Hatch v. Hatch

9 Mass. 307
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1812
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 9 Mass. 307 (Hatch v. Hatch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatch v. Hatch, 9 Mass. 307 (Mass. 1812).

Opinion

At this term, the opinion of the Court was pronounced by

Sewall, J.

The petitioners and the respondents are heirs at law of Israel Hatch, deceased, who had been the, owner of, and until the time of his death, occupied the premises of which partition is prayed. If the premises descended to his heirs at law, the shares of the petitioners are correctly stated in their petition. But the descent is controverted by the respondents, who plead a sole seisin ; and, for an exclusive title in themselves, they rely upon two deeds produced at the trial, where the questions which have been argued were reserved.

* It seems to have been a question at the trial, although it has not been insisted on in the argument by the petitioners’ counsel, whether these supposed deeds ¡áre to be allowed to have any operation or effect, — considering the manner of their delivery, and the situation in which they were retained during the life of the grantor therein named, — the common ancestor of the petitioners and the respondents.

Upon this point, the circumstances in evidence are, that Israel Hatch, about four years before his death, signed, sealed, and acknowledged, the writings which were produced at the trial as deeds and which purport to be witnessed as deeds delivered The grantees named therein respectively are Joel Hatch, one of the [278]*278respondents, in one of them, and in the other Amos Hatch, since deceased, whose heir at law is the other respondent.

The two writings, if they operated as grants and conveyances, comprise the whole premises in controversy, which were thereby given, granted, and conveyed, in part to Joel Hatch and his heirs and assigns, and in part to Amos Hatch and his heirs and assigns.

There is no evidence of the privity or consent of either Joel or Amos in this transaction; but it is proved that the grantor deposited these writings, together with his last will, in the custody of John Turner, Esq., to be kept until the grantor’s death, and then to be delivered over to the respective grantees. And it is in evidence that they received the deeds after the death of their father.

There is certainly a want of technical skill and accuracy discovered in the mode adopted to express and effectuate the intentions of Israel Hatch, the ancestor, if these were to retain to himself, during his life, the use and occupation of the premises conveyed to Joel and Amos, and for the writings to take effect, consistently with that purpose, after the death of the grantor, and then to operate beneficially to the grantees, in exclusion of the other coheirs. The grantor was competent to this disposal of his property, and *his intentions were in every respect lawful. The doubt seems to be as to the form of conveyance, and we see very little ground for this.

v The delivery is an essential requisite to a deed, and the effect of it is to be from the time when it is delivered as a deed. But it is not essential to the valid delivery of a deed, that the grantee be present, and that it be made to or accepted by him personally at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mass. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-hatch-mass-1812.