Sheridan v. House

4 Keyes 569
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 4 Keyes 569 (Sheridan v. House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheridan v. House, 4 Keyes 569 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinions

Woodruff, J.

It is not questioned, that, by the grant made in 1832, by Samuel Jackson to John Jackson, for and during his natural life, and after his death, then to his heirs and their assigns forever, the immediate grantee took an estate for life only, and that a remainder in fee was limited to such persons as were, at his death, his heirs at law.

If or is it questioned that by the conveyance of John Jackson to his children, they acquired, as tenants in common, each an estate for his life in one undivided eleventh part of the land, and that the limitation in remainder gave them, as his heirs presumptive, an estate, interest or expectation, which at his death, they being still alive, would become in them severally an absolute fee.

If that estate, interest or expectation was alienable, then the deed of partition executed by the eleven children operated to place Richard Jackson (one of their number), in the same relation to the lots assigned and conveyed to him in severalty, in which he was before that deed, to the undivided one-eleventh of the whole property; that is to say, he held an estate for the life of John Jackson in the lots so allotted and conveyed to him in severalty, and he would be entitled to the fee of each one-eleventh part thereof, provided, in respect to each eleventh, the grantor thereof should survive John Jackson.

The partition deed was something more than a release; (Miller v. Emons, 19 N. Y. 388) as between tenants in common it would operate as a grant; it granted with covenants for quiet enjoyment.

True, if he, or either of his grantors in partition, died before John Jackson, that might defeat the title to the one-eleventh purporting to belong to, or be conveyed by, the one so dying, but that is all.

The technical inquiry as to what, and between whom, a. mere release at the common law may operate, is not material; here were words of grant and conveyance, and if the grantors [586]*586had an estate or interest which was alienable — beyond their interest for the life of John Jackson—then this partition deed operated to convey it. The parties were in possession by virtue of the estate, pur cmt/re vie. They each held the relation to him in which, if they survived him, their estate would be a fee simple in one-eleventh each, and if that fact gave them an alienable estate or interest, no rule of law, technical or otherwise, forbade that their conveyance to one of the tenants in common, having a like estate or interest, and being in possession, should be effectual.

On the other hand, if the several grantors in that deed had no estate or interest in the land which was alienable, it conveyed nothing, and considering that deed simply as a conveyance, the defendant here has no estate in the lots, because the estate which she claims was derived from a conveyance to her, or to her grantor, before the death of John Jackson. Whether that deed operated as an estoppel, so as to assure to Eichard Jackson the fee, when in fact the grantors did survive John Jackson, and thus assured to her the title which they had proposed to convey, I shall not consider.

I prefer to rest my conclusions upon the answer which should be given to the question whether the children of John Jackson had before his decease an alienable interest or estate in the premises, and by this to test the effect of the partition deed and the validity of the defendant’s title. And in my opinion the consideration of this question will also determine whether, if alienable, the interest or estate of Eichard was subject to levy and sale upon execution against his property.

The circumstances of the present title would not at the common law have presented the question. The abrogation of the rule in Shelly’s case has created a state of things which at the common law could not exist; thus by the common law under the rule in Shelly’s case, a grant to A for life with remainder to his heirs, gave to A a fee; no question under the law of remainders could therefore arise under such a grant. And that is the case now before us in which Samuel Jackson conveyed to John Jackson for life with remainder to his [587]*587heirs. On the other hand, a grant to A for life with remainder to the heirs of B did present a ease to which the law of remainders was of course applicable.

In considering the effect of the grant under consideration, made since the rule in Shelly’s case was abrogated, we may seek for an analogy in the example last named, to wit, a grant to A for life with remainder to the heirs of B.

In such case the limitation over to the heirs of B is by the common law wholly contingent. It is not only impossible during the life of B to say who will be his heirs, and hence, who will be entitled to claim under the limitation; but if B is living at the death of A, the remainder over will wholly fail, because it cannot take effect at the expiration of the precedent freehold estate upon which it is limited. This last result is now prevented by our Revised Statutes (1R. S. 705, § 31), and therefore the limitation over is operative, and whenever B dies it will take effect for the benefit of those who may be his heirs. In such case, however, so long as B lives (A beiug also living), there can be no vested estate in remainder under our statutes, because there are no persons in being who would have an immediate right to the possession of the land upon the ceasing of the precedent estate; that is, if A were to die to-day, it would still be uncertain who are the heirs of B, and therefore, there is no one who under the grant is entitled to the possession.

But now suppose B dies, then the estate would vest, and for the reason that there are now persons in being, who, if A dies to-day, will be entitled to immediate possession. Whether the estate or interest can be defeated by the death of such persons, or by any other future event or not, their interest is vested according to the very terms of our statute.

It is this precise alternation of circumstances which furnishes examples within the contemplation of our statute in its definition of a “ vested future estate ” and a contingent future estate.”

1. An estate is vested where there is a person in being who will take if the precedent estate then terminates.

2. An estate is contingent while the person to whom [588]*588* * * it is limited is uncertain, — i. e. while it is uncertain who will take if the precedent estate then terminates.

One definition is the converse of the other and they are to be read together.

In the case supposed, then, on the death of B (A being still alive), the heirs of B are in a condition to take if A then die, and their estate is by the terms of the statute a future vested estate.

This, in my judgment, illustrates the new case made by our statute abrogating the rule in Shelly’s case.

Thus John Jackson took a life estate, and every child of his, bearing to him such relation, that, at any moment, he would, if John Jackson then died, be entitled to immediate possession, and to hold in fee, had a vested future estate ” under our statute. It was vested because by the death of John Jackson the precedent estate terminates, and such child, then in being, becomes eo mstmii entitled to immediate possession, which is the precise character of one who in the language of our statute has a future vested estate.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Keyes 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheridan-v-house-ny-1868.