Hall v. Wright

120 P. 429, 17 Cal. App. 502, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 42
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 874.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 120 P. 429 (Hall v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Wright, 120 P. 429, 17 Cal. App. 502, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 42 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action is for specific performance of a written contract for. the purchase of a tract of land in Sonoma county. The facts are not disputed and the only question of *504 law presented is, as agreed by counsel, “whether or not the plaintiffs have a present title in fee in the lands involved which they can convey by deed to the defendant. ” It is stipulated that on the twentieth day of April, 1883, W. S. M. Wright was the owner in fee of the premises, and on that day he executed a deed thereof to Mrs. M. 0. Hall “for the natural life of the said party of the second part, and then to the heirs of her body begotten forever.’’ On said date Mrs. Hall had five living children, two of whom have since died and two other children have since been born. The interests, if any, of the deceased children have been distributed to Mrs. Hall, and she and all the living children have joined in the deed which has been tendered to appellant. One of the said children is a minor, and Mrs. Hall has been appointed the guardian of his person and estate, and by an order of the superior court she has been authorized and directed to sell the minor’s interest in the property.

Appellant states his case substantially as follows: Section 779 of the Civil Code provides: “When a remainder is limited to the heirs of the body of a person to whom a life estate in the same property is given, the persons, who, on the termination of the life estate, are the successors or heirs of the body of the owner for life, are entitled to take by virtue of the remainder so limited to them and not as mere successors of the owner for life. ’ ’ In other words, the remaindermen take, so it is asserted, as purchasers under the deed and not as heirs of the life tenant. Section 780 of the same code is: “When a remainder in an estate for life or for years is not limited on a contingency defeating or avoiding such precedent estate, it is to be deemed intended to take effect only on the death of the first taker, or the expiration, by lapse of time, of such term of years. ” It is contended, therefore, that since the.life estate vested by the deed in Mrs. Hall was not to be defeated or avoided by any contingency, by the operation of the above section it follows that the estates of the remaindermen are not to be deemed to take effect until the death of Mrs. Hall. There are no words in the grant that preclude the application of the said provision of the code. Hence no “heirs of the body/’ of Mrs. Hall have any vested interest in the land. The two deceased children had no interest, and therefore Mrs. Hall took no interest from them. *505 They who take the remainder in fee will be those who are the “heirs of "the body” of Mrs. Hall at the time of her death. It would follow that if one of the children of Mrs. Hall should die prior to the latter’s death, leaving a child, such child would take an interest in fee as a remainderman, although the parent of such child in his lifetime and the lifetime of Mrs. Hall had attempted to convey his interest. If all of the children of Mrs. Hall and all their issue were dead at the time of the termination of the life estate, the remainder would revert, under the deed, to W. S. M. Wright, but since he has died, it would vest in his heirs or devisees. The conclusion is that the children of Mrs. Hall have no present interest in the lands; hence their deed conveys nothing and the deed of M. 0. Hall can convey only her life estate.

On the other hand, respondents cite section 690 of the Civil Code, providing that “A future interest entitles the owner to the possession of the property only at a future period,” and section 694 of the same code, to the effect that “A future interest is vested when there is a person in being who would have a right defeasible or indefeasible to the immediate possession of the property upon the ceasing of the intermediate or precedent estate,” and contends “That under these two sections the interest which the heirs of M. 0. Hall would take in the property would be a vested future interest, because at the time said deed was made there were persons in being who would have the right indefeasible to immediate possession of the property upon#the ceasing of the life estate of said M. 0. Hall.” It is also declared that the general rule is that “in the absence of the contrary intention, a remainder limited to a class vests in such of the objects as are in esse and answer the description at the death of the testator if they take by will, or upon the execution of the deed, if they take by deed; subject to open and let in any that may be afterward born before the determination of the particular estate.” A large number of cases is cited in support of the foregoing rule.

It is also claimed that the word “heirs,” as used in the deed, should be construed to mean “children,” for the reason that, under this construction alone is it possible to give effect *506 to the whole of the deed. For the general rule is that a conveyance to the “heirs” of a living person is void for uncertainty, as before his death it cannot be ascertained who will be his heirs, but if the grantor means “children” when he uses the word “heirs,” the uncertainty is avoided. Under the foregoing view it is claimed that the whole of the fee is vested, since the age of the life tenant, as stipulated by the parties, precludes the possibility of the birth of another heir.

The case, however, of County of Los Angeles v. Winans, 13 Cal. App. 234, [109 Pac. 640], not cited by either party, is directly in point, and seems altogether decisive of the controversy. In the opinion in that case the subject involved herein received very careful consideration, and it was held, as stated in the syllabus, substantially in the language of the court, that “When property in this state, is conveyed to a mother' for life, with remainder to the heirs of her body, those interested in the remainder take by purchase and not by inheritance. Such remainder is a contingent interest, future in character, and the person to whom and the time of the happening of the event upon which it is limited to take effect were both uncertain at the time of its creation. Since the uncertainties at the time of the creation of the contingent remainder continue to exist until the death of the life tenant, it did not and could not vest until her death, because she could have no ‘heirs of the body’ prior to her decease. In the interval all her children may die, and the entire .estate might vest wholly in her unborn grandchildren. The interests of unborn grandchildren in the contingent remainder are not void because of the impossibility of the contingency on which they are limited to take effect; nor can such interests be regarded as mere possibilities, such as the expectancy of an heir apparent, as they do not depend upon the law of succession to determine whether or not they will take effect, and they cannot be defeated by the testamentary or other act of the ancestor. Section 694 of the Civil Code relating to a vested future interest ‘in a living person’ has no application to a future contingent remainder in unborn grandchildren.” In discussing this section of the code, the court said that it was in effect the enactment into a statute of the rule laid down in Fearne on Contingent Remainders and Executory *507

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 P. 429, 17 Cal. App. 502, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-wright-calctapp-1911.