Flannery v. Rohrmayer

49 Conn. 27
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 Conn. 27 (Flannery v. Rohrmayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flannery v. Rohrmayer, 49 Conn. 27 (Colo. 1881).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

To entitle the petitioner to a sale of the land in question he must show that he has acquired an interest in it. The only interest claimed was derived from the filing of a mechanics’ lien for services rendered to George [28]*28Rohrmayer in the erection of a dye-house on the land, and a subsequent foreclosure of that lien.

If George Rohrmayer had any interest subject to a mechanics’ lien, then it must be conceded that the proceedings referred to had the effect to transfer that interest -to the petitioner. But he had only such interest as the law gave him by virtue of his marriage in 1863 to Mary Rohrmayer, who afterwards on the 1st of December, 1877, became the owner of an unexpired term of a lease of the land for nine hundred and ninety-nine years. And what interest was that? Obviously not that of a tenant by the courtesy initiate, for only estates of inheritance are subject to such a tenancy. 1 Hilliard on Real Property, p. 117, § 15. The wife’s estate was a mere chattel real. In Goodwin v. Goodwin, 33 Conn., 314, it was expressly decided that an estate in land for the term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years, subject to the payment of an annual rent, is personal property, and that the widow of the tenant could not claim dower out of it. It is elementary law that “ chattels real are interests annexed to or concerning realty, as a lease for years of land; and the duration of the term of the lease is immaterial, provided it be fixed and determinate, and there be a reversion or remainder in fee in some other person. It is only personal estate if it be for a thousand years. Falling below the character and dignity of a freehold, it is regarded as a chattel interest, and is governed and descendible in the same manner.” 2 Kent’s Com., 342; Co. Litt., 46a. In Gay's case, 5 Mass., 419, it was held that an administrator may sell land holden by his intestate under a lease for nine hundred and ninety-nine years as personal property, without obtaining a license from the court as in the case of selling real estate for the payment of debts. In Brewster v. Hill, 1 N. Hamp., 350, it was held that a term for nine hundred and eighty-five years would pass by a will under the expression “personal estate.”

At common law the husband could dispose of a chattel real during his life and it might be taken on execution for [29]*29his debts, but if undisposed of during his life it went to the wife if she survived him, but if he survived her it became his absolute property. 2 Kent’s Com., 134; 1 Swift’s Digest, 24.

But the common law in this respect no longer applies. The interest of the wife being personal property in contemplation of law, the husband’s rights in respect to it are to be determined and limited by the act passed in 1849, which provides that “all the personal property of any married woman, married since the 22d day of June, 1849, and all the personal property thereafter acquired by a married woman, and the avails of any such property if sold, shall vest in the husband in trust for the following uses: to receive and enjoy the income thereof during his life, subject to the duty of expending from such income so much as may be necessary for the support of his wife during her life and of her children during their minority; and to apply any part of the principal thereof, which may be necessary, for the support of the wife, or otherwise with her written assent; and upon his decease the remainder of such trust property shall be transferred to the wife, if living, otherwise as the wife may by will have directed, or in default of such will, to those entitled by law to succeed to her intestate estate.” General Statutes, Rev. of 1875, p. 186, sec. 3. Now if we concede, for the purpose of argument, that a leasehold estate may be subject to a mechanics’ lien against the owner, or that such an interest as the husband had in it at common law might be so subject, yet in a case like the present, where the above statute applies, it is clear that a mechanics’ lien cannot attach to the husband’s interest, because it is utterly inconsistent with the trust to which the property is irrevocably devoted by the statute.

It will naturally be suggested that the foregoing reasons should have prevented the petitioner from obtaining his decree of foreclosure, especially as his petition for foreclosure came before this court by the defendant’s motion in error. (46 Conn., 558.) But the finding in that case will show that no mention was made of a leasehold estate in [30]*30the wife. On the contrary, it there appeared that she was absolute owner in fee; and the counsel for George Rohrmayer in his brief admitted that the husband was tenant by the courtesy. That decision therefore was predicated on radically different facts.

And when the present case was tried in the court below no reference seems to have been made to the former finding and no estoppel was claimed on that account. And even in the argument before this court no reference was made to this point by either of the parties.

The City Court is advised to render judgment for the respondents.

In this opinion Carpenter, Pardee and Granger, Js., concurred.

Park, C. J. I fully concur in the decision of the court in this case, but not in the opinion upon which it is based.

The statute creating the lien in question is as follows:— “ Every building, in the construction or repair of which, or of any of its appurtenances, any person shall have a claim for materials furnished or services rendered exceeding twenty-five dollars in amount, shall, with the land on which the same may stand, be subject to the payment of such claim; and said claim shall be a lien on such land, building and appurtenances. . . Provided that no such lien shall attach to any estate not owned by the party against whom such claim exists.”

It will be observed that this statute does not define what estates in houses and lands shall be the sirbject of lien. All reference to this matter is contained in the last clause, which declares that “ no such lien shall attach to any estate not owned by the party against whom such claim exists; ” which seems to imply that the lien may attach to any estate in real property. The lease in question has more than nine hundred years to run, and although technically it is denominated a “ chattel real,” yet in reality it approaches so nearly a fee that it would require the closest mathematical calcu[31]*31lation to detect the difference in value, while it would need no little casuistry to explain in what the difference consists beyond the mere name. Judge Dutton, in Brainard v. Town of Colchester, 31 Conn., 407, in speaking of such an estate says—“ For all practical purposes it is a fee simple; the reversion becomes a mere imaginary estate.” ' The owner of such an estate might erect structures upon the land of the most permanent character without danger of loss. He might safely grant the fee of the land and warrant the title, or do any other act that might be done by an owner in fee. Such being the case, it seems to me that if the owner should engage a mechanic to erect a building on the land, the statute would give the builder a lien upon it. If this be so it would seem to follow that it would equally give a lien as against a party having a life estate in such a lease; for his estate could not differ in any respect whatsoever, except in the merest technicality, from any other life estate in real property.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Conn. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannery-v-rohrmayer-conn-1881.