Graham v. Houghtalin

30 N.J.L. 552
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1863
StatusPublished

This text of 30 N.J.L. 552 (Graham v. Houghtalin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Houghtalin, 30 N.J.L. 552 (N.J. 1863).

Opinion

Vredenburgh, J.

This is an ejectment, brought by Do-

remus and others, to recover a lot of 9.83 acres, in the city of Paterson. The plaintiffs claim title, under a deed dated the 31st of August, 1810, from Richard Van Gieson to Henry G. Doremus and Elizabeth his wife, whereby the grantor conveyed to the said Doremus and wife the premises in question for and during the term of their natural life, and the [558]*558life of the survivor of them, and after their decease to the children of the said Doremus by his said wife, and to their heirs and assigns for ever.

The plaintiffs are the children of the said Doremus and wife. Mrs. Doremus survived her husband, and died in-1861. This gives a perfect prima fade title to the plaintiffs. Although only two of the plaintiffs were born at the date of this deed, yet it is manifest that the deed vested the remainder in the children then born, subject to be opened at the birth of each succeeding child, so as to let them in equally as they were born. The plaintiffs therefore, by virtue of the remainder vested in them by this deed, were-entitled, at the death of their mother, in 1861, to recover the possession, unless the defendant shows a better title.

The defendant sets up, as such better title, a decree of the Orphans Court of the county of Essex, dated on the fifteenth day of June, 1818, ordering Henry G. Doremus, the father of the plaintiffs, to sell. this land for the support of such of the plaintiffs as were then born; also the proceedings on said decree, and a sale and deed under it, to the defendant’s grantors. The question is, whether these proceedings in the-. Orphans Court, and the sale and deed under them, transferred the title of the plaintiffs to the defendant. As to the title of Rachel Ann Fox and John Doremus, two of the plaintiffs, who were born after this order of the Orphans Court, it is' clear that their title did not pass, because the title of the children who were born before the decree of the Orphans Court was subject to be divested to the extent that there might be afterborn children, and was actually divested by the birth of these two children, and became vested, to that extent in them. The estate of such afterborn children was not, and could not therefore have been affected by the proceedings in the Orphans Court, consequently the said Rachel Ann Fox and John Doremus, to the extent of one-eighth each, are entitled to recover, even if the proceedings and sale under the Orphans Court are valid.

The next question is, whether the other six-eighths passed [559]*559by the proceedings in the Orphans Court. The first question raised by the plaintiffs in regard to these is, whether the Orphans Court had jurisdiction of the -subject matter. This decree of the Orphans Court is dated on the 15th of June, 1818, and recites, that whereas Henry G. Doremus, guardian of the person and estate of Jane, Henry, Sophia, Eliza, George, and Richard Doremus, minors, under the age of twenty-one, hath satisfactorily shown to the court that the said minors have no personal estate, and that the rents, &c., of the real estate are not sufficient for their maintenance and education, and do therefore, agreeably to the act of the legislature in such ease made and provided, further adjudge and decree that the said guardian sell all the real estate of said infants.

On the 7th December, 1819, the guardian reported that, in pursuance of said order, he had sold the premises in question, for f500, to Abraham Ryerson, under whom the defendant held. Had the Orphans Court of the county of Essex, on the 15th day of June, 1818, any power to order this sale? Had they jurisdiction over the subject matter? The subject matter is the sale of the real estate, not of orphans, but of the minor children of Henry G. Doremus. The authority under which it is contended that the Orphans Court had power to sell these lands, in the sixth section of the act, passed on the first day of February, 1799, Pat. Laws 347, which was the act in force when these proceedings in the Orphans Court were had. This section reads as follows: That if the personal estate, and rents and profits of the real estate, be not sufficient for the maintenance and education of the ward, the Orphans Court of the proper county, on full investigation thereof, may from time to time order the guardian to sell such parts of the ward’s lands, tenements, hereditaments, and real estate as they shall direct and judge adequate for his or her maintenance and education.” So that it will be perceived that the act did not give power to the Orphans Court to sell the lands of everybody, but only the lands of wards by guardians. Were the plain[560]*560tiffs, when, these proceedings were had, wards within the meaning of this act ? If they were not, the Orphans Court had no jurisdiction whatever of the subject matter.

The act is entitled “ an act relative to guardians.”

It has never been supposed, by anybody, that this act was intended to embrace all kinds of guardians or all kinds of wards; that it embraced guardians ad litem, guardians for nurture, or guardians for lunatics or idiots; nor were the lands of such wards ever attempted to be sold under it. When guardians and wards were spoken of in common parlance, the parties meant guardians appointed by the Ordinary and Orphans Court as his wards. However obtained, the Ordinary, long before this act was passed, had exercised the power of appointing guardians of orphans, but his power was confined to that; he never pretended to interfere with the property or custody of infants who were not orphans. The ■ecclesiastical courts of England never attempted to interfere with infants who were not orphans, either ás to their persons ■or estates; and if they had, they would very soon have found themselves brought up in the Court of Chancery.' But in this ■state, the Ordinary always exercised jurisdiction over orphans, ■so far as to appoint guardians over their persons and estates, •and to call such guardians to account and settlement.

At the time of the passage of this act in 1799, the Ordinary, in analogy to the ecclesiastical courts of England, had jurisdiction over the. probate of wills, granting letters of administration and the settlement of accounts and orders of distribution, and the power, however obtained, as we have before stated, over the persons and estates of orphans. These were cognate subjects, relating to the estates of deceased persons; but the estate of a minor who was not an orphan was a subject altogether foreign to the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts of England, as well as to the jurisdiction of the Ordinary here. As to the minor who was not an orphan, his rights were always, in England as well as in .this state, under the supervision of chancery alone. This [561]*561being the condition of the law in this regard, at and for a long time before; this statute relating to guardians was passed in 1799, lot us see what legislation had been had affecting this subject. The first legislation in this state affecting this matter was the act of 1784. At this time it was inconvenient and unsatisfactory for the people to be obliged to settle their accounts, as executors, administrators, and guardians, in ihe Prerogative Court; and this act of 1784 was passed, not to include in its operations, matters of jurisdiction not before vested in the Ordinary, hut to divide his jurisdiction between him and the Orphans Court, in order to afford greater facilities of doing it. The first mention of an Orphans Court in ibis state is the said act of the 16th December, 1784. Pat.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.J.L. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-houghtalin-nj-1863.