Schaffer v. Lavretta

57 Ala. 14
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 57 Ala. 14 (Schaffer v. Lavretta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaffer v. Lavretta, 57 Ala. 14 (Ala. 1876).

Opinion

MANNING, J.

Appellants, two married daughters of the late Foloe Pinta and his wife Marie Victorine, having by the death of their mother in 1870, come into possession of the lot in controversy, on the south side of Dauphin street in Mobile — one of them in 1862 and the other in-January, 1863 — -jointly with their respective husbands, sold and conveyed the property for cash in Confederate currency, to Molloy & Horgan, who afterwards tore down the inferior store-house then on the lot and built a large one three stories high in its stead; and having used and occupied the property, until the year 1873, they sold it to defendant Lawrence. Appellants filed their bill of complaint in this cause in Jan[16]*16■uaryyl874, against Lawrence, and Molloy, and Horgan, and Alexander Lafargue, who was trustee of the property under the deed made by their father for the benefit of their mother,, through which it came to them, and against their respective husbands. The bill alleges the premises and that they had received no benefit from the price paid by Molloy and Horgan. It avers also that complainant Helen, in January, 1863, “under the earnest entreaty and solicitation of her then husband, John Paul Lazies, and by his authority and control over her, and contrary to her will,” signed together with him a; deed of conveyance of the property to Molloy and Horgan, and that the other complainant “ Eleanor, and her husband Edward Bercy, on the thirteenth day of July, A. D. 1862, made and executed a conveyance to said Molloy and Horgan . . . under the authority of her husband and contrary to her will . . . she being then a minor under the age of twenty-one years. ”

The bill prays that these conveyances be decreed void and cancelled, and for general relief.

It also, in a former part, sets forth that the property in controversy came to them by a trust deed of it made many yeax’s ago, before the adoption of the Code of 1852, by theirfathex’, to “ Alexander Lafargue, in trust; first, for the use of Marie Yictorine Pinta, his wife, for and during the term of her natural life, and after her death, in further trust for the use of the children of said Eoloe, by his said wife, ” and that they are the only children of said Eoloe and Marie Yictox’ine.

A demurrer having been overruled by the late chancellor,. the case was heard on bill, answers, decrees pro eonfesso, and: evidence, by his successor, and the bill was dismissed.

1. No case is made showing that execution of the conveyance of either of appellants was obtained while she was under duress, or by means thereof. It is insisted, however, that the legal title to the property was at the time of the sale,., and still is; in Lafargue as trustee; that, therefore, Lawrence, the purchaser from Molloy and Horgan, has only an equity; and that complainants derived no benefit from the payment of Confederate currency to their husbands for the property. "Wherefore, they also have each an equity, older and superior to that of Lawrence. Without discussing this last proposition, let us inquire whether it is true that the legal title remains ixx Lafargue.

2. The statute of uses (of 27 Henry YIII), one of the most important enactments of our English forefathers, framed to-[17]*17effect a release from the vexatious shackles of a very artificial and intricate system of rules, for entangling and tying up land titles, was adopted “ before the emigration of our ancestors to America, is applicable to our situation and not inconsistent with our institutions and government, . ... and therefore constitutes a part of the .common law of Alabama.” Horton v. Sledge, 29 Ala. 496; Carter v. Balfaur’s Administrator, 19 Ala. 820. It was supplemented by our territorial act of 1812, to give effect to certain forms of conveyance which were founded upon the statute and invented by lawyers to facilitate the transfer of lands.

According to the doctrine of trusts, as modified by this statute, a trustee takes, ordinarily, no greater estate than is needed for the support of the trust which he is to administer. Mr. Perry, in his work on the subject, referring to a large number of authorities, states the result of them as follows : “ The extent or quantity of the estate taken by the trustee, is determined not by the circumstance that words of inheritance in the trustee are or are not used in the deed or will, but by the intent of the parties. And the intent of the parties is'determined by the scope and extent of'the trust. Therefore, the extent of the legal interest of a trustee in an estate given to him in trust is measured, not by words of inheritance or otherwise, but by the object and extent of the trust upon which the estate is given. On this principle two rules of construction have been adopted by courts: first, “wherever a trust is created, a legal estate sufficient for the purposes of the trust, shall, if possible, be implied in the trustee, whatever may be the limitation in the instrument, whether to him and his heirs or not.” And second, “ although a legal estate may be limited to a trustee to the fullest extent as to him and his heirs, yet it shall not be carried farther than the complete execution of the trust requires. ” — § 312.

Among the numerous cases cited by Mr. Perry in support of these views, is that of Comby v. McMichael, 19 Ala. 751. And after adverting to a distinction mentioned therein, made by the English courts to depend on whether the case arises upon a deed or a will, Mr. Perry says: “In the United States, the distinction between deeds and wills in respect to the trustee’s estates, has not been kept up; and the general rule is — whether words of inheritance in the trustee are or are not in the deed — the trustee will take an estate adequate to the execution of the trust, and no more or less.” — § 320. A number of cases are cited in support of this .proposition, also.

[18]*183. Now, what was the grantor’s object in the trust deed of Foloe Pinta to Lafargue ? The deed itself declares that it was “to make some sure and permanent provision for the support of his said wife out of his estate,” and it was to make a provision for her “ during the term of her natural lifeafter which the property was to go to their children. The grantor, therefore, instead of conveying it to her, she being his wife, gives and grants the property to Lafargue, his heirs and assigns, to be held in trust for her sole use and benefit during the term of her natural life, and then to be held in trust for the use and benefit of “ such child or children as my said wife Marie Yictorine may have by me, the said-Foloe Pinta, and to their heirs forever.”

The wife is to be allowed to have “ the use and occupation of the said lands and premises, . . . to be possessed and managed as to her may seem proper during the term aforesaid.” The deed further provides that if she should “ during her life desire that the said lands and premises . . . ' or any part thereof . . .be disposed of for other property or funds, then the said Alexander, upon the written -request of the said Marie Yictorine, . . shall be fully authorized and empowered to make sale of said lands,” &c., to such person or persons and on such terms as she in writing may request, and “ the property or funds so acquired by the sale of said premises, shall be held in like manner, and for the same uses and purposes,” as those declared of the premises originally conveyed.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Ala. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaffer-v-lavretta-ala-1876.