Shepard v. Taylor

16 R.I. 166
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 10, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 16 R.I. 166 (Shepard v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepard v. Taylor, 16 R.I. 166 (R.I. 1887).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The case Hodges v. New England Screw Co. 3 R. I. 9, decided A. D. 1853, has always since then been regarded as settling the practice of this State in regard to the rehearing of suits in equity on petition. The court then decided as a rule of practice, subject to alteration by a new rule if found necessary, that a rehearing would be granted by the court in its discretion upon petition preferred within a year, even when the error alleged was simply error of law, and the court added that the discretion should be exercised liberally in favor of a rehearing. We think that under this decision the petitioners are entitled to be heard on their petition, and that the motion to dismiss should be overruled. And see Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 192, § 7, 4th clause; Digest of A. D. 1844, pp. 91, 92.

Order accordingly.

The petition, for a rehearing was heard December 31, A. D. 1887, before the chief justice and the four associate justices.

The facts involved are given in 15 R. I. p. 205 sq.

Alexander, the son, died intestate November 5, 1875, leaving a minor child, Alexander V. G. Taylor, Jun., then but between four and five years old, and a widow, the defendant Martha O. Taylor, the mother of this child. After his brother Alexander’s death, William, describing himself as “ Trustee of Alexander V. Gr. Taylor under the will of John Taylor deceased,” executed to his nephew said Alexander, Jnn., a deed, in the form of a quitclaim deed, bearing date February 7,1876, reciting a nominal consideration of one dollar “ paid by Alexander Y. G. Taylor, son of Alexander V. G. Taylor, of Providence,” of all his “ right, title, and interest, as trustee as aforesaid,” in and to the estate here in question, particularly describing it. We assume, for the purpose of the present argument, that this deed was properly made and delivered to the child; although it is very evident that the child, then under five years of age, was entirely incapable of either assenting to or dissenting from it. As said by Lord Alvanley, in Philips v. Brydges, 3 Yes. Jun. 120, 127, “No act of the trustee can prejudice or narrow the title of the cestui que trust.” Or, as he quotes himself in Selby v. Alston, 3 Yes. Jun. 339, 341, “ No act of the trustee can in any degree vary the right of the cestui que trust.” And can there be a doubt that Alexander, Jun., had he lived to attain age, could have disaffirmed this deed from his uncle? And if so, may not his heirs and legal representatives ? Certainly that is the general principle. Alexander, Jun., died May 27, 1882, leaving surviving his mother as his immediate next of kin, and his uncles, said Gustayus, William, and John, and his aunt, said Mary, who are his next of kin of the blood, not only of his father, but also of his grandfather the testator, and of his uncle William, the trustee. His aunt Mary afterwards died, January 18, 1888, leaving a will dated March 7, 1871, by which she gave all the residue of her estate to her brothers, said Gustavus and John; but as this will does not make any reference to after acquired estate, it did not probably pass any interest in this estate which she took from her nephew, said Alexander, Jun. The question now is, to whom did this one fifth of the estate descend from said Alexander, Jun. ? To his mother as his immediate next of kin, regarding him as a new stock of descent in Ms own blood, or to his uncles and aunt as bis next of kin of the blood of his father, grandfather, and uncle William ? It is submitted in their behalf that it descended to the latter. I. This will was before the court as to Gustavus’s one fifth of the estate at the October Term, 1868, in Taylor v. Taylor, 9 R. I. 119 ; and the court there held that the legal title of that fifth part was in William H. as trustee, whether in fee or for life was not then mooted, but that he was “ not charged with any active trust or duty in the management or disposition of the estate which calls for a retention of the legal title; ” and that the cestui que trust had the full equitable estate, and was entitled, against the objection and refusal of the trustee, to have the title surrendered to him whenever he chose to call for it. The law of descent of Rhode Island since 17981 discards entirely the fiction of the English law, that every estate, with a few exceptions immaterial to the present inquiry, acquired otherwise than by descent, is an estate by purchase, a feudum antiquum, creating its holder a new stock of descent in his own blood ; and provides in effect that only estates acquired for value, that is, by purchase in its primary and proper sense, or from a stranger, shall have this effect, by providing that estates acquired by gift or devise, as well as by descent “ from the parent or other kindred,” shall descend as ancestral. “ Gift ” as used in this proviso to the statute being set in juxtaposition to “devise,” evidently includes gifts inter vivos, — not merely voluntary conveyances in the strict acceptation of the term as distinguished from involuntary or obligatory ; for there can be no doubt that a deed of gift obtained by duress or even fraud, unless avoided and set aside, would control the descent. And this is the sense in which Washburn, 3 Real Property, 3d ed. 305, regards it; for he does not use the word “ voluntary ” at all, but says : “ A conveyance by ‘ gift ’ is simply a feoffment, wherein the estate thereby limited or created is one in tail.” See, also, to same effect Hartman’s Estate, 4 Rawle, 39; Eckert’s Estate, 12 Phila. 93. This being the evident intent of this proviso, to preserve and continue the estate in the blood from which it was derived, it is submitted that it should not be frittered away by forced analogies under the English doctrine of estates and tenures, resting in great part upon feudal fictions, but should receive a liberal construction to effectuate this intent. And while it is no doubt true, as a general principle, that where the legal and equitable estates, entirely commensurate with each other, but seldom, if ever, otherwise, meet in the same person, the equitable will merge in the legal, it may well be doubted whether in such cases as Goodright v. Wells, Doug. 771, which is the same case as Selby v. Alston, 3 Ves. 339, and Nicholson v. Halsey, 1 Johns. Ch. 416, the principle would or should be applied to break the descent under such a statute as ours. Gibson, O. J., in Hartman’s Estate, supra, unqualifiedly asserts the contrary. But, however this may be, it is submitted that these cases are not at all analogous to the case at bar, for in them the estate never was stamped with the blood of the ancestor. He never was actually seized of it. More than this, the legal estate came to the mother in the English case, and to the child in the New York case, clearly as a purchaser, not only under the strict doctrine of the English law, but also under the New York statute, because it came from a stranger, and upon this Kent rested his judgment. The subsequent case Gardner v. Astor, 3 Johns. Ch. 53, which is sometimes cited as illustrative of the same doctrine, is still more remote. It was not so much a “ merger,”

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Bluebook (online)
16 R.I. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-taylor-ri-1887.