Jensen v. Jensen

89 P.2d 1085, 54 Wyo. 224, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 11
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1939
Docket2089
StatusPublished

This text of 89 P.2d 1085 (Jensen v. Jensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. Jensen, 89 P.2d 1085, 54 Wyo. 224, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 11 (Wyo. 1939).

Opinion

Ilsley, District Judge.

This is a suit under the Declaratory Judgment Act by the plaintiffs against the defendants seeking a construction of the deed herein referred to and a declaration of plaintiffs’ and defendants’ rights thereunder.

Plaintiffs’ petition alleges that in 1892 Angeline Bly and D. G. Bly executed a deed to Mrs. Elizabeth Murray, later Elizabeth Murray Fought, and the heirs of *226 her body, wherein the Blys conveyed to Mrs. Murray and “unto her and the heirs of her body forever”, a parcel of land in the city of Cheyenne. This deed also contains this provision:

“The property hereby conveyed being under the absolute control of Elizabeth Murray, and the heirs - of her body, free from any control or interest whatever of the husband of the said Elizabeth Murray, or the husbands of the heirs of her body.” •

It is then alleged that Mrs. Murray, later Mrs, Fought, died in 1935; since her death, plaintiffs have been in the exclusive possession of the land conveyed by such deed; that the only surviving 'heirs of the body of Elizabeth Murray are the plaintiffs Maude A. Jensen and Myrtle B. Gardenhire, and the defendant Willis George Jensen, a son of Maude A. Jensen; that Angeline Bly and D. G. Bly are deceased and their heirs unknown. The plaintiffs then set forth and contend that the deed should be construed as creating a life, estate in Elizabeth Murray in the real estate with -the remainder in fee simple in these plaintiffs as the heirs of the body of Elizabeth Murray; that there is some doubt under the laws of Wyoming as to their rights and status under the deed and that until such doubt is cleared up and plaintiffs’ rights under the deed declared they will be without merchantable title and without knowledge of their rights in regard to the parcel of land. The plaintiffs then pray for a declaration (1) that under the terms of the deed they are now the owners in fee simple of the real estate therein described; (2) that defendants be declared to have no right, title or interest, vested or contingent, in said real property; (3) that the title in fee simple in said-real property be quieted in the plaintiffs and -the defendants be forever debarred from asserting any estate or interest whatsoever in the real property adverse to these plaintiffs.

*227 Thereupon notice was published as to the unknown heirs of the Blys. A guardian ad litem was appointed for Willis George Jensen and the guardian answered admitting all of the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition but alleged that the effect of the deed in question created a life estate in Elizabeth Murray Fought, and upon her death a life estate in the plaintiffs, and upon their deaths a life estate in Willis George Jensen for whom he appeared and prayed for a declaration to the effect that the deed creates an entailed estate, giving to plaintiffs a life estate and that upon their death the real estate becomes the property of the heirs of their bodies.

Upon the trial, the deed was admitted in evidence, and it indisputably appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs and defendant Willis George Jensen are the only heirs of the body of Elizabeth Murray Fought, and the original grantors (the Blys) are dead and their heirs unknown. That the deed had been executed; that the grantee in the deed (Mrs. Murray) is dead; that the plaintiffs are now in possession of the property, and the trial court made its findings accordingly.

The trial court declared (1) the effect of the deed was to create in the grantee, and the heirs of her body, a fee tail estate in said lands; (2) that said Elizabeth Murray Fought being now deceased, the plaintiffs are the tenants in fee tail of the lands, and entitled to the possession and use thereof during their natural lives; (3) that upon the death of plaintiffs, defendant Willis George Jensen, will be entitled to the possession and use of the lands during his natural life, and should plaintiffs have further issue, said defendant will have equal rights with such issue; (4) that the heirs of Angeline and D. G. Bly are the owners of the reversion of the fee simple estate and upon any subsequent failure of issue of the body of Elizabeth Murray Fought, will be entitled to the lands in fee simple absolute; (5) *228 that plaintiffs cannot bar entailment in the lands by a conveyance of a fee simple estate, except by compliance with Sections 89-3922 to 89-3930, inclusive, Wyo. Rev. Stat. 1931, in which event the rights of the parties thus declared will vest in such personalty as is substituted for the lands, i. e., the plaintiffs will be entitled to the income therefrom during their lives; upon their decease the defendant, Willis George Jensen, will be entitled to such income for his natural life and upon subsequent failure of issue of the body of Elizabeth Murray Fought, the heirs of the Blys will be entitled to receive the entire corpus however invested, as their absolute property free from any entailment.

To these rulings and declarations, plaintiff preserved proper exceptions. Summarized, the errors complained of by plaintiffs are to the effect that, the trial court should have declared with respect to the third declaration that the defendant Willis George Jensen will be entitled to the premises for his life if the plaintiffs should die without having previously conveyed the fee simple estate; with respect to the fourth declaration, the court should have declared that upon subsequent failure of issue of the body of Elizabeth Murray Fought that the heirs of the Blys will be entitled to the lands if the plaintiffs or subsequent tenants in tail have not conveyed a fee simple estate therein; with respect to the fifth declaration, the court should have declared that plaintiffs may at any time convey a fee simple estate in said premises by warranty deed, thereby barring all right, title and interest of any kind of the defendants in said lands or in the proceeds therefrom.

An estate tail has been defined:

“An estate in fee tail, then, or as it is frequently called, an estate tail, may be defined as an estate of inheritance which, if left to itself, will, after the death of the first owner, pass to his lawful issue, including *229 children, grandchildren, and more remote descendants, in the regular order of descent from such owner and will terminate on the failure of such posterity.” Tiffany on Real Property (2d. ed.) p. 54; 21 C. J. 981.

Although infrequently referred to, estates tail are expressly recognized in Wyoming by R. S. 1887, Sec. 3009, now 89-3922, W. R. S., 1931, which authorizes the owner in fee tail to maintain an action to secure a sale of an estate in fee simple absolute, providing that the court shall order such sale, being satisfied “no substantial injury to the heirs in tail” will result thereby. And again by W. R. S. 1931, Sec. 89-3927, W. R. S. 1887, Sec. 3014, which explicitly directs that the proceeds of such sale be substituted for the land sold and be subject to the same conditions originally made relative to the land so sold.

The estates tail come to us from the common law of England dating back to the thirteenth century. Those interested in their history will find an excellent discussion with reference to their development in the Kansas case of Ewing v. Nesbitt, 88 Kan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 P.2d 1085, 54 Wyo. 224, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-jensen-wyo-1939.