Haven v. Foster

31 Mass. 534
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Mass. 534 (Haven v. Foster) 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
Haven v. Foster, 31 Mass. 534 (Mass. 1833).

Opinion

Shaw C. J.

drew up the opinion of the Court. It is now a rule of law too well established to be shaken, and one upon which titles to property have long rested in this commonwealth, that a devise of real estate can take effect orfly as to estate, of which the testator is seised at the time of making the devise, that is, at the date of the execution of the will, and that however strongly the intention is expressed by the testator, to extend the operation of his last will, so as to make it pass the estate which he might afterwards acquire before his death, yet according to the rules of law such an intention cannot have effect. In this respect the law differs entirely from that which governs a gift of personal estate ; it being a well known rule, that if such be "the expressed intent, a last will and testament will operate to convey after-purchased personal estate, as effectually, as to pass the property held by the testator at the execution of his will. It is in vain now to question the soundness of the reasons, upon which this rule in regard to real estate is founded, or to insist that it often defeats the intentions of testators, or to contend that the rule in reference to personal property is more reasonable. It is to be maintained, because it is a rule of law, which has been adopted and practised upon in this commonwealth, and is one of those rules, upon which titles to property depend, to a great extent. Hays v. Jackson, 6 Mass. R. 149. [Altered by Revised Slat. c. 62, § 3.]

The reason upon which the rule is founded, may tend to 'Ilústrate it, and govern its operation. W.e take the reason of the rule to be, that a devise is deemed to be a species ot conveyance, by which real estate is transferred by.force of the 'statute of wills ; that, though its operation is necessarily postponed to the time of the death of the testator, and though the gift is conditional, depending upon the condition, that the will is not cancelled or revoked by the testator, and that the devise is not adeemed by the alienation of the estate by the devisor in his lifetime, or otherwise, yet when it does take effect upon the happening of the conditions, it is considered as relating back and taking effect by force of the devise, as a con [540]*540• veyance and transfer of. the estate. Then in analogy to the common law rule, that a conveyance can only take effect to pass vested estates, the devise, as to estates of which the devisor is not then seised, is inoperative and void. That such is the principle of the rule is manifest from this consideration, that in England the execution of a will, by which a devise is made, like that of a deed or any other instrument of conveyance, is to be proved by the party claiming title unucr it, whenever such title is drawn in question ; and the probate of the will in an ecclesiastical court, Is of no avail to give it effect, as a devise of real estate.

From this' reason of the rule, we shall readily perceive the fitness of the other connected with and depending on it, which is equally well established, namely, that if the will be republished, then all the words contained in it, and which have reference to time, must be considered as applying to the time of the republication and not to that of the original wilL The very same words, may embrace very different parcels and amounts of estate, as they are used at one time of at another. If they are words of description, more or less general, as “all my real estate;” — “all my real estate in such a coun ty.;” — “all my warehouses and wharfs in such a city ;” — “ all my wild lands,” &c., it is manifest, that such words, used on one day, would embrace a different estate, from that included in the same description on another day, as the estate described by them may have been enlarged or diminished by acquisition or alienation, in the mean time. By the rule under consideration, the will is. considered as speaking on the day of republication, and to have the same effect as if originally made on that day, and to embrace the subject-matter, as it exists at that time. Where, therefore, there is a general residuary clause, as if one devises all his real estate, or all-the residue after specific devises, and afterwards acquires real estate, and does not republish his will, the residuary devise does not carry the after-purchased estate, because the devisee was not seised at the execution of the will. ,But if such will be republished, after the purchase of the real estate, it carries this real estate, because the words of the original, as used and spoken on the day of republication,- embrace it in terms.

[541]*541But to give a republication this effect, the words of the will must be of such a character, as if used at the date of republication, would include the estate in controversy. The proposition may be stated broadly, that to constitute a good devise, the intent to' devise and the power of devising, must concur. In genera], the reason why a devise does not take effect, to pass after-purchased estate, is not that there is not a manifest intent to pass all the estate, but because, the devisee not being seised at the time, the legal power of devising is wanting. The question is therefore usually argued as if it was merely a question of power, in which the fact of intent is immaterial. But we think the true question - is, do the intent and the power both concur, and the legal consequence will be, to give effect to the devise where they do concur, but to declare it inoperative, if either is wanting.

If, therefore, the language of the original will be such, as if used at the date of the repubiication, it would not include the after-purchased estate in its terms or description ;' or, if the act of republication be accompanied with other provisions, indicating that it was the intention of the. testator, to limit the operation of the will, as republished, to the same estate which was given, and which would legally pass by the original will, then, notwithstanding such republication, the devise will not include the after-purchased estate ; because, although the power then exists to devise, yet the intent is wanting, and as both do not concur, the after-purchased estate does not pass.

It was upon a similar ground that the case mentioned in the argument was decided, first in the Court of King’s Bench, Lady Strathmore v. Bowes, 7 T. R. 482, and afterwards in the House of Lords, Bowes v. Bowes, 2 Bos. & Pul. 500. It was a question of construction upon the words of the will and codicil. In the House of Lords, Lord Thurlow differed in opinion from the judges and chancellor, and was of opinion that the codicil operated as a republication of the will, and that it was sufficiently broad in its terms to include the after-purchased lands. But the judges, and the chancellor for the lime being, Lord Eldon, were of opinion, that it was the intent of the testator only to change the trustees, and to give to the new trustees the same estate only as had been given by the will, [542]*542and therefore that although the codicil operated as a repúblication of the will, yet that such republication did not so operate, as to include the after-purchased estate, because it was the intent of the testator, as manifested in the codicil, that it should not be included. Lo d Eldon stated the principle thus : “ the true question, seemed to be, whether from the words ‘ my said lands’ a special intention to exclude

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Bluebook (online)
31 Mass. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haven-v-foster-mass-1833.