Lee v. Bank of the U. States

36 Va. 200, 9 Leigh 79
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 36 Va. 200 (Lee v. Bank of the U. States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Bank of the U. States, 36 Va. 200, 9 Leigh 79 (Va. 1838).

Opinion

Cabell, J.

The question in this case, depends on the construction and effect of the deed of May 1811, executed by Richard Bland Lee to Zaccheus Collins, conveying to Collins and his heirs the tract of land in Fair-fax, in trust for the uses therein declared. What interests and powers did the declaration of uses create ?

1. Mrs. Lee had an express estate for life for her separate use. 2. She had power, by writing under her hand, to direct the trustee to sell and convey the land or any part of it; the proceeds of sale to be subject to her sepa[204]*204rate use or order: a power which she might have exer ° cised the day after the execution of the deed, and in the lifetime of her husband. I understand that clause as giving to mrs. Lee absolute and uncontrolled dominion over the proceeds, to her separate use, unaffected by any of the subsequent limitations in the deed. 3. At the death of mrs. Lee, the land, if not previously sold by her direction, was to be held by the trustee, to and for the use of Richard Bland Lee during his life. Thus far there seems to be no room for doubt. The difficulty commences with the next clause, which prescribed the destination of the property after the death of Richard Bland Lee, in case he should survive his wife, and which declared, lastly, that “ after his death, it was to be held to and for the use of the devisees or heirs of the said Elizabeth Lee, to be divided and conveyed to them in such portions as the said Elizabeth Lee should by last will direct, or the law of the land in that case made and provided should determine.” This clause is most inartificially drawn; but it is manifest, that it was the intention of the grantor, not only to give mrs. Lee the power of appointing those who should succeed to the property after her death and that of her husband, but further, to prescribe the persons to whom it should go, in case she should fail to make such appointment. Such a provision, in case of mrs. Lee's failure to appoint, was absolutely necessary to the disposition of the inheritance; for without such provision, there having been nothing but life estates granted by the deed, the fee or inheritance would have resulted to the grantor. Both of these objects, the power of appointment by the wife, and the destination of the inheritance in case she should fail to make an appointment, might have been directed so as to leave no doubt on the subject, if the draughtsman of the deed had used two separate simple clauses for expressing the intention of the grantor. But he resorted to the use of one compound clause, and thus [205]*205labouring to be concise, he became obscure.” Obscurities of this sort, however, may often be removed by reducing the sentence to its original elements; by dividing the compound sentence into the simple parts of which it is composed, and throwing into each part that which properly belongs to it. Let us try this process. The estate is to go to mrs. Lee's devisees or heirs: the devisees of mrs. Lee are the persons whom she prescribes to be such by her will; her heirs are the persons prescribed by the law to take her estate in case she makes no will. Her devisees, or her heirs, are to take the estate in such portions as mrs. Lee shall direct, or as the law shall prescribe : that is, her devisees are to take in such portions as mrs. Lee may direct by her will; or, in case there be no will, and consequently no devisees, then her heirs are to take in such portions as the law shall determine. It would be preposterous to say that the heirs of mrs. Lee should take as heirs, in such portions as she should direct by her will; for if they take under her will, and in portions directed by her, they are devisees or appointees, and not heirs. If we reduce this sentence to its component parts, assigning to each what properly belongs to it, all difficulty will vanish; for then it will run thus: after the death of Richard Bland Lee, to and for the use of the devisees of mrs. Lee, to be divided and conveyed to them in such portions as she shall by her last will direct: or in case she shall fail to give such direction by her will, then the property is to go to her heirs, in such portions as the laws of the land may determine. If the deed had been in that form (as I conceive it is in substance) then it would be clear, that there would have been an express estate to mrs. Lee for her life, remainder to her husband for life, remainder to such persons as she should appoint by her will, remainder, in default of such appointment, to the right heirs of mrs. Lee. And, in that case, the remainder limited to the heirs of mrs. Lee, [206]*206would, under the operation of the rule in Shelley’s case, have vested in her; so that she would have the whole estate, subject only to her husband’s life estate, with an express power to convey the estate by her will.

Having thus ascertained the meaning of the limitations of this deed, ’let us now proceed to the main question in the cause, whether the express power to devise the estate, took from mrs. Lee the power to convey it by deed in her lifetime ? I am of opinion that her power is not thus restricted.

, We rpust bear in mind, that real and not personal property is the subject in controversy; for the law, as it relates to the power of the wife over her separate estate, is different, in many respects, when applied to real, from what it is when applied to personal estate; as I shall hereafter have occasion to shew.

By the common law, it is a fundamental principle, that the sole deeds of a feme covert are void. Perk. § 6. 2 Roper on Prop. 98. It follows, therefore, that she cannot, without the concurrence of her husband, part with or encumber her own freehold estate. And this principle is, from the policy on which it is founded, applicable to the wife’s separate estate, settled or limited by deed or otherwise to her separate use, The jus disponendi, however, is incident to the idea of property; and, therefore, when real estate is limited to the separate use of the wife, although she cannot dispose of it by her own sole act, yet she may part with it by fine or recovery in England, or by deed in this country, her husband joining with her in the deed, and she being privily examined according to our statute, even although nothing be said in the deed creating the separate estate, as to the power of the wife to dispose of it. And it is to these modes of conveyance, where her husband joins with her, and to these only, that the remarks of the judges are applicable, when they say, that the wife may dispose of her separate real estate, in cases [207]*207where the deed creating it is silent as to the power of disposing of it. For it has been solemnly decided, that the wife cannot, in such cases, dispose of it by will. West v. West's ex'ors, 3 Rand. 373. But it is competent to the grantor of real estate in trust for the separate use of a feme covert, to give her power to dispose of it by either deed or will; and then she may dispose of it, accordingly, by her own sole act. It is competent to him, also, to restrain the power of alienation, by confining it to some particular mode, or by interdicting it entirely. And I am of opinion that this may be done either expressly, or by necessary implication. For, cujus estdare, ejus est disponere.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Va. 200, 9 Leigh 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-bank-of-the-u-states-va-1838.