Moore v. Darby

6 Del. Ch. 193
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Del. Ch. 193 (Moore v. Darby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Darby, 6 Del. Ch. 193 (Del. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Miriam E. Moore has filed her petition in this court, praying for partition between her and her two brothers, Samuel W. Darby and John C. Darby, of lands situate in Mispillion and South Murderkill Hun[198]*198dreds, formerly belonging to Samuel Warren, senior. One of these tracts of land contains about 700 acres; one other contains something over 200 acres, and a third tract contains upwards of 180 acres.

Samuel Warren, senior, died in 1848. By his will, admitted to probate November 6, 1848, he devised as follows:

Fcmrth. I give and devise to my beloved wife, Miriam, for and during the term of her natural life, without impeachment of waste, all that farm or tract of land with the appurtenances situate in Mispillion Hundred, Kent County, and State of Delaware, being the Mansion Farm on which Solomon Townsend, senior, and Solomon Townsend, junior, lived and died, and now in the tenure of Abner Woofers, and containing six hundred acres more or less; and from and immediately after the death of my said wife, I give and devise the said farm or tract of land, with the appurtenances unto Solomon Townsend Warren and John W. Hall and their heirs for and during the natural life of my daughter Mary Darby, now the wife of John M. Darby, upon trust, to receive the rents and profits thereof and to pay the same to my said daughter Mary during her natural life, for her sole and separate use, notwithstanding her coverture, free from the debts, management, power, and control of her now husband the .said John M. Darby, or of any other husband by her hereafter to be taken, and the receipt of the said Mary alone from time to time to be a sufficient discharge and after the death of my said daughter, I give and devise the farm or tract of land aforesaid with the appurtenances unto the heirs of my said daughter Mary in fee simple absolute, clear and discharged from the trust aforesaid.

“Fifth. I give and devise unto Solomon Townsend Warren and John W. Hall and their heirs for and during [199]*199the natural life of my daughter Mary Darby, now the wife of John M. Darby, the farm or tract of land which I purchased of Dr. Alexander Lowber near Frederica •containing five hundred acres more or less with the appurtenances upon trust, to receive the rents and profits thereof and to pay the same to my said daughter Mary ■during her natural life, for her sole and separate use, notwithstanding her coverture, free from the debts, management, power, or control of her now husband the said John M. Darby, or of any other husband by her hereafter to be taken, and- the receipt of the said Mary alone from time to time to be a sufficient discharge. And after the -death of my said daughter, I give and devise the farm •or tract of land aforesaid unto the heirs of my said daughter Mary in fee simple absolute, clear and discharged from the trust aforesaid.”

The tract of land in Mispillion Hundred, as appears from the return of the freeholders, in fact contains about 700 acres of land and the two tracts in South Murderkill .Hundred contain, as appears by said report, something •over 400 acres. This discrepancy between the will of Samuel Warren, senior, and the report of the freeholders is not accounted for by any proof in the cause, but the •discrepancy is immaterial, as there is no doubt that the land mentioned in the will above recited and the land -of which partition is sought are the same. Thomas H. Moore has filed his petition, therein stating that he intermarried with the said Miriam E. Moore, the petitioner in the proceedings for partition on or about the 4th day of September, 1852, and had by her issue born •alive and thereby became tenant by the curtesy initiate of the lands of which she was seised for and during said •coverture, and that as said tenant by the curtesy initiate in the lands of his said wife, Miriam E., he has been informed and believes that he has an interest and is enti[200]*200tied to be made a party to said proceedings in chancery and he therefore prays that he as her husband may be-made a party thereto.

He was made a party by the consent of the solicitors-for the plaintiff and defendants respectively.

The freeholders appointed to make partition of the-lands have reported that the same cannot be divided, without detriment to the parties entitled and that they therefore have appraised the lands as by their commission they were commanded to do. The lands in respect to-which partition is prayed, have been sold, the proceeds, of sale paid into court, and the question is now raised by the solicitors for the husband of the petitioner whether her share of the proceeds of sale shall be paid to her absolutely, or, as they claim would be proper, shall be: ordered to be invested for her benefit, .the interest paid, to her for life and the principal held to secure the possible right of the husband therein should he survive the wife. '

An estate by the curtesy, says Cruise, quoting Little-ton, vol. 1, § 1, of chap. 1, title 5, p. 107, is where a man taketh a wife seised in fee simple or in fee tail general or seised as heir in special tail, and hath issue by the same wife, male or female, born alive, albeit the issue after dieth or liveth, yet if the wife dies the husband shall hold the land during his life by the law of England.

And a tenant by the curtsey of England, says Blackstone, book 2, chap. 8, p. 126, is where a man marries a. woman seised of an estate of inheritance, that is, of lands and tenements in fee simple, or fee tail, and has by her issue, born alive, which was capable of inheriting her estate. In this case he shall on the death of his wife hold the lands for his life as tenant by the curtesy of England. There are four requisites, says Blackstone, necessary to make a tenancy by the curtesy: marriage,, seisin of the wife, issue, and death of the wife.'

[201]*2011. The marriage must be canonical and legal.

2. The seisin of the wife must be an actual seisin or possession of the lands; not a bare right to possess which is seisin in law, but an actual possession; and therefore a man shall not be tenant by the curtesy of a remainder or reversion.

3. The issue must be born alive. The husband, he-says, by the birth of the child becomes tenant by the curtesy initiate, and may do many acts to charge the lands, but his estate is not consummate till the death of the wife; which is the fourth and last requisite to make-a complete tenant by the curtesy.

Miriam E. Moore had not the possession nor the right, to the possession of these lands or any part of them until the death of her mother, Mrs. Mary Darby. Her mother lierself had not the right to their possession in her lifetime, but the right to their possession during her lifetime was in Solomon Townsend Warren and John W. Hall and their heirs during her lifetime. The right to the possession of Miriam E. Moore to any portion of these lands did not accrue until the death of her mother,, Mrs. Darby, which occurred, as Mr. Moore states in his. petition, on or about the 27th day of January, 1888. At this period her children Miriam E. Moore, Samuel W. Darby and John C. Darby became entitled to the possession of the lands under the will of their grandfather Samuel Warren, senior..

Before that day and before Miriam E. Moore, and of course before her husband, Thomas H. Moore, could become entitled to any portion of said lands, the Legislature of Delaware lntd in effect abolished the right of a. tenant by the curtesy initiate in this State.

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Related

In re the Real Estate of Ellis
194 A. 119 (Delaware Orphan's Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Del. Ch. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-darby-delch-1889.