Ocheltree v. McClung

7 W. Va. 232, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 7
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 7 W. Va. 232 (Ocheltree v. McClung) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocheltree v. McClung, 7 W. Va. 232, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 7 (W. Va. 1874).

Opinion

HopfMAN, Judge:

In England, at common law, a feoffment — including livery of seisin — was the ordinary conveyance used to transfer an estate in fee, vested in possession, in land, from the holder, in his lifetime, to another not already having an estate or interest in the land, or possession of it. This conveyance was effectual to vest a fee simple, or a fee limited to continue till the happening of a contingent event and thereupon of itself to determine; or a fee conditioned so as, upon a contingency to be, by the entry of the feoffor or his heirs, determinable; and, in either case, such qualified or conditional fee to revert to the feoffor or his heirs. But the feoffment was not adequate, upon such determination of an estate in fee, either with or without entry, to vest the estate in a stranger; or, without a previous estate, to vest an estate in futuro in any person. For centuries after lands became alienable — until after the passage of the statute of uses — estates in fee could not, by any conveyance inter vivos, be limited so as, upon a contingency, to divest out of one taker and vest in another, or, certainly, on a contingency, to commence in futuro. In Virginia, I believe, the feoffment was the only conveyance not statutory in its operation, that was used to transfer an estate in fee. But, for many years this has been but seldom, if at all employed. •

In England, the fine and the common recovery were made to serve the purpose of most effectual transfer and assurance of title. But in Virginia .they were never adopted.

[235]*235A grant was proper to transfer an incorporeal here-ditament, or a reversion or vested remainder, in land.' But,.in England before 1845, and in "Virginia before 1850, a grant was not effectual to transfer an estate in fee in land in possession.

A release was, and is, appropriate to vest an estate or right oí one person, in another person already having an estate less than a fee simple in land, or having possession with claim of title. Though, since the year 1850, a deed of release may have more extensive application.

At common law, a power retained by a feoffor or grantor, or conferred by him on any one, after the feoffment or grant, to appoint an estate to another, was unknown.

In England, the deed of bargain and sale was sometimes used, but not so generally as other conveyances and assurances. It was, I believe, for the most part, if not entirely, limited, to the simple transfer of an estate to take effect in 'presentí, to a bargainee in esse and ascertained. Under the act of Parliament requiring enrollment, it was less convenient to the parties than the deed of lease and release. In Virginia, this deed was used not only for the conveyance of a fee absolute, qualified, or conditional, immediately from the .bargainor to the actual bargainee for his own benefit; but for the limitation and creation of different estates in successive or substituted takers, and for the conveyance to trustees for the benefit of others. At any rate, the deeds usually employed for such purposes contained words of bargain and sale, while, as other species of conveyance, they were entirely inappropriate, or wanting in essential requisites to their validity. As deeds of bargain and sale they vested the estates as intended — or they failed to vest them at all.

In Virginia, moreover, this species of deed was employed to convey land, and, at the same time, to reserve or confer a power to revoke an estate thereby transferred to one person, and to appoint it to another or to others, successively or by substitution — or rather when [236]*236the appointment should be made, thereupon to vest the And, under the statute of uses, enacted to give effect to conveyances, from such a deed containing a reservation or grant of power, and an accordant appointment, a limitation over upon the appointment acquired whatever efficacy it had to transfer and vest the legal title to and in the appointee.

In England, under the statute of uses, the deed of lease and release, Avas generally used, not only to transfer a fee from one person to another for his own benefit, but to vest the estate in a trustee, and declare any uses, present or future, certain or contingent, Avhich it was intended shoAild, by the pervasive efficacy of the statute, be transmuted into legal estates. In Virginia these deeds were never much used. Whether, under the operation of the limited statute of uses in force, they were effectual to transfer the estate to any person other than the lessee, need not now be considered.

A covenant to stand seised to a use, as a conveyance, required a consideration of blood or marriage between the covenantor and the person to take the title. Such a consideration would not support a deed by a covenantor, so as to vest the title in a trustee not by blood or marriage related to him,, for the benefit of his Avife, child or other relation. This conveyance Avas not often employed.

Since, then, deeds of bargain aud sale have been employed to effect the transfer and accomplish the settlement of most of our estates, and rights in lands, a brief reference to their origin and nature, and an inquiry as to their operation and effect under the statute from Avhich they receive their efficacy as conveyances, may be interesting and important.

At an early day, in contemplation of a court of equity, a feoffment or other conveyance of land might be accompanied by a declaration' that the use of the land should, at once or subsequently, certainly or upon a con[237]*237dition, inure to a third person, in fee simple or nable with or without entry, and revert to the feoffor or his heirs; or that, upon a contingency, the use should shift from one to another beneficiary; or that the feoffor or trustee might appoint the use, or revoke and appoint it; and, thereupon it should inure to the benefit of the appointee : Or, upon the payment of a valuable consideration, a bargain might be made by the holder of land, with a bargainee, to sell it; and a use would thereby be created. By the court of equity, the holder would be coerced, according to the trust, to allow the beneficiary to enjoy the land, or to convey it to him.

The statute of uses was devised and enacted to apply to such equitable rights, and transform them into legal estates.

The most important provision of the English statute of uses, passed in 1536—37, Hen. VIII, ch. 10—(found in Cruise’s Digest, p. 348,) relieved of dispensable verbiage, is in substance as follows:

When any person shall be seised of lands, to the use, confidence or trust of any other person or body politic, the person or corporation entitled to the use in fee simple, fee tail, for life or for years, shall thenceforth stand and be seised or possessed of the land, of and in the like estate as he or it had in the use, trust and confidence ; and the estate of the person so seised to the use shall be deemed to be in him that has the use, in such quality, manner, form and condition, as he had before in the use.

The Virginia provision to give effect to deeds without livery of seisin or actual transmutation of possession, which passed in 1785, and took effect in 1787 — (ch. 62, 12 Hen. Stat., 157,)—extracted from a section containing many distinct provisions—is as follows:

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Related

Laing v. McClung
137 S.E. 744 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1927)
Hunt v. Mounts
133 S.E. 323 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1926)
Totten v. Pocahontas Coal & Coke Co.
68 S.E. 373 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
Waldron v. Coal Co.
56 S.E. 492 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1907)
Equitable National Bank v. Morrison
5 Ohio N.P. 290 (Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati, 1898)
Carney v. Kain
23 S.E. 650 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1895)
Thrasher v. Ballard
10 S.E. 411 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1889)
Lambert v. Smith
9 Or. 185 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1881)
Stoneman v. Commonwealth
25 Va. 887 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1874)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 W. Va. 232, 1874 W. Va. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocheltree-v-mcclung-wva-1874.