Hall v. Chaffee

14 N.H. 215
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 N.H. 215 (Hall v. Chaffee) 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
Hall v. Chaffee, 14 N.H. 215 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Gilchrist, J.

The first question for determination is, what estate did the petitioner take under the will of her father, Seth Britton ? The answer to this question depends on the construction to be given to the will, and this must be determined by the application of the rules laid down for our guidance in similar or analogous cases. The intention of the testator has been called the pole star for the direction of the court; but what that intention is, it is often extremely difficult to discover. Certain words and phrases, however, have received a settled construction when found in wills, and that construction it has been found necessary to adhere to, in order that the rules for the exposition of wills should be as certain as the nature of the case will permit. And certain general rules are applied to the interpretation of wills, which are concisely expressed by Sir R. P. Arden, 4 Vesey 329. “ The intention is to be collected from the whole will taken together. Every word is to have its effect, and is to be taken according to its natural and common import, and the court are bound to carry the will into effect, provided it is consistent with the rules of law.” But what intention the testator had in this case, it is impossible to say, unless we give to his language a certain legal effect, of which he was probably altogether ignorant, and thus declare the meaning of the will. New testators ever heard the expressions, [219]*219■“ executory devise” and “ contingent remainder” ; and those few, unless they were of the legal profession, could attach no definite idea to these technical terms.

Applying then to this will the settled rules of construction, if the limitation over to Hannah Hall is void by way of ex-ecutory devise, as being too remote, she took no estate in the premises, Fearne on Rem. 444, {notea,) and Huldah Chaffee ■took an estate tail. If the limitation over to Mrs. Hall is valid, then Mrs. Chaffee took a fee simple, determinable on the contingency of her dying without issue living at the time of her death. The questions as to the estates of these two persons under the will, are so connected that the determination of one involves the other.

The will gives certain land to Mrs. Chaffee and her heirs, but if she should die without issue born alive of her body, to heir her estate,” then the land goes to Mrs. Hall and the testator’s other daughter, Betsy.

The general question in this case is one which has been often mooted, and upon which the investigations have been not only very numerous but very profound, and they have sometimes also been embarrassed by extreme metaphysical and verbal subtleties. But enough light has been shed upon it by the numerous discussions it has received, to enable the courts at the present day to determine the cases without much difficulty, provided they are not extremely different from those that have preceded them. The cases in England, in an unbroken series until the time of Lord Kenyon, show, in the words of Ld. Oh. Jus. Willes, in Brice vs. Smith, Willes R. 1, “ that if a man devise an estate to A and his heirs, and afterwards in his will gives his estate to another in case A dies without issue, these subsequent words reduce A’s estate to an estate tail.” Nor have the words, in default of such issue, ever been restricted to issue living at the death of the first taker. Ld. Mansfield, Doe vs. Fonnereau, Dougl. 487, 504, says, The cases are uniform that a devise in fee, with a remainder over if the devisee die without issue, or heirs of [220]*220the body, is a fee cut down to an estate tail, and the limitation over is void by way of executory devise, as being too remote, and founded on au indefinite failure of issue. In Bigge vs. Bensley, 1 Bro. C. C. 187, the words of the will were, “in case of the death of F. H. without issue” remainder over—and it was held that the remainder over was too remote. Lord Thurlow said there was not a single case which did not hold that such a limitation after these general words, was too remote, and that there were not less than fifty-seven cases upon the point. This was in 1783, and since that time the number is greatly increased. Doe vs. Ellis, 9 East 382; Tenny vs. Agar, 12 East 253; Romilly vs. Jatnes, 6 Taunt. 263; Barlow vs. Salter, 17 Vesey 479. The same view of the law has been taken by the courts in this country. Ide vs. Ide, 5 Mass. 500; Paterson vs. Ellis, 11 Wend. 259; 4 Kent’s Com. 276, and cases there cited. Whether this construction accords with the general intention of testators, it seems now too late to inquire. Chancellor Kent thinks that by the use of the words, dying without issue, in a devise, testators generally intend an indefinite failure of issue. Anderson vs. Jackson, 16 Johns. 382. Probably no decision of any respectable tribunal can be found establishing a different doctrine. And perhaps we should find more difficulties in exploring a path hitherto untrodden, than in following in the route marked out for us by the general assent of the courts both in England and America.

Now a definite failure of issue is when a precise time is fixed by the will for the failure of issue, as in the case of a devise to A, but if he dies without lawful issue living at the time of his death. If there should be no such issue living at the time, a remainder over would be good. An indefinite failure of issue is a proposition the very converse of the other, and means a failure of issue whenever it shall happen, sooner or later, without any fixed, certain or definite period within which it must happen. It means the period when the issue or descendants of the first taker shall become extinct, and [221]*221when there is no longer any issue of the issue of the grantee, without reference to any particular time or any particular event; or, in the words of the statute, de donis, referring to the first taker, if his issue shall fail. An executory devise to take effect at such a remote period of time, is void ; being against the policy of the law, which forbids property to be tied up and accumulate for a period which might extend through a great number of years and for many successive generations. Thellusson vs. Woodford, 4 Vesey 227.

Such is the law where there is nothing in the will to limit the generality of the words, dying without issue, and to show that the estate of the first taker is made determinable on a special contingency. But in the case of Pells vs. Brown, Cro. Jac. 590, which has been called the magna charla of this branch of the law, the testator devised lands to Thomas, his second son, in fee, and if Thomas died without issue, living William his brother, then William should have the lands in fee. It was held that the clause, if he died without issue, was not absolute and indefinite, when he died without issue, but it was with a contingency if he died without issue, living William, for he might survive William, or have issue alive at the time of his death, living William, in which case William should never have it, but was only to have it if Thomas died without issue, living William. This case has always been considered as law. But in Porter vs. Bradley, 3 T. R.

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14 N.H. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-chaffee-nhsuperct-1843.