Sanborn v. Sanborn

62 N.H. 631
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 N.H. 631 (Sanborn v. Sanborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanborn v. Sanborn, 62 N.H. 631 (N.H. 1882).

Opinion

Dob, C. J.

By a will made since the repeal of the rule in Shelley’s Case, the plaintiff’s husband devised to her “for and during the term of her natural life the homestead place where we now occupy in said Littleton contaimg about One half acre with all the appurtennances there unto belonging for and during the term aforesaid, to have and to hold the same to her and her heirs and asigns.” Without the words “and her heirs,” the habendum would have been a useless, form. With those words, it has no effect unless it operates, directly or indirectly, as a devise to her heirs or to her. And the first question is, whether the express devise of an estate for life shall be enlarged, or construed to pass any greater estate, by reason of the habendum to her heirs. “ No express devise of any estate for life . . . shall be enlarged, or construed to pass any greater estate, by reason of any devise to the heirs ... of such person.” Gf. L., c. 193, s. 5. This repeal of the rule in Shelley’s Case removed a technical ground on which the testator’s intention was formerly defeated by the word “heirs.” Crockett v. Robinson, 46 N. H. 454, 461, 462, 463. As the express devise of a life estate to the plaintiff would not be enlarged by a devise to her heirs, it is not enlarged by the habendum to her heirs, which is, in effect, a devise, or nothing. It is not materia] whether the devise to heirs is express, or implied. In either case, it is within the statute, and does not expand the life estate of the ancestor.

“ It is said to be a rule of the common law, that, without the word ‘ heirs,’ a fee-simple in land cannot pass by deed; and that this rule is so absolute and unyielding, that, no matter how clearly the intention of the grantor to convey a fee may be stated in the deed, such intention can be of no avail without that word. . . . *634 The rule is a feudal one. . . . The word ‘ heirs,’ when first in- ' troduced into charters and feoffments, was a word of very great importance. It enlarged the right of the vassal from one held either at the will of the lord, or for his own life, to a permanent and hereditary interest. It signified an undertaking of the lord that he would accept the heir as his vassal. ... It was, in effect, simply a stipulation for a renewal of the lease upon the same terms with the heir of the first lessee. . . . It is important . . . that the utter repugnancy and hostility of feudal institutions to ours should be fully borne in mind. ... It was to answer one of the conditions upon which the existence of ” the feudal system “ depended that the rule in question was introduced. Unless the lord bound himself that the fief should go to the heir of his vassal, the heir had no rights in it on the death of his ancestor ; but the lord, being the absolute owner of the soil, might be.stow tbe fief upon any stranger who would enter into homage and do fealty to him for the land, upon such new services as he might impose. The rule was nothing more nor less than the practice of the feudal sovereign, securing and perpetuating his grasp upon all the land, and the services of all the landholders in his realm. Its origin, purpose, and history show it to be in no way adapted to our institutions, system of government, or condition of society. . . . When the fetters which feudalism had fastened upon the tenure of lands . . . fell off, every reason on which this rule had rested fell with them.” Cole v. Lake Co., 54 N. H. 242, 279, 288, 285.

“ If an estate be made to A for life, remainder to his right heirs in fee, his heirs shall take by descent j for it is an ancient rule of law, that whenever the ancestor takes an estate for life, the heir cannot by the. same conveyance take an estate in fee by purchase, but only by descent. And if A dies before entry, still his heirs shall take by descent, and not by purchase : for where the heir takes anything that might have vested in the ancestor, he takes by way of descent. The ancestor, during his life, beareth in himself all his heirs; and therefore, when once he is or might have been seized of the lands, the inheritance so limited to his heirs vests in ' the ancestor himself: and the word 1 heirs ’ in this case is not esteemed a word of purchase, but a word of limitation, enuring so as to increase the estate of the ancestor from a tenacy for life to a fee-simple. And had it been otherwise, had the heir (who is uncertain till the death of the ancestor) been allowed to take as a purchaser originally nominated in the deed, as must have been the case if the remainder had been expressly limited to Matthew or Thomas by name, then, in the times of strict feudal tenure, the lord would have been defrauded, by such a limitation, of the fruits of his signiory arising from a descent to the heir.” 2 Bl. Com. 242.

“Various considerations have been supposed to have concurred in producing the rule” in Shelley's Case, “ but the judges, in Perrin v. Blake, imputed the origin of it to principles and policy deduced *635 from feudal tenure; and that opinion has been generally followed in all the succeeding discussions. The feudal policy undoubtedly favored descents as much as possible. There were feudal burdens, which attached to the heir when he took as heir by descent, from which he would have been exempted if he took the estate in 1lie character of purchaser. An estate of freehold in the ancestor attracted to him the estate imported by the limitation to his heirs ; and it was deemed a fraud upon the feudal fruits and incidents of wardship, marriage, and relief, to give the property to the ancestor for his life only, and yet extend the enjoyment of it to his heirs, so as to enable them to take as purchasers, in the same manner and to the same extent precisely as if they took by hereditary succession. The policy of the law would not permit this, and it accordingly gave the whole estate to the ancestor.” 4 Kent Com. 218, 217. “The rule in Shelley's Case, . . . will occur to the reader as a familiar instance of an arbitrary and technical ride of construction, the authority of which is acknowledged by the courts, even where its application may tend to defeat the intention of the testator.” Broom Leg. Max. 428. “ It is admitted to interfere, in most cases, with the. presumed, and in many others with the declared, intention of the parties to the instrument to which it is applied.” 4 Kent Com. 218. Similar wrong was done by substituting a life estate for land conveyed without qualification. “1 really believe that almost every case determined by this rule, as applied to a devise of lands in a will, has defeated the real intention of the testator.” Lord Mansfield in Loveacres v. Blight, Cowp. 352, 355.

In Cole v. Lake Co., 54 N. H. 242, the rule requiring heirs to be mentioned in a conveyance by which they took nothing, was held to be obsolete. And if the Shelley rule (which took an estate from them) had not been repealed, it would not have survived the restatement of the law of interpretation in Rice v. Society, 56 N. H. 191, 197—203.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.H. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanborn-v-sanborn-nh-1882.