George v. Green

13 N.H. 521
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 N.H. 521 (George v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George v. Green, 13 N.H. 521 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Gilchrist, J.

The argument of the counsel for the defendant rests upon the grounds, that the reason why a will cannot operate to transfer lands acquired after its date, is that a will is considered as a conveyance ; that in general a deed does not convey lands of which the grantor is not possessed at the time: but that in this state a conveyance of land by one out of possession will pass his interest therein; and that, by parity of reasoning, a devise in this state will operate to pass lands of which the devisor is not seized, and in which he had no interest at the time of the execution of the will. Whether decisions have ever been made by this court which involve such a conclusion, is a matter deserving of inquiry.

The first case in this state bearing upon this point is Willard vs. Twitchell, 1 N. H. Rep. 177. It was there held that one having title to land in the adverse possession of another, has, so long as he has a right of entry, such a seizin that the land will pass by his deed. , It is also said by ,the court, that this point has been settled in this state too long to be questioned, and that it is deeply to be regretted that it has been so settled. In Hadduck vs. Wilmarth, 5 N. H. Rep. 188, it is held that if the grantor have a right of entry, the land will pass by his deed, though a third person may be in possession ; and that the common law in relation to buying and selling pretended titles has never been adopted in this state. In Whittemore vs. Bean, 6 N. H. Rep. 47, a query is made, whether, while a disseizor holds land adversely, the disseizee’s right of entry into land be devisable.

That a will does not operate to transfer lands acquired after its execution, has been settled in England, and wherever the common law prevails, unmodified by local usage, from a very early period. But this principle does not extend to wills of personal estate. A reason for the distinction is given by an eminent legal writer, Rowell on Dev. 151, 152, Jarman’s [525]*525edition. The common law, it is there said, after the introduction of feuds appointed no heir on whom personal property should descend. If the owner died intestate, it devolved on the church. A testament was then the constitution by the testator of an heir to his personal property, the law having otherwise appointed none. An executor stood in the relation of the testator to such property, and was entitled to all of it, the law not giving it to any other person. The only limitation upon his rights was that the property was subjected in his hands to the trusts of the testator.

But as to freehold property, the feudal law, when feuds became inheritable, constituted an heir in his own right, whose title was inchoate when a freehold of inheritance was acquired by his ancestor, and the person next in succession was called the apparent, or presumptive heir. A will of personal property operating therefore as the constitution of an heir, and a will of lands as a disposition from an heir, the one cannot take effect in the same manner as the other does, but each must take effect according to the nature and property of the subject matter on which it is to operate, and the time of its operation.

The decisions, says Lord Chancellor Loughborough, which settle this distinction, are founded upon fair legal, that is, systematical reasoning, and do not depend upon any captious nicety. The objections to them, as hard decisions, have originated from considering the disposition by testament of land in the same view as the Roman testament was considered, or wills of personal estate ; which is not a just manner of considering what the law of England permits to be a disposition by will of land. It is not an indefinite disposition of all a man may be possessed of at his death, as in the case of personal property. It is no more than an appointment of the person who shall take the specific land at the death of the person making it. It is so far testamentary, that it is fluctuating, ambulatory, and does not take effect till after the death, but it is in the nature of a conveyance ; being an ap[526]*526pointment of the specific estate. And these determinations were not upon the literal construction of the statute of wills; not upon the word “ having.” They were upon the nature of the instrument, differing from the Roman law in this, that it is an appointment of the specific estate. The consequence is necessary, that the devisor must continue to have it to his death, when the devise is to take effect. Brydges vs. The Duchess of Chandas, 2 Ves. Jr. 427. The same view was entertained by Lord Mansfield, who says also that the same rule held before the statute of wills, when lands were devisable by custom. Harwood vs. Goodright, Cowp. 90; Wyndham vs. Chetwynd, 1 Burrow 429. In the case of Wind vs. Jekyl, 1 Peere Wms. 572, Lord Chancellor Parker says he takes the reason why after acquired personal estate will pass by will, while after acquired real estate will not, to be this ; that with regard to the real estate, supposing that not to pass, still there is in law one capable of taking it, that is, the heir; but as to the personal estate, if the executor, though made before the acquiring thereof, does not take it, it is uncertain who shall. Lord Mansfield expresses himself to the effect, that when the rigor of the feudal law became relaxed, it was held that a devise affecting lands could operate only on such real estate as the testator had at the time of making his will; because there could be no legal conveyance at common law of what a man should acquire in future. Hogan vs. Jackson, Cowp. 305; Bunter vs. Coke, 1 Salkeld 237; Preston's Shepp. Touch. 437 (note 72); 4 Kent 510.

A will, then, is a disposition of lands from the heir. It is an appointment of the person who shall take the specific land. It is also an appointment of the specific estate, and so far it is in the nature of a conveyance. These views are not inconsistent with each other; and it may be suggested whether the reasons for the different operation of a will of real from one of personal estate, do not depend upon the principle that a future interest cannot be conveyed at com[527]*527mon law. But it is not necessary that the possession, or an executed interest in the land, should be in the testator. It is enough if he have a present interest, though to commence in futuro, or to depend upon a contingency. Roe vs. Griffiths, 1 Black. R. 605; Moore vs. Hawkins, 1 H. Bl. 33-4; Barnitz vs. Casey, 7 Cranch 469; Duner vs. Frank, 6 Price 63.

Here, then, is the distinction between the cases in the N. H. Reports and the rule of the common law as to the devise of a future interest. Our cases settle only that a party out of possession may convey such interest as he has. If he be a disseizee, he will have only a right of entry, and that he may convey. But the cases do not hold that he may convey a freehold in futuro, and therefore they do not go far enough to sustain the defendant’s position. And the court do not seem to have supposed there was any analogy between Willard vs. Twitchell, and Hadduck vs. Wilmarth, and a petition for partition ; for in the subsequent case of Brown vs. Brown, 8 N. H. Rep.

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13 N.H. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-green-nhsuperct-1843.