Hayes v. Hammond

143 N.E.2d 693, 336 Mass. 233, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 619
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 26, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 143 N.E.2d 693 (Hayes v. Hammond) 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
Hayes v. Hammond, 143 N.E.2d 693, 336 Mass. 233, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 619 (Mass. 1957).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

This is a petition for registration under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 185, as amended, of title to land in Marblehead (hereinafter called the locus). The petition was filed September 27, 1954, and, as amended, has been prosecuted by seven petitioners. Answers filed in behalf of numerous respondents deny the title of the petitioners and *234 claim that the respondents hold title of record to the locus. 1 The trial judge held that the respondents have a good title of record to the locus and ordered that the petition be dismissed. The petitioners duly saved exceptions to the denial of certain requests for rulings (discussed below). The case is before us upon the petitioners’ substitute bill of exceptions, from which the following pertinent facts are summarized.

In 1830, John Girdler gained title to the Girdler Farm, which included the locus. He died on May 25, 1855, still owning the Girdler Farm. His will was dated March 23, 1855. Then (and at his death) he had a wife Betsey, three children (Lucy, through whom the petitioners claim, Deborah, and Rachel) and a granddaughter, Elizabeth, child of a son, who had theretofore died. By this will (after a life estate to his wife for her support and maintenance) he provided: “After the decease of my said wife Betsey, my will is that whatever remains of my Estate not expended by her, shall descend in four equal parts: to wit one part to my daughters, Lucy Ann Harris, one part to Deborah, one part to Rachel and the other part to Elizabeth Girdler, the child of my late son John B. Girdler, now deceased: To hold the same to them, their respective heirs, administrators and assigns forever: But if either of my said daughters or granddaughter should die without issue, then in such case my will is that such respective part or parts should descend in equal proportions to said surviving legatees or to their legal representatives.”

Betsey Girdler, John’s widow, died prior to 1871 when the three daughters and the granddaughter named in John Girdler’s will, all of whom survived Betsey, filed a petition for a partition in the Probate Court “alleging [that] they held as heirs equal . . . shares in the estate of John Gird- *235 ler, taking an one-fourth part each. The petition was assented to by the four petitioners and their husbands.” In 1874 the Girdler Farm was separated by the partition into four lots of about thirteen acres each, the locus then being assigned to Lucy A. Harris. Lucy died without issue in 1885 leaving the residue of her estate to her husband, who died in 1900. It is indirectly under this will that the petitioners claim. In their chain of alleged title (which need not be summarized), it does not appear that the locus had been mentioned of record from 1874 to 1953 in any conveyance or in any probate inventory. 1

In 1908 various persons, through whom the respondents claim, namely (1) Elizabeth Bessom, the last survivor (who died in 1914) of the persons named in the residuary article of John Girdler’s will, (2) the grandchildren 2 of Rachel Girdler High (one of John Girdler’s daughters, who died in 1897, leaving issue), and (3) the heirs of Deborah Hooper, another daughter (who died in 1907, leaving issue) of John Girdler, joined in deeds, separating the locus into thirds, which by the several grantees (and certain successors in title) have since been conveyed and reconveyed, with the consequence that, by such conveyances (which need not be set forth in detail) of parts of the locus subsequent to 1908, the respondents, in the aggregate, claim title to the whole locus, directly or indirectly, under one or more of the parties to the 1908 partition deeds. The premises have been improved from time to time by persons for the time being so claiming title to parts of the locus.

The trial judge held (1) that, under the residuary article *236 of John Girdler’s will (quoted above), upon his death, each of his daughters and his grandaughter, Elizabeth Bessom, “took a fee tail in expectancy and upon the death of the wife Betsey a fee tail in possession”; (2) that the 1871 partition proceeding in the Probate Court operated to make “the daughters and granddaughter . . . tenants in tail in severalty of separate portions of the Girdler Farm”; and (3) that upon Lucy Harris’s death in 1885 without issue, the “locus vested in fee tail in the three others, namely” Rachel High, Deborah Hooper, and Elizabeth Bessom.

1. The residue of John Girdler’s estate after the life interest of Betsey was to “descend” in four equal parts, to Lucy, Rachel, Deborah, and Elizabeth, and their respective heirs. Each would then have taken an undivided one-fourth interest in fee simple in the Girdler Farm, were it not for the further provision that if any one (or more) of them “should die without issue, then . . . such respective part . . . should descend in equal proportions to said surviving legatees or to their legal representatives.”

The will took effect on the death of John Girdler in 1855, prior to the enactment of St. 1888, c. 273 (now found in G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 184, § 6), which as to limitations effected by deed or will after April 30, 1888, provides that the words “die without issue” “shall, unless a contraiy intention clearly appears by the instrument creating such limitation, mean a want or failure of issue in the lifetime or at the time of the death of such person, and not an indefinite failure of his issue.” The statute 1 is not applicable to instruments executed prior to 1888. Gilkie v. Marsh, 186 Mass. 336, 338. Lyman v. Sears, 283 Mass. 404, 413. 2 Accordingly, *237 John Girdler’s 1855 will must be construed in accordance with principles of construction in effect prior to 1888.

The Massachusetts authorities, construing pre-1888 limitations applicable to land, have followed the common law view, that (in the absence of clear controlling provisions in the governing instrument showing a contrary intention), a gift over if A shall die without issue following a gift to A and his heirs, means that the gift over is to take effect upon the indefinite failure of A’s issue. Nightingale v. Burrell, 15 Pick. 104, 109-115. Wheatland v. Dodge, 10 Met. 502, 505. Terry v. Briggs, 12 Met. 17, 22-23. Malcolm v. Malcolm, 3 Cush. 472, 481-482. Hall v. Priest, 6 Gray, 18, 20-21. Allen v. Trustees of Ashley School Fund, 102 Mass. 262, 264. Brown v. Addison Gilbert Hospital, 155 Mass. 323, 325-326 (where the rule is said “to have become a rule of property”). Gilkie v. Marsh, 186 Mass. 336, 337-339. 1 See Swain, Crocker’s Notes on Common Forms (7th ed.) §§ 908-909.

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Bluebook (online)
143 N.E.2d 693, 336 Mass. 233, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-hammond-mass-1957.