Knapp v. Windsor

60 Mass. 156, 6 Allen 156
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 Mass. 156 (Knapp v. Windsor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knapp v. Windsor, 60 Mass. 156, 6 Allen 156 (Mass. 1850).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This case certainly presents a remarkable coincidence of facts, not likely often to occur. It is that of a female dying intestate, with considerable personal property in her own right, having three grandparents living, but leaving no child, parent, brother, or sister. The appellant is her paternal grandmother, the mother of her father; the appellees are the father and mother of her deceased mother, and are of course husband and wife. These grandparents are now to take her estate, as next of kin, by force of the statute of distributions. Rev. Sts. c. 64, § 1, cl. 3, referring to and adopting c. 61, § 1, cl. 5. The words are, “ shall descend to his next of kin in equal degree.” It is a plain rule of law, that those who take property, as a class of persons described, where there is nothing in the law making the appropriation to distinguish their respective rights, take in equal shares. Under this rule, there being three heirs, next of Mn in equal degree, the estate apparently must be divided into three shares, and the appellant be entitled to one of them, or one third. There would seem to be no doubt of the applicability of this rule to the present case, were not two of the distributees husband and wife. It is upon this fact, that the appellant raises the present question and claims one half, on the ground, that husband and wife are but one person in law, and, therefore, that they together and jointly are entitled to but one share, or moiety, and that she is entitled to the other.

This maxim is one of those fictions of law, intended to sub-serve a useful purpose, but not to be applied absolutely and [158]*158without qualification. To many purposes, husband and wife are one person in law, but they are several fur the purpose of being the donees, grantees, or recipients of property. If property comes by law or is granted to a man, he is not the less competent to take and hold it because he has a wife: so if it comes to a woman, it is not the less available to her because she is a wife. The law, for the accomplishment of its own purposes, in regulating the rights and duties of husband and wife, may direct how it shall be taken, held, "and disposed of, at and after marriage and during coverture, but that does not affect the act by which' it is acquired. If it is real estate, the law directs that the husband shall be seized of it, in right of his wife, and be entitled to the possession and rents during coverture; if it is goods and chattels, the property in them vests absolutely and forthwith in the husband ; but if it is a chose in action, he is entitled to it as his own, on reducing it to possession, as he may do. A right to a distributive share of an intestate estate, coming to a wife, is a chose in action, which the husband may reduce to possession, and take to his own use, at any time during coverture, and if he does not, it survives to the wife if she survives him. Wildman v. Wildman, 9 Ves. 174; Carr v. Taylor, 10 Ves. 574 ; Schuyler v. Hoyle, 5 Johns. Ch. 196; Hayward v. Hayward, 20 Pick. 517. These shares, coming to each of the grandparents, suo jure, though claimed by a common title, are distinct rights. The words of the statute (Rev. Sts. c. 64, § 1,) are, “ shall be applied and distributed.” Though like in amount, they are not the same shares. The law makes them several and distinct, and'this is implied in the term “ distributed.”

But if the rule is a sound one, that because husband and wife are but one person in law, they can take but one share, it would apply to descendants as well as ancestors. But descendants may take in unequal proportions ; as where several grandchildren, say four, take in their own right, and five children of a fifth grandchild, by right of representation. Suppose then a grandson, taking a fifth, had previously intermarried with a great-granddaughter, taking a fifth of á fifth, or one twenty-fifth. If they take as one person, is it the husband’s [159]*159fifth, or the wife’s twenty-fifth ? This shows not only that the shares are several in their nature, but may be different in amount, and that the distributees do not take jointly. The shares have a common origin, but there is no entirety or unity in their creation. The unity of title, as well as of interest, necessary to joint tenancy, is wanting.

But the appellant relies on the analogy between a distributive share coming to husband and wife by operation of law, and a gift or grant by deed of devise to husband and wife. It is laid down in the books, that baron and feme being one person in law, there can be no moieties between them of an estate given to them jointly during coverture. Co. Lit. 187 a; Bac. Ab., Joint Tenants, B. But if an estate is made to a man and a woman and their heirs, before marriage, and after they marry, the husband and wife have moieties. Co. Litt. 187 b. The distinction, we think, is, that in the first case, the grant is made to husband and wife, as such, by one and the same act, of one and the same entire estate; and by the rule of the common law, this creates a joint tenancy with a right of survivorship. So, it is laid down, that if a grant is made to A. and his wife, and to B., or to B. and C., and their heirs, respectively, they are all joint tenants, as between themselves; but the husband and wife are tenants by entireties as to each other; and as, for all the purposes of ownership, the husband and wife are but one person in law, they take only a moiety, in the one case, and only a third in the other. 2 Kent, Com. 132.

This we think arises from the consideration, that in a conveyance which derives its character and quality from the act of the party making it, as a grant or devise, which takes effect from the intent of the grantor or devisor, the law presumes in an express gift to husband and wife, as such, and in terms, or so designated, that it is the intent of the party to regard them as one person in law, and therefore that they shall take jointly with the other grantees or devisees named, and so only one share. And chancellor Kent, (2 Com. 132,) in a note, cites the authority of Mr. Preston, (2 Abstr. of Title, 41,) for the position, that as the law is now understood, husband and wife may, by express words, be made tenants in common by a gift to them during coverture.

[160]*160The rule itself is originally laid down in Litt. § 291, and the ground or reason assigned by Coke is, that husband and wife take one and the same title, in one and the same right, and so it is joint; but that if they take different titles it is otherwise ; as if a man make a lease to A. and to a baron and feme named, to A. for life, to the husband in tail, and to the wife for years; in this case, each hath a third part, in respect to the severalty of their estates. Co. Litt. 189 b. The same thing is more fully expounded, in treating of the distinction between joint tenants and tenants in common, where lord Coke says, the essential difference is, that joint tenants have the lands by one joint title, in one right, and tenants in common bv several titles, or by one title and by several rights. Co. Litt. 189 a.

In the present case, although in a certain sense the husband and wife claim under one title, that is, each as an heir of one and the same intestate, yet it is by several and distinct rights, not depending at all upon their relation of husband and wife. It appears to us, that the analogy between the acquisition of property by operation of law, giving to each individual of a class a share suo jure,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Mass. 156, 6 Allen 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knapp-v-windsor-mass-1850.