Lithgow v. Kavenagh

9 Mass. 161
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 15, 1812
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 9 Mass. 161 (Lithgow v. Kavenagh) 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
Lithgow v. Kavenagh, 9 Mass. 161 (Mass. 1812).

Opinion

Sewall, J.

The verdict taken for the tenant in this cause, upon the issue of not guilty, is subject to the opinion of the Court upon the case reserved and reported; and the general question to be decided is, whether this verdict shall be set aside, and a new trial shall be granted, upon the motion of the demandant.

The evidence for the demandant is the last will of James Noble, in which a devise of the demanded premises is expressed; the con struction and effect of which is a principal question in the cause The seisin of William Lithgow, the father, and of Sarah Lithgow, their deaths, and the death of William Lithgow, the son, have not been contested; and it appears that the demandant is the second son of William and Sarah Lithgow, the devisees named in the will, and their eldest son and heir by the common law, at the death of Sarah, his mother.

The devise, relied on for the demandant, is in these words: “ I [151]*151give to Colonel William Liihgoio, and Sarah, his wife, and the heirs of her body, to be at the disposal of their father, William Lithgow, Esq., among his children, as he shall think proper, the westerly side or half of the stream,” &c., [describing the demanded premises,] “ on consideration that he, the said William Lithgow, or his heirs or assigns, pay my loving wife, yearly, during her natural life, every first day of June, twenty pounds lawful * money. And in case I should sell said estate, I order that the money I receive shall be paid to the said Lithgow, to be disposed of among his children as aforesaid, he, the said William Lithgow, or his heirs, giving my loving wife, &c., security to pay her twenty pounds yearly as aforesaid.”

The plea, by the tenant of the premises, that he is not guilty, seems to be an undertaking to maintain a title on his part; whatever might have been otherwise the right of the demandant. At least it may be said that, according to the report, this was the light in which the case was examined at the trial. The constructive effect and operation of the devise and gift in question, will be best considered, therefore, in examining the evidence exhibited at the trial, to prove a title in the tenant, and upon which this anomalous issue was found for him, that he had not been guilty of deforcing the demandant.

The evidence was, first, the deed of William Lithgow, the father^ made to the tenant, February 9, 1795, in consideration of 1018(7 money paid, or secured to be paid, to convey to him the demanded premises, to hold to him in fee simple, with warranty again s.lWÜ persons claiming by, from, or under, the grantor, or Sarah, his wife, and against the heirs, claiming as such, of the late Major Noble, the devisor, or any other conveyance made by or under him. And in this deed, Sarah Lithgow, the mother of the demandant, is made a party by these words at the close: “ I, the said William Lithgow, and Sarah, my wife, in token of her full, free, and entire relinquishment of all her right to said granted premises, have hereunto set our hands and seals,” &c.; and by her signing and sealing with her husband. This deed, having been duly executed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, was acknowledged, both by William Lithgow and Sarah Lithgow, on the 24th of February, 1795, and duly registered on the 25th of the same month.

2. The mortgage deed of the tenant, made to the said William Lithgow, the father, in fee simple, to reconvey the premises * purchased of him, to be held as a collateral security, and conditioned for the payment of 900Z., part of the purchase money, according to the two promissory notes of the tenant. The mortgage deed was acknowledged and registered [152]*152at the same time, and corresponds in all respects with the deed of William and Sarah Lithgoiv.

3. The deed of Sarah Lithgow and James N. Lithgow, another son of William and Sarah Lithgow, made after the death of the father, dated November 18, 1799, acknowledged by her the next day, and by J. N. Lithgow, February 10, 1800, and on that day lcgistered.

In this deed there is a recital of the before-mentioned deeds. The first is called the deed of William Lithgow and his wife, Sarah Lithgow; and they are said to have granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed, the premises in controversy to James Kavenagh; and it is further recited, that James Kavenagh, and Matthew Cottrill, originally concerned with the said James Kavenagh in the purchase of the land aforesaid, have paid the sum mentioned in the condition of the said mortgage, in full satisfaction thereof; and in order that the said mortgage should be fully and absolutely discharged, and the tract of land aforesaid should he vested in the said Kavenagh and Cottrill, the said Sarah Lithgow and James N. Lithgow, also described as administrators of William. Lithgow, the father, deceased ; and in consideration of the sum mentioned in the condition of the mortgage deed aforesaid, paid by James Kavenagh and Matthew Cottrill, the receipt whereof is acknowledged by the said Sarah Lithgoiv and James N. Lithgow, they do for themselves, and in oieir capacities aforesaid, grant, release, remise, and forever quitclaim, to the said James Kavenagh and Matthew Cottrill, their heirs 4*4 assigns forever, all their, the grantors’, and all the said William Lithgow’s right, title, interest, and estate, in and to the following described tract of land, &c.; describing the demanded premises, as in the former deeds thereof. And there is annexed a covenant by Sarah Lithgoiv and James * N. Lithgow, for themselves, their heirs, executors, and administrators; and, in their capacities as administrators, to warrant and defend the afore-granted premises, &c., against all persons lawfully claiming from, by, or under, the grantors, or under William Lithgow, deceased.

If William Lithgow, the father, held the demanded premises as his own in fee simple, or by a less estate with a power of disposing of the same in fee simple, the tenant’s title is maintained under the first deed; The demandant’s title is also disproved by this construction of the devise; although the application of the evidence would have been more direct and precise upon the general issue of ne dona pas; but in that view of the case, the verdict ought to be confirmed, as the evidence must be considered as conclusive against the demandant.

[153]*153So, also, supposing a gift and tenancy in tail, the tenant is sufficiently defended, if, by the legal effect of the deeds offered in evidence on his part, or of either of them, the tenancy in tail was barred and defeated; for then the tenant is entitled to hold, against the issue of the tenant in tail, by force of the statute of this commonwealth, which provides for the barring of estates tail, &c., by deed.

In the argument for the tenant, his counsel have assumed the ground of a fee simple estate in William Lithgow, the father; or, at least, of a joint estate tail in him, and in Sarah Lithgow, the mother of the demandant; which, it is said, is conclusive against this action, as the demandant, in his writ and count, entitles himself as heir to his mother,

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mass. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lithgow-v-kavenagh-mass-1812.