Stephenson v. Hagan

54 Ky. 282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 11, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Ky. 282 (Stephenson v. Hagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephenson v. Hagan, 54 Ky. 282 (Ky. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court—

On the 5th day of August, 1789, William Robinson, Sr., and Sarah, his wife, executed a deed, which purports to be an indenture between themselves, of the first part, and John Pitman and Dorothy P. Pit-man, of -the second part, and Peyton Robinson and William Robinson, Jr., sons of said William, of the third part, by which, “for and in consideration of the natural love and affection he (William Robinson,Sr.,) [300]*300hath for said John Pitman and Dorothy, his wife, the daughter of the said William, and also for and in consideration of the natural love and affection which he hath to his said sons, and for and in consideration of the sums of five shillings, severally paid by Pitman and wife, and the said P. and W. Robins on, the receipt of all which is acknowledged, after covenanting to stand seized, &c., for the following uses, &c., they, the said Wm. Robinson, the elder, and Sarah, his wife, granted, bargained, and sold to said John Pit-man and Dorothy, his wife, a tract of one hundred and sixty-five acres of land, in the county of Madison, then in the State of Virginia; to have and to hold during the term of their natural lives, and for and during the term of the life of the longest liver of them, and at the decease of said John Pit-man and Dorothy P., his wife, or the longest liver of them, then the said one hundred and sixty-five acres of land, with its appurtenances, shall ensue and descend to the heirs of the said John Pitman, lawfully begotten on the body of said Dorothy, his present wife, and shall be vested in such heirs in fee simple. But if in case the said John and Dorothy shall depart this life, leaving no issue of their two bodies, then the said land and premises, &c., shall revert, return, and be again vested in the said Wm. Robinson the elder, and his heirs, to and for the uses hereinafter mentioned. And this indenture, so far as relates to said John and Dorothy, and their heirs, shall then cease and determine.” The deed, then, in case the said land shall revert to said William, Sr., after the decease of said John and Dorothy, for default of heirs of their two bodies, grants, bargains, and sells to the said Peyton Robinson and Wm. Robinson, Jr., their heirs and assigns forever, the before-mentioned tract of one hundred and sixty-five acres, to have and to hold the same unto the said P. and W. Robinson, Jr., and their heirs as tenants in common, to the only proper use, &c., of the said Peyton and William, Jr., and of their heirs and assigns forever. [301]*301Then follows a warranty of said land to and for the uses and intents mentioned before. The land conveyed by this deed has been held under it ever since the date of the deed. In 1803, Dorothy P. Pitman died, before her husband. In 1804, John Pitman sold and conveyed the land to William Robinson, under whom the land has been since held. John Pitman died in 1839. In 1853, this action was brought by MaryJ. Stephenson, then a widow, and Irvine S. Pitman, the only living children of the marriage of John and Dorothy Pitman> grantees of William Robinson the elder, and the heirs of their bodies, to recover the land from Hagan and Stone, who were in possession. During the progress of the suit, Irvine S. Pitman released whatever title he had to the defendants, and the suit was dismissed as to him. The case then proceeded in behalf of Mary J. Stephenson aloné, and the law and facts having been submitted to the court, judgment was rendered against the plaintiff, who has brought it to this court for reversal.

The deed and facts above stated present the whole case. And it is apparent, that on the whole case, the only question is, whether the conveyance to John Pitman, created in him, as the survivor of his wife, a fee tail or a mere estate for life. If the former, the fee tail was turned into a fee simple by the statute of 1776 ; his children born of the mai’r-iage with Dorothy P. Robinson took nothing by the deed, and his sale and conveyance to William Robinson, in 1804, passed the fee simple in the land. If he was only a tenant for life, his sale and conveyance passed the estate for his life only, and the children of the marriage with Dorothy P. Robinson, to whom the land was given in remainder, became entitled on his death to the possession. And his daughter, Mary J. Stephenson, was entitled to a judgment for one undivided- half of the land, in this action, commenced within less than twenty years after- his death, It is clear that the rights of these parties depend upon the construction [302]*302and legal effect of the deed of 1789. In determining which, we have been most earnestly urged to resort to the law as it existed before the passage of the Virginia act of 1776, abolishing entails, as furnishing, according to that act, the only test for deciding the character of the estate limited to Pitman by the deed in question; which, as having been made by parties residing, at its date, in Virginia, and for land then in that State, it is contended, was then, and is now peculiarly subject to such construction and operation as were fixed upon by the law of the time in the State of Virginia. As a part of that law, the rule in Shelly’s case, abolished by the Revised Statutes of this State, and disregarded by this court in the recent case of Turman vs. White’s heirs, 14 B. Monroe, has been adverted to, and its policy, even in this country, has been vindicated on the ground of its preventing the estate in cases to which it applies, from being locked up during the period of a life, however long, and then being subject to a division into minute particles among numerous heirs, the infancy of some or all of whom may render portions or the whole of it still longer inalienable. But this evil, great or small, is not removed by the abolition or rejection of the rule in Shelly’s case. The general law of the land, even before the adoption of the Revised Statutes, allowed, as they now do, a limitation after an estate for life, provided it is so constructed as to take effect, if at all, within a life or lives in being, and twenty-one years, and the usual period of gestation afterwards. The abolition or rejection of the rule in Shelly’s case, does not either give or enlarge this power of disposition, but only allows it to be made by words which the parties understand and use for making such a disposition, and suppose to be effectual for that purpose, but which, under the rule in question, would often so operate as to defeat the manifest intention of giving to the first taker a restricted interest and power, which would not enable him to destroy the interest intended to take effect in others [303]*303after his death. But, without dwelling further upon a question of policy which is no longer an open one in this State, and conceding that at the date of this deed the rule in Shelly’s case was in full force in Virginia, as a part of the 'law of real estate, we are of opinion that even if that rule and the whole law of entailment, as it existed at and prior to the date of the act 1776, is to be applied as a test of the estate which Pitman, as the survivor of his wife, took under the deed now before us, he did not take an estate tail, (converted into a fee simple,) but only an estate for life, which admitted, according to the law as then and now existing, of a valid limitation to persons described as heirs of the body of himself and his wife Dorothy.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ky. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-hagan-kyctapp-1854.