Miller v. . Emans

19 N.Y. 384
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 19 N.Y. 384 (Miller v. . Emans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. . Emans, 19 N.Y. 384 (N.Y. 1859).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 386 The only clauses of the will of James Emans which are material to the questions to be considered are the following:

"Thirdly, it is my will that all the residue of my estate, both real and personal, after paying out the legacies above mentioned, my just debts and funeral expenses, should be equally divided among my sons, Cornelius, James and John, and my daughters Elizabeth, Catharine, Ann and Margaret."

"Fourthly, it is my further will that, in case either of my said sons and daughters last mentioned should die without lawful issue, the proportion of my estate which he or she may *Page 387 receive by virtue of this will, shall be equally divided among the survivors."

The question is, whether the interest of the daughters in the real estate of their father, and especially their contingent right of survivorship, under the fourth item of the will, passed to the sons by the deed of the 14th of June, 1810. To determine this question, it is necessary to recur to some of the principles which govern this mode of conveyance. A release was a form of transfer, used at common law only where some right to real estate existed in one person, the actual possession of which was in another. The possession in such case was said to "countervail livery" (Dyer, 269, pl. 20, in marg.), that is, it supplied the place of and rendered unnecessary that open and notorious delivery of the possession which the common law required in cases of transfer of lands.

After the statute of uses, however, by force of which certain words in a conveyance were held to transfer a constructive possession, deeds combining the necessary words under the statute, with the operative words of a release, became a common mode of conveying lands to parties not in possession. The deed in question here contains no words which could give it effect under the statute of uses. It is a pure deed of release at the common law, and is governed by common law principles alone. Had it even been executed after the Revised Statutes, the questions would have been the same as now; because no language is inserted which could bring it within the provisions of those statutes, making "expectant estates" alienable. Under those provisions they are to be aliened "in the same manner as estates in possession," that is, by "grant," to constitute which, under the statute, required either a formal grant at common law or an instrument valid as a conveyance under the statute of uses. (1 R.S., 726, § 35;id., 738, §§ 136, 138, 142.)

It will be useful here to notice the different modes in which releases operated at common law. They were said to enure in four several ways, viz.:

1. Per mitter le droit: As where a person who has been disseised releases to the disseisor, his heir or feofee. There, by *Page 388 the release, the right which was in the releaser is added to the possession of the releasee, and the two combined perfect the estate.

2. Per mitter l'estate: Where two or more are seised, either by deed, devise or descent, as joint-tenants or coparceners of the same estate, and one of them releases to the other, this is said to enure by way of mitter l'estate. As this is the mode in which the release in this case must operate, if at all, in transferring the absolute vested interest of the daughters, it will be well to dwell for a moment upon it. At common law, joint-tenants could release to each other, but tenants in common could not. (Shep. Touch., 326, 327.) The reason was that each joint tenant was deemed to be seised of the whole estate and not of his separate portion only. He was seised per my and pertout; and hence a conveyance might be made to him without livery of seisen. But tenants in common being seised of their respective portions alone, no title could pass from the one to the other without livery. Under the statute of uses, it is true, one tenant in common could release to another by inserting words of bargain and sale. This release, however, contains no such words, and must, therefore, operate, if at all, by force of the common law. It is clear, then, that if the devisees, under the will of James Emans, were tenants in common merely, this release would be entirely inoperative, even as to the vested interest of the daughters. The recital in the release of the fact of possession in the releasees, would be construed in accordance with the actual title with which they were clothed.

It is perhaps not easy to say what is the precise nature of the estate created by this will. In cases of joint tenancy the right of survivorship is absolute to the tenant who survives. Here it depends upon the additional contingency of the death of a co-tenant without issue. It is this right of survivorship, giving to each joint-tenant an interest in the whole estate, which causes each to be deemed seised of the whole. But this interest, even of a joint-tenant, is contingent upon his surviving his co-tenant. Here another contingency is added, and *Page 389 the interest, therefore, is a little more remote. Still, as the interest of each devisee, however remote, pervades the whole estate, their seisin should, I think, as in the case of joint tenants, be deemed to extend to the whole. The counsel for the plaintiffs must, I apprehend, have come to this conclusion, as he has not made the point.

3. A third mode in which releases operate, is that of enlarging an estate. This is where a person who has a future interest, either vested or contingent, releases to one who has the possession or some vested estate in the premises. At common law such a release could only be made to one who had an actual rightful possession. Under the statute of uses it might be made to any one who had a vested estate, provided the necessary privity existed; that is, provided the right released and the interest of the releasee were parts of the same estate.

4. The fourth mode in which releases operate is by extinguishment. Where the right released is of such a nature that it cannot be enjoyed in connection with the estate of the releaser, then it becomes extinguished: as where the lord releases his seigniory to the tenant. It will be unnecessary to notice this class further.

The release in the present case, so far as it purports to convey the future interests of the releasers, comes obviously under the third head; and operates, if at all, by way of enlarging the estate of the releasees. It being executed to parties in the actual possession of the premises, it was not necessary that it should contain any words to give it effect under the statute of uses. Two objections are made to its operation, viz.: 1. That the words used to describe the interests conveyed, do not embrace the contingent rights of survivorship of the releasors; and 2. That as bare possibilities, those rights could not be released.

The words of the release are, "all the right, title, interest, property, claim and demand of any nature of the said parties of the first part, of, in, or to the said lands, tenements, or hereditaments, and the reversion or reversions, remainder or remainders, *Page 390 rents, issues and profits thereof." These words would seem expressly designed to cover every possible interest which the parties might have, and I cannot doubt that they were understood and intended to embrace the interest in question. That interest is in substance a contingent remainder.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.Y. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-emans-ny-1859.