Sumner v. Williams

8 Mass. 162
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1811
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 8 Mass. 162 (Sumner v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumner v. Williams, 8 Mass. 162 (Mass. 1811).

Opinion

After the argument, the action stood continued for advisement * to this term ; and now the justices present delivered their opinions seriatim as follows : —

Sedgwick, J.

The facts, which, in my opinion, are necessary to be considered in the decision of this cause, are the following: —

On the sixth day of July, 1786, William Dudley, being seised in fee tail of certain lands in Roxbury, mortgaged them in fee simple to Thomas Williams, one of the defendants.

On the first day of November, 1786, William Dudley died, and thereupon administration on his estate was granted to the present defendants.

After the granting of the administration, and before making the deed declared on, the defendants, obtained from the Court of Common Pleas a license to sell all the real estate of which William Dudley died seised.

On the ninth day of April, 1789, Thomas Williams, for a valuable consideration, assigned to Governor Sumner and his wife, who was the original plaintiff in this action, all his right, by virtue of the [149]*149deed of mortgage. Governor Sumner died before the commencement of the action.

On the same ninth of April, the defendants, having observed all the requirements of law in that regard, sold the equity of redemption, which William Dudley had in the mortgaged premises, to Governor Sumner and wife, and made a deed thereof to them, therein styling themselves “ administrators of all and singular the goods and chattels, rights and credits of William Dudley, late of Roxbury.” After premising that they had petitioned the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Suffolk, to obtain license to sell all the real estate of which Dudley died seised in fee simple; that such license had been accordingly granted; that they had advertised the same according to law; and that the grantees, Governor Sumner and wife, had become the purchasers, by being the highest bidders at auction, — the deed then proceeds, that they, the said Thomas Williams and Joseph Williams, “ in their capacity of administrators * on the estate of William Dudley,” in consideration of £305, paid to them, as administrators as aforesaid, by the grantees, had, in their said capacity, given, granted, &c., and thereby did give, grant,-&c., the equity of redemption, of which the said William Dudley died seised and possessed in the premises, which are described; and the more particularly to specify what was intended to be sold, that is, the equity of redemption and nothing else, the mortgage from Dudley to Williams, and his assignment thereof to the grantees, are particularly set forth. The habendum is in these words: —• “ To have and to hold the same to the said Increase and Elizabeth, their heirs and assigns, to their use and behoof forever.” The grantors then covenant, in their said capacity of administrators, with the grantees, that they, as administrators as aforesaid, are lawfully seised of the premises; that they are free and clear from all encumbrances, by them or with their knowledge made, saving and excepting the mortgage deed and bond, above referred to, and the right of dower of William Dudley’s widow; they also covenant, that they had, in their said capacity, good right to sell and convey the same to the grantees, and that they, as administrators as aforesaid, would warrant and defend the same against the lawful claims and demands of all persons ; and they subscribed their names, each as administrator on the estate of William Dudley, and annexed seals expressly as administrators.

After the death of William Dudley, and after the death of Governor Sumner, Joseph Dudley, the son and heir of William, commenced an action of formedon in descender against the original plaintiff, Elizabeth Sumner, and recovered judgment against her whereby she was evicted.

[150]*150The great question in this case is, — whether the defendants are nound by the covenants in their deed, in their private capacities.—• But, previous to the discussion of that question, I will endeavor to ascertain (and it is important that it should be ascertained) what was intended as the subject of the grant. And here I will observe, that it * seems to me, that the mind of every man capable of comprehending the subject, unshackled by speculative and abstract reasoning, who should endeavor, from the plain and settled signification of the words, to discover the meaning of the parties, would feel perfect satisfaction in the conclusion, that it was intended to sell the equity, which William Dudley had, of redeeming the mortgaged premises, and nothing more. Great, and, I think", unusual attention is paid in the language of the deed, that no doubt should remain upon this question.

In the premises, to exclude all pretension to their having any claim to the land, and to confine their claim merely to the equity of redemption, they particularly state the mortgage; that it was outstanding, and had that day been assigned to the grantees; thereby showing that they had no right to sell the land. The subject of the grant is the “ equity of redemption, of which William Dudley died, seised in the premises.” The habendum is expressed, to have and to hold the same.

Here commences the argument of the counsel for the plaintiff". —■ They say that the defendants, in expressing the subject of the grant, call it the equity of redemption, of which William Dudley died seised; ” and that, by adding “ in the premises,” they have distinguished that subject from the premises ; and then they go on to show that “ the premises can refer to nothing but the land described.”

Having ascertained this, they then proceed further to show from it, that the subject of the defendant’s covenant is the land, and not the equity of redemption. They say that the word same, in the habendum, refers to premises, as the next antecedent; but that, if they are mistaken in this, the covenant of seisin, that they were lawfully seised of the premises, and their reference thereto in the subsequent covenants, by the word same, renders it manifest that it was intended that the covenants should go to the land, and not be confined to the equity of redemption; that it is a good rule of .construction, that where, in an instrument, a word *or expression.has a definite meaning annexed to it, and it again recurs in the same instrument, it is fairly to be presumed (unless it can be clearly inferred, from the subject matter or context, that a different meaning was intended) that it is used in the same sense ; that the subject of the grant is the equity [151]*151of redemption to the premises; that the equity is a distinct subject from the premises ; that the premises and the land are the same; and that the covenants refer to the premises, and of consequence to the land. This I take to be the substance of the argument in this regard ; but I am not satisfied with its justness.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mass. 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumner-v-williams-mass-1811.