Hall v. . Hall

81 N.Y. 130, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 208
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 130 (Hall v. . Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. . Hall, 81 N.Y. 130, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 208 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The validity of the devise in remainder, in the will of William Hall, to the children of his sister Sarrissa, is the question presented in this case.

There is no question as to the competency of the testator to make a will disposing of the lands in controversy. He held them by an absolute and indefeasible title in fee, and having been naturalized before his death, he was not under the disability of alienage, and there was no impediment to his disposing of his lands by will to any person or persons whomsoever, provided only, that the devisees were, under our laws, competent to take by devise. If the children of the testator’s sister Sarrissa were, at the time of the death of the testator, under no incapacity to take lands by devise, they took under the will of William Hall a valid remainder in fee of the premises in controversy, and the plaintiffs, who claim solely by descent as heirs-at-law of the testator, cannot maintain this action.

The validity of the devise to the children of Sarrissa Spalding is assailed on the ground of their alienage at the time of the death of the testator, and it is claimed to be void for that reason by force of the 4th section of the statute of wills (2 B. S. 57), which is as follows: Every devise of any interest in real property to a person who, at the time of the death of the testator, shall be an alien, not authorized by statute to hold real estate, shall be void. The interest so devised shall descend to the heirs of the testator; if there be no such heirs competent to *134 take, it shall pass under his will to the residuary devisees named, if any there be competent to take such interest.”

It is a principle of the common law that an alien may take lands by purchase (which includes all titles except such as are acquired by descent or by mere operation of law), and that the title so acquired is good except as against the State. (2 Kent, 54; People v. Conklin, 2 Hill, 67, and cases cited.) This general rule was not changed by the Revised Statutes, except in the single case provided for by the statute of wills. (Wright v. Saddler, 20 N. Y. 320.) Before that statute an alien could take lands by devise as well as by any other form of purchase, and hold until office formed. ( Wadsworth v. Wadsworth, 12 N. Y. 376.) But the statute of wills, by necessary construction, prohibited an alien devisee, not authorized by statute to hold lands, from taking under a devise. He could neither take nor hold. By the express terms of the section, lands devised to an alien, not authorized by statute to hold lands, descend to the heirs of the testator competent to take, or to his residuary devisees.

The statute of wills changed the common law in two particulars ; first, it deprived an alien devisee of the right which he had by the common law to take by devise, unless he was authorized by statute to hold the lands devised; and second, it modified the rule that the State might recover lands devised to an alien, and hold them as against all the world, and made such lands, when the devise could not take effect by reason of alien-age, descendible to the heirs of the testator, if there were any competent to take, and if there were none, then they are to pass to the residuary devisees named in the will. This statute was not passed primarily in furtherance of a restrictive policy on the part of the legislature in respect to aliens. Such a conclusion would be opposed to the legislative policy of the State, as indicated by the course of legislation which has steadily tended in the direction of removing the disabilities of alienage, and freeing aliens from the incapacities to which the common law subjected them. The primary purpose of the statute was to prevent the disinheritance of heirs by the application of the rule *135 that a devise to an alien, though good as to heirs of the devisor, was voidable by the State, which could recover the lands devised and hold them as an escheat. (Revisers’ Note, 5th ed. Stat. 624; see, also, Moers v. White, 6 Johns. Ch. 336.)

The Revised Statutes (1 R. S. 720, §§ 15 and 16) authorized a resident alien who had made and filed the deposition specified therein, to take and hold lands under certain restrictions. This was the only statutory authority upon the subject, and the benefit of the statute was, by its obvious construction, limited to such aliens as, at the time of the grant or devise, had made and filed the deposition specified. ( Wright v. Saddler, supra.) The devise to the children of Sarrissa Spalding is not, therefore, aided by the provisions of the Revised Statutes last referred to. They were aliens at the death of the testator, and had not made or filed the deposition specified. They were not of the class of aliens authorized hy the Revised Statutes to hold lands, and unless the fourth section of the statute of wills has been changed or modified by subsequent legislation so as to take the devise in question out of its operation, the devise in question is void.

The legislature, by the act chapter 115 of the Laws of 1845, greatly enlarged and extended the rights of aliens in respect to the taking and holding of lands. The act is entitled “ An act to enable resident aliens to hold and convey real estate, and for other purposes.” The first section of the act provides that “ any resident alien of this State who has heretofore purchased and taken, or may hereafter purchase and take a conveyance of any lands or real estate within this State, or to whom any lands or real estate has been, or may hereafter be devised, before making and filing in the office of the Secretary of State the deposition, or affirmation in writing, specified in the fifteenth section of the first title, in the first chapter of the second part of the Revised Statutes, may, on making and filing such deposition or affirmation, hold the real estate granted, conveyed or devised to such alien, in the same manner and with the like effect as if such alien, at the time of such grant, conveyance or devise, were a citizen of the United States.” This section *136 does not, in terms, repeal or modify the fourth section of the statute of wills. But it is plain that the provision that a resident alien devisee may, on making and filing the deposition specified, hold the lands devised, in the same manner and with like effect as if, at the time of the devise, he was a citizen, necessarily makes the devise effectual to vest in the devisee an inchoate title as against the State. To this extent at least the section modifies the statute of wills. A devise to an alien, good as against the State, cannot he void. °

But the change wrought by the first section of the act of 1845 is much more extensive and radical. The section relates exclusively to conveyances and devises to resident aliens. It leaves the statute of wills to operate upon devises to non-resident aliens, and such devises since, as before the act of 1845, are void. But it was, we think, the intention of the legislature by this section, to restore, as to resident aliens, the rule of the common law, which permitted aliens to take by devise, and in addition to enable them to hold the lands devised even as against the State, on making and filing the deposition specified.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 130, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-hall-ny-1880.