Hanson v. Willard

12 Me. 142
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 12 Me. 142 (Hanson v. Willard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Willard, 12 Me. 142 (Me. 1835).

Opinion

[144]*144At a subsequent term, the opinion of the Court was delivered W

Parris J.

By the common law, parceners might be compelled, by writ, to have partition of their inheritance, but until the statute of 31 Hen. VIII, ch. 1, there was no mode of compelling partition among joint-tenants and tenants in common. They might make an amicable division of their joint or common property, but unless all would agree to such a division, no individual could obtain a partition whereby he might enjoy his share in severalty. The preamble to that statute recites the inconveniences to which those might be subjected, who were interested in joint or common property, and could not compel a division, viz. that “ divers and many of the joint-tenants and tenants in common, oftentimes of their perverse, covetous, and malicious minds and wills, against all right, justice, equity and good conscience, by strength and power, not only cut down all the woods and trees growing upon the same, but also have extirpated, subverted, pulled down and destroyed all the houses and the whole commodities of the same, and have taken and converted them to their own use, to the open wrong of the other joint-tenants and tenants in common of the same property, who have been always without any assured remedy for the same.”

The statute then proceeds to give the remedy, by providing that “ all joint-tenants and tenants in common, of any estate of inheritance of any .lands, tenements, or hereditaments, shall and may be coacted and compelled to make partition between them, in like manner and form as coparceners have been and are compelled to do.”

As early as 1693, the colonial legislature provided, that “ all persons holding any lands, tenements, or hereditaments, as coparceners, joint-tenants or tenants in common, may be compelled by writ of partition at common law, to divide the same.” This is substantially the phraseology of our statute, ch. 37, sec. 1.

From this review it will be seen, that we have adopted what is usually called partition at common law, that is, by writ da partitions faciendo, and in cases under that mode, as our statute embraces the same subject matter as the stat. 31 Hen. VIII, ch. 1, viz. “ lands, tenements, and hereditaments,” we may be aided in [145]*145our investigations by the judicial expositions of that statute, and the practice under it.

Under the writ de partitione, a partial partition cannot be made. The demandant must institute his process against all the other co-tenants. He must, at his peril, state his own share, and that of the others, with precision, and every one must have a part set out in severalty.

This was found to be very inconvenient, and, in many cases, partition “ though much desired and of great advantage, was often hindered and delayed, by reason that infants were interested, or that the parties concerned were numerous and lived remote from each other, and sometimes in parts beyond sea, and were some of them unknown:” Preamble to Statute of March 11,1784. To remedy this and other inconveniences, a mode was provided, by the statute above mentioned, by which persons interested with others in any lot, tract of land or other real estate,” might have their share or shares set off and divided from the rest. This is the mode prescribed by our statute, ch. 37, sec. 2.

We have taken this review to arrive at the object of partition by petition, as prescribed by our statute, and we think it is apparent, that the statute does not modify the common law as to the species of property that may be the subject of partition, but that, of whatever kind of property partition might be demanded, by parceners at common law, it might be demanded by joint-tenants and tenants in common, under statute 31 Hen. VIII, ch. 1, and under both the 1st and 2d sections of our statute, ch. 37.

The phraseology of the 2d sec. “ any person or persons interested with others in any lot, tract of land, or other real estate,” is, at least, as broad and comprehensive as “ all persons holding any lands, tenements, or hereditaments, as tenants in common,” &.c. which is the language of the 1st section, and is substantially the language of the English statute above referred to, which was the earliest statute upon the subject.

Under the provisions of our statute, ch. 37, sec. 2, a tenant in common may have his property divided and set out from the residue of the common property, without causing a division of the whole, as he must if he proceed by writ. That section changes [146]*146the mode of procedure, but it neither limits nor enlarges the objects on which the process is to operate. If the estate be such as the petitioner could demand partition of it by writ under the first section, he may have it by petition, in the mode pointed out in the' second. He has his election. In the one case, the whole common property must be divided among all the co-tenants ; in the other, the petitioner’s share alone is to be set out, and the residue will continue as before, the common property of all the remaining tenánts.

Considering then, that whatever property would be partible under a writ of partition at common law, would be alike partible under the statute process of partition, we proceed to inquire what lands of property may be the subject of partition. We have seen that lands, tenements, and hereditaments, or, as described by Statute, lands or other real estate may be divided, and as it is essential to an estate in common to be subject to partition, it is incident to such an estate that either tenant may enforce it. Those interested in the common property may make a conventional partition so as best to accommodate the whole, having regard to the nature and situation of the estate ; but if no such partition can be agreed Upon, either tenant may claim it as of right, and it is no sufficient objection to a partition that it would be attended with the most inconvenient Consequences, and that the value of the property so much depends on its entireness, that its division would materially lessen that value. The strongest arguments of inconvenience will not prevail, and it is said, in a recent treatise on partition, that if there is only one entire subject matter of division, it must be severed into shares, although the difficulty of doing it should be almost insuperable, and although it should be attended with the most palpable inconvenience and even destruction. Allnatt on Partition, 85. As was said by Lord Eldon, in Turner v. Morgan, 8 Ves. jr. 143, the difficulty is no objection, if the parties insist upon having the law taire its course, the partition must proceed. If they would avoid the difficulty, they óüght to agree to buy and sell. 11 Ves. 157, note; 17 Ves. 546, note. We might refer to a great number of cases, some at law, and others in Chancery, all recognizing the principle that tenants in common may demand partition of right, and that injury to the [147]*147common property, or inconvenience to other co-tenants, cannot be urged to stay the proceedings. It is not material here to inquire into the origin of the authority of Courts of Chancery to order partition. The jurisdiction has been assumed and exercised concurrently with courts of law, and upon the same principles. The.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Me. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-willard-me-1835.