Jewell v. Warner

35 N.H. 176
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 N.H. 176 (Jewell v. Warner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jewell v. Warner, 35 N.H. 176 (N.H. 1857).

Opinion

Bell, J.

So far as we are aware this is the first case in which the question has been raised and contested, whether estates tail can exist here consistently with the statutes of the State.

It may be admitted that an impression has to some extent prevailed that such estates might and did exist here, and actions have been brought, and questions raised and discussed, in which that idea has been tacitly admitted ; and it has been laid down in books published elsewhere, and in one instance here, that the law of England relative to estates tail was in force here. 1 Cruise Dig. T. 2, ch. 2, note 20, 161 Am. Ed.; Griff. L. R. 42; Atherton’s Address, &c., cited for the plaintiff.

We have found little to support it in the reported decisions. Frost v. Cloutman, 7 N. H. 9, was a formedon in remainder, and the question was if the remainder had been barred by a common recovery, followed by an entry, where no writ of possession had been issued. There was no controversy as to the validity or the effect of the will under which the parties claimed, [180]*180or as to the law relative to estates tail. It is not disputed,” says Richardson, C. J., that the demandant is entitled to judgment in this ease, unless the defence upon which the tenants rely is a legal answer to the action.” The court decided nothing as to the point before us, and there is no allusion to any previous decision of the courts here upon it.

Hall v. Chaffee, 14 N. H. 215, related to aWexecutory devise and not to an estate tail. It is incidentally said by the court that estates tail, though not abolished, are not in accordance with the general spirit of our laws, and are hardly known among us; but there was no investigation or decision upon the point.

The eases of Bell v. Scammon, 15 N. H. 390, and Downing v. Wherren, 19 N. H. 9, and Ladd v. Harvey, 1 Foster 526, each contain allusions to estates tail, in discussing the law relating to executory devises, but there is nothing of weight upon the question before us.

An inference is attempted to be drawn from the statute of 1837, authorizing tenants in tail to convey by deed, and to bar their heirs and the remainder or reversion, that in the opinion of the legislature estates tail still existed here. It seems to us rather designed to obviate some doubt which might have arisen on the subject.

Believing then that no such action of the courts or of the legislature has taken place as to preclude an inquiry into this question, we propose to examine the statutes, and ascertain to what conclusion they lead. To present clearly our views on this matter it may be proper to look back to the state of the law anterior to the statute of Westminster the second, passed in 1285, (13 Ed. I.) called the statute de donis.

j' Conveyances made to a man and his heirs gave to the purchaser an estate in fee, and to an estate in fee certain incidents were held to belong, among which, and the most essential, was the absolute dominion, the power to dispose of it as he pleased. To limit this power and to secure the return of the property to the donor in case the purchaser should have or leave no descendants, it became usual to convey property to a man and the heirs [181]*181of his body. But it became the settled construction of these conveyances that the purchaser took a fee subject to the condition that he had heirs of his body. By the birth of such an heir, the estate of the purchaser became absolute, at least for three purposes. 1. To enable him to alien the land, and thereby to bar not only his own issue, but the reversion of the donor. 2. To subject it to forfeiture for treason ; and 3, to empower him to charge the land with rents and incumbrances, so as to bind his issue. 2 Bla. Com. 111; 4 Kent Com. 11.

To defeat this construction, and to limit the power of the purchaser to divert the property from his heirs, and to divest the title of his grantor on failure of issue, the statute de donis was passed. It provided, “ quod voluntas donatoris, secundum formara in chartam doni sui, manifesté expressam, de caetero observetur, ita quod non habiant illi, quibus tenementum sic fuit datum sub conditione, potestatem alienandi tenementum sic datum, quo minus ad exitum illorum, quibus tenementum sic fuerit datum, remaneat post eorum obitum, vel ad donatorem vel ad ejus heredem, si exitus deficiat, nerestatuiv’ 1 Sull., sec. 286; 1 Cruise Dig. 77.

Upon this statute is founded the whole system of the law relative to estates tail. []Before the statute the donor had what was called a possibility of reverter; a right to have the property if the condition failed, either by the failure or extinction of the prescribed heirs of the donor, but subject to be wholly defeated if the donee, after he had issue, or any of his heirs, should alienate the property. After the statute this possibility was held to become a certain interest; an estate in reversion.

Before the statute, no remainder could be limited after a fee simple conditional, because it was a settled maxim that no remainder could be limited after any fee simple, under the construction of the statute, as the estate given could not be defeated, and the right of the donor was secured, the donee took a limited interest less than a fee simple, called a fee-tail, and the reversion, after it became susceptible of conveyance, and consequently one or more remainders could be limited after the estate tail.

The limitation of the estate to descend to some or all of the [182]*182heirs of the body of the donee, and to revert to the donor or his heirs on failure of such heirs of the donee, and the prohibition to the donee and his heirs to alien the land, so that it should not so descend or revert, were the essential characters of an estate tail, which distinguished it from an estate in fee simple. They ¡were all indispensable, and it would cease to be an estate tail at I once when the cause of descent should be changed, or the re- ! ■version be cut off, or whenever the donee or his heirs should ac-j quire the unlimited power of alienation.

By the decisions of the courts, common recoveries and fines with proclamations, were established as the common assurances of a tenant in tail, and the liability to be defeated by these modes of alienation became an inseparable quality of an estate tail; but though they modified the effect of the statute in a very essential manner, they could effect no repeal of it, even by implication, and the statutes which subjected estates to forfeiture for treason, and made certain leases of the tenants in tail binding on the issue, were too limited in their effect to do more than slightly modify the statute.

It is clear that later statutes repeal, by implication and without express words, such earlier statutes as are inconsistent with them. ■ Foster’s Case, 10 Co. 63 ; Brown’s Max. 23. But such repeals are not favored. Only so much of the present law is repealed as is plainly repugnant to the new provisions, and both are to be’construed so that they may stand together as far as may be. Thornby v. Fleetwood, 10 Mod. 118; Bowen v. Lease, 5 Hill 225; Williams v. Potter, 2 Barb. 320; Snell v. Bridge, 24 Pick. 297.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.H. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-warner-nh-1857.