Lowe v. Brooks

23 Ga. 325
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 Ga. 325 (Lowe v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe v. Brooks, 23 Ga. 325 (Ga. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court.

Benning, J.

delivering the opinion.

John, James, and Emma Lowe were joint tenants of the slaves in dispute. John and perhaps James, died.

The question is, whether John’s interest in the slaves, in whole, or in part, went on his death, to Emma.

By a rule of the common law, on the death of one joint tenant, the property, held in joint tenancy, whether real, or personal, went to the surviving joint tenants.

[327]*327111 1828, the Legislature passed an act in these words: “ Whereas, it is doubtful whether the right of survivorship, as under the English law, does not still exist in this State, in all estates of joint tenancy.”

“Be it enacted, That from, and after, the passage of this act, when two or more persons shall hold and possess any estate of lands in joint tenancy, in this State, and one or more of said joint tenants may depart this life during the existence of said estate, the title or interest of the deceased joint tenant, in said estate, shall not go and become the property of the surviving joint tenant or tenants, as under the English law, but that the same shall be distributed as all other estates, under the existing laws of this State.” Cobb’s Dig. 545.

This act confines itself to estates in “lands.”

In 1854, the Legislature extended the act “to personal estate held in joint tenancy.” Acts of 1853-’4. 70.

But John Lowe, the one of the joint tenants in this case, who is dead, died before the year 1854. So, at least, it is assumed, by the counsel on both sides.

That act, therefore, cannot affect the question.

But it is insisted for the defendant in error, that this common law principle of survivorship among joint tenants, did not exist in this State at the time when even the first of those two acts was passed. It is insisted for him, that this doctrine had been abolished by the people, or by the Legislature, long before 1828.

The question for us, therefore, is, whether this position taken for the defendant, is true? To that question, I proceed.

A part of the 51st section of the Constitution of 1777, is as follows:

“Estates shall not be entailed; and when a person dies' intestate, his or her estate shall be divided equally among his or her children; the widow shall have a child’s share or her dower at' her option.”

“A person” — this is equivalent to a general term. It [328]*328means any person. It must therefore equally include, persons who are sole tenants, and persons who are tenants in connection with others ; as, tenants in common, tenants in coparcenary, and joint tenants.

If, therefore, the meaning of the term, “ a person,” had been expressed in full in the part of the quoted section of the Constitution, that part would have taken this form — ■ .“and when any person, whether sole tenant, tenant in common, tenant in coparcenary, or joint tenant, dies intestate, his or her estate shall be divided equally,” &c.

And if the part had taken this form, it would have included the sense, if not almost the very operative words, of the act aforesaid of 1838. “And one or more of said joint tenants may depart this life during the existence of said estate, the title or interest of the deceased joint tenant,” &c. shall be distributed,” &c. These are the operative words of that act.

It must follow, that if the act of 1828 was sufficient to abolish this doctrine of the survivorship among joint tenants, then the above quoted part of the Constitution of 1777, was also sufficient to abolish the doctrine, and therefore,-it must follow, that this part of -the Constitution of 1777, did abolish the doctrine.

But even if we did not have the Act of 1828, to aid us in the interpretation of this part of the Constitution of 1777, we should, I think, have to come to the same conclusion.

First, let us look to the Avords of this part: The words, a “ person,” in the part, being equivalent to the tvords, any person, they include a person, though he be, a joint tenant.

If then we express what is thus impliedly included, the part of the Constitution in question, Avould stand as follows : “ when any person not excepting a joint tenant, dies intestate, his or her estate shall be divided equally,” &c,

It may be assumed, therefore, that this part of the Constitution, says, that the estate of any person not excepting a joint tenant, when he dies intestate, shall be equally divided among his wife and children,” &c.

[329]*329What then means the expression, the estate of a deceased person, Avhen applied to the case of a deceased person, who died a joint tenant ? Does it mean that estate only which he held as sole tenant, or that, and also the estate Avhich he held as joint tenant?

The ansAver of men unskilled in the law, would doubtless be, that the expression means all the estate which the deceased person had Avhen he died, including that Avhich he had, as joint tenant, as Avell as that Avhich he had, not as joint tenant.

This, too, Avould, doubtless, as we have seen, have been the answer of the Legislature of 1828, for the operative words of their act aforesaid, differ little, from the expression under consideration.

And if this would be the ansAver of the generality of men,- and the Legislature itself, perhaps, Ave ought to be satisfied, and ought to say, it is the answer.

But is it impossible, that this might not also be the an-* srver of the lawyer ? Is it certain, that the law, (the common law,) says, that Avhat a dead man holds as joint tenant, when he dies, cannot be a part of his estate after his death, but, without having become any part of that estate, must pass directly to the surviving joint tenant ? To say so, is to say, that a joint tenant cannot be a tenant in fee simple, but can only be a tenant in some limited fee, or, a tenant for life; for Avhat belongs to a person, as tenant in fee simple, becomes a part of his estate on his death. But, it is beyond question, that a person may be joint tenant in fee simple.

And to say, (in the case of a joint tenancy in fee simple, and death of one of the joint tenants) that the survivor takes the part of the estate that had belonged to the deceased one, as successor to him, is not to do more violence to the conveyance creating the joint tenancy, if as much, as would be done to it, if Ave said, that such survivor takes as successor to the maker of that conveyance; (and we have to say, that he takes as successor to the one or the other,) for the convey[330]*330anee being one in fee, is a conveyance to the two joint tenants and their heirs; the effect of which is, to create two fee simple estates, joined together, it is true, but still two, one in one joint tenant, the other, in the other; and to say, that the survivor takes the one of these two estates, that was the estate of the other, as successor to the maker of the conveyance, that is, by the conveyance is to say, what the conveyance itself opposes, for the conveyance gives to him who is the survivor, but one of the two estates, and the other of the two estates, it gives to him who has become the deceased joint tenant.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ga. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-v-brooks-ga-1857.