Roberts v. Roberts

22 Wend. 140
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 Wend. 140 (Roberts v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Roberts, 22 Wend. 140 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1839).

Opinion

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

The whole case turns on the question, whether the instrument offered and received in evidence passed a legal title to the defendant. The consideration of marriage was sufficient to sustain it, as against creditors ; and if the frame of the instrument be such as to render it effectual for the end proposed, the plaintiff’s judgment and purchase could not divest the defendant’s title. If ineffectual, the defendant was in no condition to contest the judgment on the ground of fraud.

The object of' the instrument was to carry a fee to the wife after the husband’s death. It is inartificially drawn ; and if it be operative in any way, it must be as a covenant • to stand seized. The only difficulty in giving it such a [143]*143character arises from the operative words; for the consideration, being a marriage to be had, is like the consideration of blood, a distinctive and controlling feature. 4 Bart. Elem. of Conveyancing, 636, 642. 3 Wood’s Conveyancing, 573. Per Savage, Ch. J. in Jackson, ex dem. Howell, v. John, 4 Cowen, 427, 430, 431. A freehold to commence in futuro, may be granted by this form of conveyance. Pitfield v. Pearce, March, 50. Roe, ex dem. Wilkinson, v. Tranmer, 2 Wils. 75. Willes, 682, S. C. Wallis v. Wallis, 4 Mass. R. 135. Jackson, ex dem. Wood, v. Swart, 20 John. 85. The remarks of Willis, Ch. J. in the case cited from Wilson, seem to embody almost every thing which it is necessary to look at, as a test of the instrument before us. I cite them from the case as reported by Wilson. The chief justice begins by stating, with marked approbation, the words of Lord Hobart, in his reports, fol. 277, where he says: “ I exceedingly commend the judges that are curious and almost subtil, astuti, to invent reason and means to make acts according to the just intent of the parties, and to avoid wrong and injury which by rigid rules may be wrought out of the act.” He said Lord Hobart was a very great man ; and added, my Lord Hale, in the case of Crossing v. Scudamore, 1 Ventr. 141, cites and approves of this passage in Hobart. Although formerly, according to some of the old cases, the mode or form of a conveyance was held material, yet in later times, where the intent appears that the land shall pass, it has been ruled otherwise ; and certainly it is more considerable to make the intent good in passing the estate, if by any legal means it may be done, than by considering the manner of passing it, to disappoint the intent and principal thing, which was to pass the land.” The case to which he thus spoke, was a conveyance of a freehold in futuro, expressing both a pecuniary consideration, which, standing alone, would leave it void, as being a bargain and sale; and another of blood, upon which it might enure as a covenant to stand seized. And he concluded thus: “We are all of opinion that, in this case, there is every thing necessary to make a good and effectual covenant to stand seized to uses. First, here [144]*144is a deed. Secondly, here are apt words ; the word grant, alone, would have been sufficient; but there are other words besides, which are material. Thirdly, the covenantor was seized in fee. Fourthly, here appears a plain intent that Wilkinson should have the land, &,c.; and lastly, here is a sufficient consideration,” &c. Several old authorities are cited to the same effect; and the case concludes, by saying the whole court were clear that a man seized might covenant to stand seized to the use of another person, after the covenantor's death. The same case is also very well reported in Willes, 682, by the title of Doe, ex dem. Willkinson, v. Tranmarr, whence it is cited, and the general reasoning approved by Spencer, C. J. in Jackson v. Swart, before cited ; and by Swft, C. J. in Barrett v. French, 1 Conn. R. 354. 363, et seq.; and see Milledge v. Lamar, 4 Desauss. 617, 626, 7. So, in Jackson, ex dem. Trowbridge, v. Dunsbagh, 1 Johns. Cas. 91, a deed which was in terms one of bargain and sale, and expressing a pecuniary consideration, appearing by a contemporary instrument to be in fact for the consideration of blood and a future marriage, was sustained as a covenant to stand seized, and held operative as such to carry a fee in futuro. The same thing was held in Jacson, ex dem. Staats, v. Staats, 11 Johns. R. 337, 339, 351.

Marriage, as we said, is an equally good consideration with blood; and it may be a marriage, to be solemnized thereafter, which may be shown in proof to have been actually solemnized, as was done here. 7 Bacon’s Abr. Uses and Trusts, p. 99, Phil. ed. 1813. Barton says: “ The consideration of a marriage to be had will raise a use, because the present estate is in the baron ; and what is limited to the feme is only a remainder.” 4 Bart. Elem. Conveyancing, 640. Both writers rely on what Twisden, J. said in Stephens v. Brittredge, Sid. 83. Barton translates Siderfin the most fully. Cains and wife’s lessee v. Jones, 5 Yerg. 249, is a very striking illustration of this rule of construction

No man I think, can dispute, that in the case at bar, the intent of the parties was to carry a fee to the defendant af[145]*145ter her husband’s death. And here are all the requisites mentioned by Willes, C. J. before cited, except the precise operative words used in the deed to which he was speaking. But in that case, the words were not the technical ones which belong to a covenant to stand seized. When that sort of conveyance is drawn with strict formal propriety, the terms by which it is characterized are used: “ I hereby covenant to stand seized” to such and such uses. 4 Bart. Elem. of Conveyancing, 642. This phrase was always construed to raise a use, especially when the deed expressed a consideration of blood or marriage. As the consideration is the foundation of the conveyance, no particular form of words is necessary. Id. Most of the questions have arisen on the ordinary words used for conveying an estate presently, such as give, grant, sell, &c., which have been turned into a convenant by r.eason of the consideration; and thus been made to pass- a freehold to commence in futuro, or to pass an estate without livery of seizin, &c. See the cases before cited from March, Wils., Yerg. &c. and per Wilson, J. in Habergram v. Vincent, 2 Ves. jun. 226. Before the statute 27 Hen. VIII., 1 R. L. of 1813, p. 72, the covenant to stand seized was enforced like a use which was raised by a feoffment; and when the statute came, it was held to execute the use in-the covenantee, the same as if it had been declared by a conveyance in the more common form. Gilb. Uses and Trusts, 110, Lond. ed. of 1741. Swift, C. J. in Barrett v. French, 1 Conn. R. 363. The words in the conveyance before us are, in part, words of covenant to give and secure to the defendant the premises in question after the death of the husband, to be held by her in fee, in such a manner, that after the marriage, he could in no way dispose of the land.

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22 Wend. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-roberts-nysupct-1839.