Lippitt v. Huston

8 R.I. 415
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 8 R.I. 415 (Lippitt v. Huston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lippitt v. Huston, 8 R.I. 415 (R.I. 1867).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was given by

Bradley, C. J.

This cause, heard upon demurrer to a bill in equity for the specific performance of a written contract for the purchase of land, raises only questions of title to the property. And those questions turn chiefly upon the construction of the statutes of the State prescribing the mode of barring estates tail in open court, and the devise of such estates.

It is claimed that, in addition to the acknowledgment made in open court to bar the entail, with the cautions and methods known to the law in taking such acknowledgments, that an additional requisite not named in the statute upon this subject is required, to wit: that the formula required by another statute to be observed by a magistrate, in taking an acknowledgment of a married woman, is to be followed as strictly by the court, in the exercise of their powers under this statute, as by the magistrate in the exercise of his statutory authority.

The first answer to this claim is, that the statute does not in terms — in express terms — so require. If the legislature had intended that special forms and modes of procedure were to be followed in any cases in the proceedings before them to bar an entailed estate, such intention would naturally have been expressed in the statute upon that subject. None such having been expressed by. them, none such, upon the ordinary rules of construction in our day, should be declared to exist in the law. The rule for the construction of statutes is to give them “their plain and obvious meaning.” In the language of Blackstone, to give the “ words ” the “ signification ” they bear “ in general and popular use.” 1 Bl. 60. There is no occasion, certainly, in these days, for either the “ awkward shifts,” the “ subtle inforce *420 ments,” the “strange reasonings,” — to use again the words of Blackstone, — in construing or evading statutes, which that commentator declares were resorted to by the courts, in carrying out the policy of the monarch who appointed them, and a policy also favorable to the interests of the public, in opposition to that of the parliament which enacted the statutes. 'In our time the legislature and the court intend to enact and construe statutes in the plain sense in which men of average intelligence in the community will understand and apply them.

It may not require great professional learning or ingenuity to suggest other and plausible constructions. But when a court departs from the plain and obvious sense, and imports by construction into a statute something unseen and unexpressed there, they incur two dangers: first, that we make law and do not simply confine ourselves to the humbler task of applying it, and thus go beyond our right and duty. And, secondly, there is danger that, in this way, we disturb titles instead of securing to them that peace and repose which the law intends to grant. In short, by our mere word, in construing a statute, we may, in point of fact, give away the property of those who hold it, to those who before never supposed they had any right to it. These dangers, it seems to us, exist in this case. But, to give this claim further consideration, is it unreasonable to suppose that the legislature, in directing the performance of certain acts in open court, in the two highest tribunals of the State, should trust that those courts would, as other courts in similar cases always do, exercise a reasonable oversight that acts thus performed before it, recorded upon its records, certified by its clerk and made a part of the chain of title of real estate, — acts, too, which take away property from those who are not before the court, — should be done intelligently and fairly. Why is the business sent'to those courts except that it calls for the exercise of that discretion and judgment which, in the theory of our law, they are presumed to possess in a higher degree than every individual of the numerous magistrates who are authorized, throughout the State, to take acknowledgments. On the other hand, is it reasonable to suppose that the legislature would require the *421 courts to follow the same precise formulas which they prescribe for every such single magistrate or certifying officer, or, at least, if they so intend, would they not so explicitly say ?

For the question, it is to be remembered, is not whether it is the duty of the court to cause the married woman before it to understand the effect of the act in which she is engaged, as they have done in the present instance, but whether it mast not also certify to precisely the same proceedings and in the same words which are required of these ordinary magistrates. We think, from the difference in the tribunals, not less than from the terms of the two provisions, that a different and larger measure of discretion might be reasonably given to the highest courts of the State, than to its simple justice of the peace and notary public.

Such a view is also consonant to the analogies of the law 'in such cases. Courts of equity, in passing upon causes which touch the interests of married woman, of their own motion and not in pursuance of precise statutes, enquire as to her actual and intelligent consent to the attempted disposal of her property. 1 Danl. Ch. Pr. 115.

So courts of law, in proceedings analogous to this, — in short, in these very proceedings for which the statute in question was intended to be the substitute and equivalent, — took care to en-quire whether the barring of the entail in the wife was “the result of her free choice or of the husband’s compulsive influence,”- — -to use the phrase of Mr. Hargrave, — and this of their own motion. Proceeding to bar the entail in the English law by fine, was but the acknowledgment in a feigned suit, in open court, of a previous conveyance by the tenant in tail. And though, under the English law, a woman could not bind herself or her heirs by any of the direct modes of alienation, she was, in this indirect mode, under the sanction and in the presence of the courts, allowed to convey her estate tail, and convert it into a fee simple. Thomas Co. Litt. 132 c. p. 1. Our statute, to enable parties to bar an entail by acknowledgment of a conveyance in open court is, unquestionably, but the simpler equivalent of the old English mode in their courts termed fines and recovery. And thus these statutes are always treated.

*422 And in the light of this analogy, certainly the most direct one to be found in the law, we 'can sustain the power of our courts, or, more strictly speaking, of the parties themselves proceeding, in open court, to bar the entail of a married woman's estate by acknowledgment as provided in this statute, and conducted, as we have seen, in the courts in which this mode of conveyance had its origin, — that is, in the discretion and judgment of the court, and not in precise forms or terms prescribed for other proceedings and other magistrates. And we have no occasion to resort to another statute when this is intelligently and learnedly understood, if the expression may be allowed, to find the power of a married woman to convey her estate tail in fee simple.

And it is certainly to be presumed, that the committees and the legislature, which have, on so many occasions, revised and reenacted this law, understood its purpose and its office, or the place which it filled in the common law system of conveyancing, and that mode of common assurances in the law of which it took the place.

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Bluebook (online)
8 R.I. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippitt-v-huston-ri-1867.