Lawrence v. . Pitt

46 N.C. 344
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 N.C. 344 (Lawrence v. . Pitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. . Pitt, 46 N.C. 344 (N.C. 1854).

Opinion

Battle, J.

The facts stated in the case agreed, present the question, whether the reversionary estate in lands in fee simple, after a life estate in the same is to be regulated in its descent by the sixth rule in our canons of inheritance in the same manner as if it were an estate in possession. The solution of this question depends upon the sense in which the word seized ” is used in those canons. This word is a well known term of the common law, signifying the possession or occupation of the soil by a free man or freeholder, one who has at least a life estate in the land, 2 Black. Com. 104. Seizin was of two kinds, sei- *347 zin in deed, or the actual possession or occupation of the land, and seizin in law, which was a bare right to possess or occupy it. Ibid 127. The difference between the two kinds is thus illustrated : “ Where a freehold estate is conveyed to a person by feofment, with livery of seizin, or by any of those conveyances which derive their effect from the statute of uses, he acquires a seizin in deed and a ’freehold in 'deed. But where a freehold estate comes to a person by act of law, as by descent, he only acquires a seizin in law; that is,, a right to the possession; and his estate is called a freehold in law. For, he must make an actual entry on the land to acquire a seizin, and a freehold in deed.” 1 Cru. Dig., tit. 1, see. 24; Co. Lit. 266 b. In the English Canons of Inheritance, an actual seizin of land was necessary to constitute a person an ancestor from whom an estate could be derived by descent. A bare right or title to enter or be otherwise seized, would not do. Hence the maxim, seisina fcucit stipitem. Black. Com. 209; Co. Lit. 15. It is manifest, from this explanation of seizin, that neither actually nor legally could it be had of a remainder or reversion after a life estate. It could not be so had, because the tenant for life-was in the present occupation of the land, and there could not. be two distinct or separate seizins in the same land, at the same' time. Hence arose a peculiarity in the descent of such estates,, which is well expressed by Judge Story, in the case referred tO' in the argument of the defendant’s counsel, of Cook v. Hammond, 4 Mason’s Rep. 484. “ Where the estate descended, is a. present estate in fee, no person can inherit it, who cannot, at the time of the descent east, make himself heir of the person last in the actual seizin thereof. But of estates in expectancy,, as reversions and remainders, there can be no actual seizin during the existence of the particular estate of freehold; and,consequently, there cannot be any mesne actual seizin, which of itself shall turn the descent, so as to make any mesne reversioner or remainderman a new stock of .descent, whereby his heir, who is not the heir of the person last actually seized of the estate, may inherit. The rule, therefore, as to reversions and remain *348 ders, expectant upon estates in freehold is, that unless something is done to intercept the descent, they pass, when the particular estate falls in, to the person who can then make himself heir of the original donor, who was seized in fee, and created the particular estate, or, if it be an estate b purchase, the heir of him who was the first purchaser of such reversion or remainder. It is no matter in how many persons the reversion or remainder may, in the intermediate period, have vested by descent; they do not, of course, form a new stock of inheritance. The law looks only to the heir of the donor or first purchaser.” See the note on the 228th page, in any of later editions of Black. Com., and the cases there cited. The same was held to be a rule of the common law in New York. Jackson v. Hendricks, 3 John. Cases, 214; Bates v. Schraeder, 13 John. Rep. 260; It has also been decided to be a part of our common law. Exum v. Davie, 1 Murp. Rep. 475.

It is manifest, then, that, prior to the passage of our act to regulate descents in 1808, the son of the plaintiff’s lessor would not have been the propositus or stock from whom the inheritance could have been derived. Is the rule changed by that act? is the question which we now have to consider. The plaintiff’s counsel contends that it is, by force of the words “ actually or legally,” which are used in the first rule, in connection with the word “seized;” that those words must be supplied by construction, to explain and qualify the term seized wherever it occurs in the other rules; that a person is legally seized of an estate in reversion, after a particular estate for life ; and that all these propositions are established by the case of Bell v. Dozier, 1 Dev. Rep. 333. We do not understand the counsel to insist that the words “ legally seized” have a different signification in our act, from what they bear at common law. We suppose that he acquiesces in the rule, which is well established, “ that when a statute makes use of a word, the meaning of which was well ascertained at common law, the word shall be understood in the same sense it was at common law.” Kitchen v. Tyson, 3 Murph. Rep. 314; Rives v. Guthrie, ante. 84. *349 It is so even with regard to words used in our Constitution. Roberts v. Cannon, 4 Dev. and Bat. Rep. 256. In the matter of the contested election between Berry and Waddell, published in an appendix to the reports of the cases decided at December Term, 1848, 9 Ired. Rep. These words must then be understood in the same sense in which they are used at common law, as there is nothing in the act itself to show that they were intended to be used in any other sense. We admit that the words “ actually and legally ” are to be supplied whenever the term seized is used alone in any of the rules of descent prescribed in the act, because they are expressed in the first rule, and we can see no reason for excluding them from the others; and it was so held in Bell v. Dozier. We admit further, that that case is apparently an authority in 'favor of the other propositions contended for by the plaintiff’s counsel; and yet, we cannot yield our assent to the conclusion which he deduces from It. The judgment in that case may well stand, though some of the positions assumed in It are manifestly wrong, and the inferences drawn from them therefore erroneous. It was an action of waste against a dowress and her second husband, in which it is expressly stated, in the opinion of the Court, that the waste was committed upon the land assigned to the widow for her dower. She and her husband were therefore liable to the action, whether she held the land as dower, or as being vested in her for life, upon the death of her son Jesse, under the 6th Rule of Descents.

In the course of his opinion, Judge Henderson says: “ The case does not expressly state that Jesse was ever actually seized; but I think it may be inferred from the assignment of dower — - for it is taken out of his seizin.” This is a plain mistake, for the widow’s dower is not taken out of the seizin of the heir, but of that of her husband. The well known maxim of dos de dote peti non debet, depends upon this very principle; for the reason is, that when the heir endows the widow of the ancestor, the assignment defeats the seizin which the heir acquired by the descent of the land to' him; so that the widow is in of the estate *350 of her husband, and the heir is considered as never having been - seized of that part.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.C. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-pitt-nc-1854.