Hogan v. . Strayhorn

65 N.C. 279
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 65 N.C. 279 (Hogan v. . Strayhorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogan v. . Strayhorn, 65 N.C. 279 (N.C. 1871).

Opinion

Peaesoh, C. J.

The plaintiff derives, title from the Assignee in bankruptcy, who represents the creditors of Calvin Strayhorn. To resist a recovery it is necessary for the defendant to maintain two positions:

1. The deed of Calvin Strayhorn to Laws passed the title.

2. The deed makes a valid declaration of trust.

As to the first, the objection to the deed is, that it is not supported by a valuable consideration from Laws to Calvin Strayhorn. Treating it as a deed of bargain and sale, this ■objection would be fatal; but under the maxim, ut res magis valeat guam pereat, an instrument which can not have effect in one form, will be supported in another; provided, that meets the difficulty, and sufficient words are used. For instance, a deed in the form of a covenant is allowed to operate as a grant; a deed purporting to be a bargain and sale, *282 as a covenant to stand seized; and either of these as a deed at common law if that will answer the purpose. An instrument in the form of bargain and sale, purporting to pass a remainder after a life-estate in land, but inoperative for want of a valuable consideration, will be allowed the effect of passing the remainder as a deed at common law, which does not' require a consideration, Harrell v. Watson, 63 N. C. R. 454, and operates to pass remainders, reversions, rights of way and other easements, and any incorporeal hereditament; the solemn act of delivery being accepted in lieu of “ livery of seizin,” which can not be made of things incorporeal. This, principle could not be applied to deeds accompanying feoffments, or deeds of feoffment as they were termed, to supply the want of livery of seizin; for the reason that the land passed by the livery of seizin, and not by the deed; for, although after the introduction of contingent remainders, springing and shifting uses, powers of appointment and con-' ditional limitations, a deed always accompanied the livery of seizin, it was held that the freehold passed by the livery, an act of notoriety, and not by the deed, which served only the secondary purpose of a memorial of the limitations of the estate, and declarations of uses which were too complicated to be trusted to the memory of witnesses.

The céremony of making livery of seizin was in its original very imposing. The parties went upon the land, and the tenant, in the presence of the freeholders of the manor, delivered the soil to the feoffee, by handing to him a twig, or clod of dirt, in the name of the whole; by which act, notoriety was given to the fact that the one had ceased to be tenant, and the other had taken his place. After it became necessary to have a deed to accompany the livery of seizin, this mode of conveyance was both expensive and inconvenient, and upon the passage of the Statute of Uses, 27 Hen. viii, the conveyance by deed of bargain and sale was substituted for it in all cases not requiring limitations of the es *283 tate, or a declaration of uses. This was also expensive by reason of the statute of enrollments, and the conveyance by lease and release took the place of bargain and sale.

A conveyance by transmutation of possession, to-wit: feoffment, was only used when the estate was to be limited by way of contingent and cross-remainders, or family relations called for a declaration of contingent uses and powers of appointment. Eines and common recoveries, which are called feoffments of record, were only used when it was necessary to bar contingent estates that might spring out of some former conveyance, and thereby free the land from the complication of title incident thereto.

The Legislature of the colony of North Carolina, in 1715, seeing the expense and inconvenience of requiring the ceremony of livery of seizin, by which the parties were required to go upon the land, in a sparsely-settled country, enacted that “ no conveyance or bill of sale for land shall be good, unless the same shall be acknowledged, &c., and registered. in the County where the land lies,” and “ all deeds so done and executed shall he vaMd and pass the estates in land without Iwery of seizin, attornment, or other ceremony in the law, whatsoever.” Rev. Stat. ch. 37, sec. 1; Rev. Code, ch. 37, sec. 1. The object of this statute manifestly is to dispense with the ceremony of livery of seizin, to substitute registration of the deed in lieu thereof, and to allow title to be passed by the deed, which before had accompanied the livery "of seizin, without that expensive and inconvenient ceremony. To a plain man it must be a matter of surprise how any question ever could be made as to the validity of a deed, or “ bill of sale for land,” executed and registered in pursuance of this statute. The reference to the old mode of conveyance by livery of seizin, accompanied by deed of feoffment, was made to explain this matter, and the explanation will be made full by the fact that in the colony and in the State of North Carolina, sales and conveyances of land *284 have been simple and free from all complication by reason of contingent and cross remainders, and declarations of contingent and shifting nses, although such limitations and declarations of uses are often met with in wills: so that at the first, a conveyance by lease and release, and after act of 1715, dispensing with enrollment and actual indentation of deeds of bargan and sale, and substituting registration in Eeu thereof, deeds of bargain and sale, and of covenants to stand seized, have answered every purpose.

It is a remarkable fact that there has been no occasion to be met with in our books, except in one instance,-to resort to conveyances operating by transmutation of possession. Indeed the members of the legal profession seem almost to have lost sight of the fact that by the Act of 1715, the deed which before accompanied livery of seizin, is, provided it be duly registered, allowed the effect of passing the title by transmutation of possession, without the ceremony of livery of seizin.

The single instance referred to above where there was a necessity for a conveyance operating by transmutation of possession, is Smith v. Smith, 1 Jon. 135. There the maker of a deed of bargain and sale, or of a covenant to stand seized (for it is good either way) attempted to create a power of sale to one who was a stranger to the consideration; and it is held that the power could only be created by conveyance operating by transmutation of possession. The Court was not able to give effect to it as a deed under the statute of 1715, because there were no words of conveyance to the stranger who was to exercise the power. In our case that difficulty is not presented, for the land is given to Laws (< to have and to hold, to him and his heirs,” and the ceremony of livery of seizin being dispensed with, the deed operates to pass the title under the act of 1715, although it cannot take effect as a deed of bargain and sale for the want of a valuable consideration.

*285 As to the second position: With every disposition, under the maxim ut res magis vdleat quam pereat,

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.C. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-strayhorn-nc-1871.