In re Reeves

94 A. 511, 10 Del. Ch. 483
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 94 A. 511 (In re Reeves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Reeves, 94 A. 511, 10 Del. Ch. 483 (Del. 1915).

Opinion

Boyce, J.

(delivering the opinion of the court). Edward Taylor, late of Laurel, Sussex County, who died on the thirtieth day of March, A. D. 1897, did, in his lifetime, make and publish his last will and testament, since his decease duly admitted to probate before the Register of Wills, in and for said County, in and by which he divised, inter alia, as follows:

“I give and devise to my wife, Martha Taylor, all the residue of my property, real, personal or mixed, to be held by her for and during the period of her natural life or widowhood, and for her to properly educate and clothe the boy, William Reeves, that I now have with me, and at the death or marriage of my said wife Martha, whichever first occurs, then it is my will that the whole of my said property go to my boy William Reeves, if he then be living, to him and the lawful heirs of his body forever, but in the event of him, the said William Reeves, dying and leaving no lawful issue of his body, then for the whole of said property to go to my nephew, Stephen Taylor, his heirs and assigns forever, or in the event of the said William Reeves dying before the death or marriage of my said wife, Martha, then and in that case I desire that the said property upon her death or marriage pass immediately to my said nephew, Stephen Taylor, to him and his heirs and assigns forever,”

Martha Taylor, the life tenant, therein named, has since departed this life, and the said William Reeves is seised of the real estate of the testator under the provision of said will.

The said William Reeves was, on the thirtieth day of September, A. D. 1898, ascertained to be insane by inquisition" [485]*485duly held. On the eleventh day of August, A. D. 1902, he was duly admitted to the Delaware State Hospital at Famhurst for the insane, and there has since been confined— being at the time of his admission, and now is, insane. Upwards of two thousand dollars are due the said hospital for his board and maintenance, care and custody.

Frank F. Davis, the present duly appointed trustee of the said William Reeves, did, on the tenth day of June, A. D. 1914, present to the Chancellor, in Sussex County, a petition, praying for an order authorizing and directing the sale of the real estate, in the petition mentioned, of his insane ward, freed, barred and discharged of and from all estates tail, remainders and reversions, and for a rule upon Stephen Taylor, the contingent remainderman in said will, to show cause why said lands should not be sold in fee simple, the estate tail extinguished, and the remainder legally barred.

The rule issued, and coming on to be heard on petition and answer, the Chancellor held that William Reeves, the insane, holds as tenant in tail the said real estate, and that the court has power and authority to direct the trustee to sell, alien and convey, in fee simple the said real estate, in the same manner and as effectually as if the said real estate were held in fee simple; and further held that because of the character and condition of the real estate, it is proper that the same should be sold, and thereby the estate be cared for, preserved and increased; and decreed that the trustee do sell at public auction, etc., all the lands in the petition mentioned, as an estate in fee simple.

Stephen Taylor, by his solicitors, prayed for an appeal from the decree, which was allowed, and is now before this court.

The solicitors for the appellant assign that the court erred (1) in decreeing that the said William Reeves holds as tenant in fee tail the said real estate in said petition mentioned; (2) in decreeing that the said court has jurisdiction, power and authority to direct the said trustee to sell, alien and convey in fee simple, the said real estate in the same manner and as effectually as if the said real estate were held in fee simple; and [486]*486(3) in decreeing that the said Frank F. Davis, trustee for the said William Reeves, do sell at public auction the said real estate as an estate in fee simple.

Before considering the several assignments of error, it maybe said that the general jurisdiction and powers of the Court of Chancery are vested by Section 10, Article IV, of the Constitution (1897), and Section 1, Chapter 95, Revised Code, (1893) 704. Except in so far as affected by subsequent statutory provisions, the Court of Chancery is by the above statute vested with jurisdiction and powers according to the course of Chancery practice in England. Anciently the powers of the Chancellor, or the High Court of Chancery, with respect to lunatics, were not included within the general, inherent, original jurisdiction of the court, but were derived from the Crown by delegation to the Chancellor as the personal representative of the King by means of his sign manual. 3 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, §1311; Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, §1335; Penington v. Thompson, 5 Del. Ch. 328, 368; In re Harris, 7 Del. Ch. 42, 49, 28 Atl. 329. Chapter 49, Revised Code (1893) 381, confers upon the Court of Chancery in this State, the care of insane persons above the age of twenty-one years. By this statute the Chancellor may issue a writ to inquire by jury and determine whether the person named is insane, and if found to be insane, appoint a trustee for such person to take charge of him and manage his estate; and—

“in the name of the insane person do whatever is necessary for the care, preservation and increase of his estate.” And ‘‘if it appear to the Chancellor proper to sell any real estate of the insane person, he may direct such sale to be made by the trustee. * * *”

The authority of the Chancellor to direct a sale of the lunatic’s property by the trustee is, therefore, derived from the statute.

“A person having a legal or equitable estate, or right,’ in fee tail, in possession, remainder, or reversion, in any lands, tenements or hereditaments,” has an actual vested estate attended with the usual incidents of full freedom, including the power at his own will, to convert it into an absolute estate, [487]*487both by the common law and by the statute. Sections 26 and 27, c. 83, Revised Code 1893, 630, 631; Holland v. Cruft, Adm’r., et al., 3 Gray (Mass.) 162, 182.

Although a person has been adjudged insane and a trustee has been appointed for him, the title to his property remains in him. The trustee is a substitute for the insane person to do, in the name of the latter, under the direction and with the approval of the Chancellor, “whatever is necessary for the care, presérvation and increase of his estate.” The estate of an insane person is a trust fund for his maintenance and support and may be sold when it shall appear to be for his interests, without regard to contingent interests of others. The governing principle in the management of the estate, applicable generally, is the lunatic’s interest, not that of those who may have eventual rights of succession. In re Salisbury, 3 Johns. Ch. 347.

The remainder after an estate tail is subject to be extinguished as provided by the statute for barring estates tail.

The statute clothing the Court of Chancery with power to direct the trustee of an insane person to sell his real estate, does not restrict the power of sale to any particular kind of estate.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 511, 10 Del. Ch. 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-reeves-del-1915.