Gibbons v. Gibbons

1 Charlton 113
CourtChatham Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedJanuary 15, 1807
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Charlton 113 (Gibbons v. Gibbons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Chatham Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbons v. Gibbons, 1 Charlton 113 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1807).

Opinion

From this form of pleading the following points present themselves for investigation :

1. What is the species of tenure created by the titles of [115]*115the corporation to the grantees of city lots, sold pursuant to i,- ' it „ the ordinance of the 28th September, 1790? \

2. Do the conditional conveyances of the corporation exempt the grantees from the payment of the state taxes ?

The purchaser of city lots has it at his option to obtain an absolute fee simple title by paying down the valuation and increase money, or, to keep the estate in himself, his “heirs and assigns for ever,” by paying 5 per cent, quarterly, upon the valuation.

The second section of the before recited ordinance, also declares, that on the failure of the payment of ground rent, fifteen days after it becomes due, the lots shall revert to the corporation.

Thomas Gibbons, a purchaser of city lots, sold pursuant to the directions of this ordinance, alleges, that he is nothing more than a lessee of the corporation, and therefore not subject to the payment of the taxes.

We, on the other hand, contend, that convey and assure to Mr. Gibbons, a freehold of inheritance to be defeated upon the nonperformance of a condition subsequent.

If Mr. Gibbons is simply a lessee of the corporation, it must appear so, on the face of his deed. That deed conveys an estate to him, his heirs and assigns for ever, upon the condition of paying a quarterly ground rent.

The technical expressions of the deed cannot create a lease.

A lease is a conveyance of lands and tenements for life, for years, or at will; but always for a less term than the lessor hath in the premises ; its operative words are demise, grant, and to farm let. Co. Litt. 45. 2 Blk. Com. 317.

The deed from the corporation does not and cannot contain these operative words, nor is a less term conveyed than the lessor had in the premises. It conveys the vahóle interest dependent upon a contingency. The conveyance from the corporation cannot be denominated a lease.

The titles from the corporation do not create an estate fop life. Litt. 56. 2 Tuck. Blk. 120.

[116]*116An estate for life is by express or general language ; the first, where a lease is made to a man of lands and tenements for his own life, or the lives of others ; the second, where the deed leaves the nature of the estate indefinite.

The titles of the corporation to the grantees of city lots preclude the idea of this species of estate ; because they neither expressly convey the estate for life, nor are the terms so genéric as to create that estate.

The titles of the corporation do not create an estate for years.

That estate is created by a contract between the lessor and the lessee for the possession of lands, to expire at a determinate period. Com. Dig. vol. 4. p. 45. 2 Bl. Com. 141.

' The titles of the corporation convey an interest, which may last for ever.

We have thus pursued the idea of a lease- in all those branches which can in any manner apply to the present discussion ; and sufficiently shown that the contracts between the corporation and the purchasers of its lots, cannot create a lease.

We will in the next place endeavour to evince, by adopting a similar train of definition, that the estate created by the city titles is a freehold estate of inheritance, which may be defeated upon the nonperformance of a condition subsequent.

The highest estate the law recognises is the estate in fee simple.

A tenant in fee simple is he that hath lands, tenements, or hereditaments, to hold to him, and his heirs for ever. 2 Elk. Com. 104. 1 Inst. 1.

The word “fee,” is derived from the nature of the feudal system. It imports, that the land is held of some superior, to whom certain services are due, and in whom the ultimate property resides.

In Englandj to the present day, there is a system of dependency and vassalage, which preserves the spirit of the feudal law, though the literal inconveniences and oppressive [117]*117principles of that law are done away with by 12 Car. 2. c. 24.

The tenant in fee simple in England, and his heirs, have the uncontrolled disposal and enjoyment of the use of the land, but that land is still held of some superior.

The British subject hath only the usufruct, not the absolute property in the soil.

Only one mao in England, and he is the king, hath an absolute allodial property in the soil. Predium domini regís est directum dominium, cujus millus est author nisi deus. Co. Litt. 1.

The Revolution hath destroyed the ideas attached by the English law to an estate in fee simple. We adopt the term fee simple, as induanve of the highest species of tenure which can be created, and in creating that estate, we also adopt the forms, the principles, and technical expressions of the English law. But the term fee, as it imports a subjection to some superior in a feudal acceptation, is unknown to the constitution and laws of the American people.

The citizen seized of an estate called a fee simple, holds his lands of no superior.

The connexion between him and the government is a con-nexion founded upon the doctrines of the social compact, the leading principles of which are, mutual protection, and the preservation of certain political rights and.forms of government. The tenure by which estates may be held can neither diminish or enlarge the sphere of that protection, or those civil rights. The government of England has its ba^is on the feudal system, the very genius of which is a chain of dependency from the lowest up to the highest species of estates. The term fee, that is, an acknowledgment that I hold my estate of some superior, in whom the ultimate property resides ; but the use of this estate is vested in myself, my heirs and assigns for ever, is the English fee simple estate.

A man seized of lands and tenements to himself, his heirs and assigns for ever, in the state of Georgia, (and every other state in the union,) is seized thereof absolutely in his [118]*118own demesne, and the allodial estate or property remains in himself and his descendants.

This is called the allodial tenure in contradistinction to the fee, and this is the estate which we improperly call in this country a fee simple.

The word “ heirs,"1 however, in this country, and in England, creates the estate in fee simple. It is a term incompatible with any other kind of estate. The titles of the corporation contain this operative word — they convey to the purchaser, his “ heirs and assigns for ever.”

Upon the demise of the ancestor the heirs take possession of the lots, by the legal operation of the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Charlton 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbons-v-gibbons-gasuperctchatha-1807.