but the lands subject to a power, although in no legal sense can such lands be called his, yet the will shall operate. Napier v. Napier. L Sim. 28. In applying the principle, we see that the courts take up the words of the will, which they discover cannot be satisfied according to their legal import. The words there stand entirely indefinite and uncertain, until the court find, on casting about, that there is certain land which the testator might have devised or conveyed in another form; and that these are the only lands upon which the instrument can operate; and they give the words a direction and application to that land. Take the language of Best, J. in Lewis v. Lewellyn. . He says : “ Ut res magis, &c. That is the general principle of Standen v. Standen; and we must look only to the general principle, for it is impossible to find two cases alike. The principle is, that where there is nothing for the will to operate upon, but with reference to the power, it must operate as an execution of the power.” And may we not say so in respect to the covenant before us 1 There was nothing in the state of the case, as proposed to be made out by evidence, on which the covenant could operate, except the dam and pond of the defendant’s intestate, and in favor of the carding machine and fulling mill of the plaintiff; for the defendant’s intestate owned no other dam and pond; the plaintiff no other machine and mill.

I have so far adverted to the doctrine upon wills and other assurances of title, and, in principle,-1 can perceive no difference between the method of applying a description of parcels in such instruments, and that which we are to adopt in ascertaining the subject matter of an executory agreement. Indeed, a question arose in the late case of Shortrede v. Cheek, 1 Adolph. & Ellis, 57, the decision of which would seem to go the whole length of sustaining the ground taken [656]*656by the plaintiff in respect to the covenant in question. Cheek, the defendant, on the 11th of May, 1832, Wrote.to Shortrede, the plaintiff, thus : “ Sir, you will be so good as to -withdraw the promissory note, and I.will see you at Christmas, when you shall receive, from me the amount of it; together with the memorandum of my son’s, making in the whole £45.’’ It was agreed' that this was a contract which, by the statute of frauds, it being to answer the debt of another, must therefore be sufficiently clear and certain on its face, to show a consideration and a subject matter. In order to make out both, the plaintiff at the trial ■introduced a variety of extrinsic evidence. He proved that at.the time, he held a note of £35 against the defendant’s son, dated January 28th, 1832; and a letter subsequent to the guaranty, (of January 10th, 1833,) in .which the defendant acknowledged himself under obligation to discharge the £45 due from the son ; but the memorandum referred to in the guaranty was not produced. The jury, in answer to a question put by the judge at nisi prius, said they found that the guaranty of May 11 th referred to the son’s note, and found for the plaintiff £47. White moved for a new trial, because the description in" the note was uncertain ; or if not, the extrinsic evidence adduced to give it application was insufficient. On the first point, the.court sustained the finding. It is more material to.

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