Lillibridge v. Adie

15 F. Cas. 532, 1 Mason C.C. 224
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 15, 1817
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 532 (Lillibridge v. Adie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lillibridge v. Adie, 15 F. Cas. 532, 1 Mason C.C. 224 (circtdri 1817).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

Upon the facts in this case several important points have arisen; and as every question, touching the nature and effect of devises of real estate, materially affects the title of purchasers, we have taken time to consider them. In no branch of the law is a more cautious examination of authorities necessary; and indeed in no branch are the principles more generally built upon artificial and technical reasoning. It is quite another consideration, whether these principles were originally the most correct or equitable, that could hav.e been adopted. It is sufficient, that they are now incorporated into the law, and cannot be separated from it without shaking the very foundations of all landed titles. We are at liberty in last wills and testaments to effectuate the intention of the testator, if by law it can be done. But in ascertaining what that intention is, the construction, which has been put upon like words, and the artificial rules, by which it is sifted and fixed in the authorities, are to be our inflexible guides, where they distinctly and pointedly apply.. We are not permitted to indulge in conjectures, however plausible, as to the private intention of the party, when the law has already pronounced its own mode of investigating and deciding it.

The first question is, what is the nature and quality of the estate taken under the devise by the daughters of the testator, Harriet and Clementina? Is it an estate tail, or a fee simple? Is it a joint tenancy, or tenancy in common? The testator, after devising a life estate in the lands in controversy to his wife, devises it, “after her decease, to his two beloved daughters, Harriet and Clementina, to them, their heirs and assigns for ever.” If the will had stopped here, there would have been no question, that the daughters took a fee simple. But the testator adds, .“but in case they should die without issue, my will is, that the same shall go to, and vest in, their two sisters, Mary and Charlotte.”

It was supposed at the argument, that the words “if they should die without issue” did not mean a general failure of issue at an indefinite period of time, but a failure at the death of the first takers, or one of them. If this be the legal import of the words, it will certainly add some weight to the argument, that they do not operate to abridge the absolute fee given by the previous clause; for then the limitation over being to take effect, if at all, upon the death of a person in esse, might clearly be good, as an executory devise. Fearne, Exec. Dev. 352; Pells v. Brown, Cro. Jac. 590; Goodtitle v. Wood, Willes, 211, and other cases cited in Lippett v. Hopkins [Case No. 8,380]; Doe v. Wetton, 2 Bos. & P. 324; Jackson v. Staats, 11 Johns. 337. If, on the other hand, these words are to be construed as referring to an indefinite failure of issue, then, unless the estate be in tail only, the limitation over will be on a contingency too remote, and consequently void. Fearne, Exec. Dev. 322; Denn v. Shenton, Cowp. 410; Chadock v. Cowley, Cro. Jac. 695; Brice v. Smith, Willes, 1; Comyn, Dig. “Devise,” S, [536]*536and cases cited in Lippett v. Hopkins [supra]; 6 Cruise, Dig. “Devise,” c. 17, § 22, etc.; Id. e. 18, § 17, etc. The general principle to be extracted from the authorities is, that the words “dying, without issue,” in reference to freehold estates, are to be construed an indefinite failure of issue, unless there be something in the context, which manifestly confines the sense to a definite period of time. In respect to terms of years, and other personal estate, courts hare very much inclined to lay hold of any words to tie up the generality of the expression “dying without issue,” and confine it to dying without issue living at the time of the person’s decease. But in respect to freeholds, the rule has been rigidly enforced, and rarely broken in upon, unless there were strong circumstances to repel it. Fearne, Exec. Dev. 357, 361 (Butler’s Ed., 471, 476); Crooke v. De Vandes, 9 Ves. Jr. 197; Dansey v. Griffiths, 4 Maule & S. 61. The cases of Porter v. Bradley, 3 Term R. 143, and Roe v. Jeffery, 7 Term R. 589, have gone a great way; but they turn on distinctions, which though nice, clearly recognise the general rule. In the first ease, the devise was “to my son A and his heirs and assigns, and in case he should happen to die, leaving no issue behind him, then to my wife B during her widowhood, and after her decease or marriage, to my son C, his heirs and assigns for ever.” Great stress was laid upon the words “leaving no issue behind him,” and upon the circumstance of there being a life estate to B, as confining the contingency to the death of A; and the court held, that A took a fee, and that the devise over was a good executory devise. In the last case, the devise was “to my grandson A, and his heirs for ever, but in case A should depart this life and leave no issue, then the premises should return unto his granddaughters B, C, D, or the survivor or survivors of them, to be equally divided betwixt them, share and share alike.” The court held, that A took a fee, and that the executory devise over was good, the contingency being confined to a life then in esse. Great stress was laid upon the circumstance, that the granddaughters were then living, and only took estates for life. If the estates over in this last ease had been in fee, it seemed admitted, that the other words would not have pointed to any other period than an indefinite failure of issue; and consequently to support the limitation over it must have been held, that A took an estate tail only. In the case now before the court, assuming that the devise over to Mary and Charlotte was in fee, there is not the slightest circumstance, from which we can infer, that the testator intended, that it should take effect (if at all) only upon the failure of issue at the death of the first dev-isees. In this view, it falls completely within the authorities, which pronounce the limitation over to be upon a general and indefinite failure of issue. I need not recite these authorities; they are numerous, and so pointed, that it is impossible to make any solid distinction. See authorities cited; Lippett v. Hopkins [Case No. 8,380]; Fearne, Exec. Dev. 322, etc. (Butler's Ed., 444); 6 Cruise, Dig. “Devise,” c. 17, § 22, etc.; Id. c. 18, § 17; Denn v. Shenton, Cowp. 410; Tenny v. Agar, 12 East, 253; Dansey v. Griffiths, 4 Maule & S. 61. On the other hand, assuming that the devise over gave life estates only to Mary and Charlotte (a construction, which puts an end to the demandant’s claim), it does not follow, that the previous estate is at all events to be held a fee simple. That is only one circumstance, from which an intent to limit the contingency to the death of, the first devisee may be inferred;butitisnotdecisiveasto the extent of the estate previously devised; for such a contingency may as well be limited upon an estate tail as an estate in fee. Spalding v. Spalding, Cro. Car. 185, and cases cited; Lippett v. Hopkins [supra]; Fearne, Exec. Dev. 308. 398. In Porter v. Bradley, Lord Kenyon said, “If the devise had been, and in case he (A,) shall die without heirs, then over,” it would have given to A an estate tail. Yet in that ease there was. a subsequent limitation on failure of A’s issue to the testator’s widow for life. So in Webb v. Hearing, Cro. Jac. 415, the devise was “to A, my son, after the death of my wife, and if my three daughters, or either of them, do outlive their mother, and A, their brother, and his heirs, then they to enjoy the same for term of their lives;” and it was held, that A took an estate tail only. See, also, Tyte v. Willis, Cas. t. Talb, 1; Forth v. Chapman, 1 P. Wms. 663; Roe v. Scott, Fearne, Exec. Dev., note by Powell, p. 363.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 532, 1 Mason C.C. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lillibridge-v-adie-circtdri-1817.