Izard v. Middleton

8 S.C. Eq. 228
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 15, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 8 S.C. Eq. 228 (Izard v. Middleton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Izard v. Middleton, 8 S.C. Eq. 228 (S.C. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Harper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

After as mature an examination as we have been able to make* we have reluctantly come to the conclusion, that the decree of the Chancellor must be reversed, on both the points which are the subject of appeal.

The first question relates to the liability to debts, of the land which was devised to Mr. Henry Izard, in fee-simple conditional, by the will of his father. By the st. 5 Geo. 2, c. 7, P. L. 250, houses, lands, negroes, and other hereditaments, and real estates,” are made liable to, and chargeable with debts; and it is declared, that they shall be assets, in the hands of the heir, in the same manner that lands descended in England, are liable for the satisfaction of bond or specialty debts. From the generality of the terms of the statute, it is sufficiently plain, that whatever estate, or interest, Mr. Izard had in the land, was, during his life time, liable to be sold under execution for the satisfaction of his debts ; ■ and we are to inquire what that estáte, or interest, was. It was not a life estate, as seems to have been supposed, but a fee-simple conditional. The authorities are sufficiently clear, that by a gift in fee-simple conditional, as the law in relation to it was settled before the statute de donis, the heirs of the body took nothing as against the ancestor. qq,ey were named, not for any benefit intended to them, or to con. trol the ancestor’s power of disposition over the lands, but to define the nature, and extent, of his estate, and to point out the course of the descent, if no disposition should be made.

The authority of Bracton seems express to the point. In lib. 2, cap. 6, after speaking of' the “ donatio simplex et pura,” which is a gift to aman, and his heirs generally, and saying that nothing is given to the heirs, though they are named in the gift, he observes, that the donor may enlarge the grant, and make others quasi heirs, by granting to one, his heirs, and assigns. He then adds: Item, sicut ampliari possunt Jtceredes, sic ut prosdictum est, ita coarctari poterunt per modum donationis, quod omnes hmredes ad succession-em non vocantur. Modus enim legem dat donationi, et modus tenendus est contra jus commune, et contra legem, quia modus et conventio vincunt legem: ut si dicatur, do tali tantam terram, cum pertinentiis, in N., habendam et tenendam sibi et haredibus suis, quos de carne sua et uxore sibi desponsata procreatis hdbuerit, <Spc. He adds in the same chapter, “ Et unde hujusmodi hmredes procreati fuerint, ipsi tantum ad successionem vocantur ; et si taliter feqfatus aliquem inde ulterius feofaverit, tenet feofamentum, et hmredes tenentur ad warrantiam: cum ipsi nihil clamare possunt [235]*235nisi ex successione et descensupaventum; quamvis quibusdam videatur quod ipsi feofati fuerint cum parentibus, quod non est verum.” That is, if heirs of this sort are begotten, they only are called to the succession; and if one thus enfeoffed, enfeoff over another, the feoffee holds the land, and the heirs are bound to warranty, inasmuch as they can claim nothing but by succession and descent from the parent; although it appears to some that they were enfeoffed together with the parent, which is not true.”

Blake *• Heyward, ante,p.208.

The same inference may be drawn from what is said by Lord Coke, 1 Inst. 19, a. “If donee in tail at the common law, had aliened, before any issue had, and after had issue, this alienation had barred the issue, because he claimed fee simple.” When, therefore, it is said, that it was on the performing of the condition, by the birth of issue, that the donee was enabled to alien, to forfeit, or to charge, it must mean, that he was enabled as against the donor. As against the issue, his power was perfect before performance, and they could claim nothing as against his act.

The same thing is said in the case of Willion v. Berkley, Plowd. 241; and so also in Bac. Abr. Estate in Tail, in the preliminary remarks to that title, which Mr. Preston, in his Treatise on Estates, attributes to Chief Baron Gilbert. 2 Prest. Est. 294, ch. 7. Mr. Preston, himself, in the treatise mentioned, examines the subject, and comes to the same conclusion, that the issue had no right, as against the ancestor. Ib. It was only by the effect of the statute de donis, that the issue were enabled to avoid the alienation of the ancestors^ Thus it is said by Lord Coke, 2 Inst. 336, that the formedon in descender lay not at the .common law. That remedy was given by the statute; although in a particular instance, it would seem, that the formedon in descender did lie at the common law. Hargrave’s note 5, to 1 Inst, 19 a.

The lands being thus liable in the hands of Mr. Izard, it was bound by the lien of the decree against him, as we have determined during the present sitting; and lands bound by a judgment, or a decree, according to our decisions, are bound also in the hands of the heir. But if there had been no decree against Mr. Izard, in his life time, yet if the heir takes only by succession from the ancestor, and in his right, it would seem to follow, that whatever would be liable to debts in his hands, must be assets in the hands of the heir; and such is the purport of the statute, 5 Geo, 2. c. 7. (supra.)

With respect to the other point involved in the case, we have lately had occasion, in several instances, to consider how far a vo[236]*236Iuntary settlement can be supported against creditors, whose debts existed at the time. It will not be necessary, therefore, to go into any elaborate examination of cases ; but I will endeavor to express, with as much precision as the nature of the subject will allow, our views of the law.

The rule laid down by Chancellor Kent, in Reade v. Livingston, 3 Johns. C. R. 481, which, however, is not fully sanctioned in this State, is, that any, the least indebtedness, at the time of a voluntary settlement, will vitiate it. And the highest English authorities go far to support him in this position. In Russell v. Hammond, 1 Atk. 15, in Fitzer v. Fitzer, 2 Atk. 511, and in Taylor v. Jones, 2 Atk. 600, Lord Hardwicke repeatedly says, in general terms, that with respect to creditors, a voluntary settlement is always fraudulent. An exception was made in the case of Lush v. Wilkinson, 5 Ves. 384, where there was a single inconsiderable debt. That was a case of peculiar circumstances, and the Master of the Rolls observed, that every man must be indebted for the weekly bills of his house. The general rule then, I take to be, that a voIuntary settlement is void as to existing creditors : but it admits a qualification, if the debts are utterly inconsiderable, when compared with the amount of the donor’s property, like those which a man incurs for the weekly expences of his household ; so that in fact, he cannot be considered to be substantially indebted.

The expression used in Lush v. Wilkinson, that it must depend upon this, whether the party is in. solvent circumstances, has occasioned some embarrassment. The word insolvent is not very definite in its meaning. It can hardly mean, that the party after making the voluntary conveyance, has retained property to an equal, or greater, estimated amount than his debts. Perhaps it may be said, that a man indebted to near the estimated value of his property, is generally insolvent.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.C. Eq. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/izard-v-middleton-scctapp-1831.