Tantum v. Campbell

91 A. 120, 83 N.J. Eq. 361, 13 Buchanan 361, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 28, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 91 A. 120 (Tantum v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tantum v. Campbell, 91 A. 120, 83 N.J. Eq. 361, 13 Buchanan 361, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71 (N.J. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Walker, Chancellor.

The bill in this cause was filed to foreclose three mortgages, two of which are' involved in the pending motion; one of the latter made by Catherine Campbell and her then surviving children. to James D. Tantum, guardian, January 7th, 1898, and the other by Catherine Campbell and her then surviving children [363]*363to James D. Tantum, guardian, November 1st, 1899. All three-mortgages became the property of the complainant by virtue of several assignments.

The title to the mortgaged premises was in James McGuire at _ the time of his death and passed from him by devise. So much of his will as is pertinent to the present inquiry provides as-follows:

“I do give and bequeath the said lot of land and the dwelling to boerected thereon, when the same is completed, to my daughter, Catherine, for and during the term of her natural life, to her sole use and benefit,, entirely free of any charge or control whatever of any husband she how has or hereafter may have; and after the decease of my said daughter Catherine, I give and devise the said lot of land and dwelling to the lawful issue of her body begotten, her surviving, to hold in equal shares as-tenants in common in fee-simple.
“It is my will in case my said daughter, Catherine, shall die without lawful issue of her body begotten, her surviving-, and I do in such event give and devise the said lot of land and dwelling to my daughter Mary and my son Phelix in equal shares as tenants in common, or to the survivor of them at the time of the decease of my said daughter Catherine without surviving issue as aforesaid, to hold respectively as follows,” &c.

There is no doubt but that Catherine Campbell, daughter of the testator, has but a life estate in the premises. And the question pressing for'solution is, did the estate devised to her for life-become a vested estate in remainder in her issue in esse at the-time the devise took effect — that is, upon the death of the devisor, or was the remainder to her issue a contingent one ?

It is to be observed that if all of Catherine’s issue he dead at the time of her decease, then thq land in question will go to the testator’s daughter Mary and his son Phelix, or to the survivor of them.

One of the mortgagors in the last two mortgages above mentioned -was Mary M. Sweeney, a daughter of Catherine Campbell, the life tenant. Mrs. Sweeney has since died, leaving a daughter, Lida B. Sweeney, one of the defendants, her surviving. Motion is made on behalf of Lida

“to strike out so much of the bill of complaint in the above-entitled cause as prays that this defendant, Lida B. Sweeney, may be decreed to pay to the said complainant the amount due to her on the bonds and [364]*364mortgages secondly and thirdly set out in the said bill of complaint, and in default thereof that this defendant may be foreclosed of and from all equity of redemption or claim of, in and to the said mortgaged premises, and that the same be sold to satisfy the amount due on the bonds and mortgages aforesaid, for the following reasons — first, because this defendant did not, nor did any person through whom she claims an interest in the said lands create the debt or any part thereof, nor did she, or any person through whom she claims an interest in the said lands, execute or deliver any of the bonds and mortgages aforesaid; second, because neither the mother of this defendant nor any of the other children of Catherine Campbell were empowered to dispose of, or in any manner charge, the lands described in the bill of complaint, by the act entitled ‘An act to authorize the transfer of estates in expectancy’ (Gen. Stat. p. 381 § 138), the estate being an estate in expectancy or a contingent estate, where the contingency is as to the person or persons in whom the estate may vest.”

This motion is made under rule 213 and is, in effect, a demurrer to the hill and affords a proper opportunity deliberately to determine the merits. Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Co., 74 N. J. Eq. 457, 461, 462. The motion is confined to a portion of the prayer of the bill, and it appears that a demurrer, and, consequently, a motion such as this, will lie to relief prayed in a bill in chaucery. Dan. Ch. Pl. & Pr. *547. That tire general demurrer, in Hoppock's Executors v. United, &c., Railroad Co., 27 N. J. Eq. 286, was considered as affecting the prayer of the bill is apparent from the language of Chancellor Runyon at the end of his opinion (on p. 292), and also from the observation of Mr. Justice Reed, speaking for the- court of errors and appeals, iu the same case, sitb nom. United, &c., Railroad Co. v. Hoppock, 28 N. J. Eq. 261. (at p. 263).

The defendant Lida B. Sweeney contends that her contingent estate is not charged with the encumbrances which her mother assumed to create. She claims that she will take immediately from her grandfather as a purchaser, and not immediately from her mother as an heir, upon the death of her grandmother, the life tenant, -and therefore her contingent estate, should it ripen into a vested remainder by her outliving her grandmother, will not be charged. These contentions I am bound to support as well founded in law.

As Lida’s mother had only a contingent remainder' (with others) at her death, which became extinguished, as to her [365]*365(mother’s) interest, by the happening of that event, she inherited. nothing from her mother; and as her grandfather by his will created that remainder, which has as yet vested in nobody, she has not taken as a purchaser from him; although she may, and will, yet do so, if she survives her grandmother, tlia life tenant, because she is one of the issue of her grandmother’s body begotten, according to the legal meaning of that term.

I say that she, Lida B. Sweeney, will have a vested interest in the land if she survives her grandmother, the life tenant; and that is because the term “issue of one’s body” means issue ad infinitum, and not that of the body of an immediate ancestor only.

In the treatise on estates tail in .70 Cyc. it is laid down, (at ¶. 60S) : - '

“Estates tail are estates of inheritance, which, instead of descending to heirs generally, go to the heirs of the donee’s body, which means his lawful issue, his children, and through them to his grandchildren in a direct line, so long as his posterity endures in a regular order and course of descent.”

And Blaekstone observes (2 Bl. Com. 118).:

“Tail general is whore lands and tenements are given to one, and the heirs of his body begotten; which is called tail-general, because, how often soever such donee in tail be married, his issue in general by all and every such marriage is, in successive order, capable of inheriting tlie estate tail.”

As was said by Vice-Chancellor Learning in Coyle v. Coyle, 73 N. J. Eq. 528:

“The word 'issue,’ in its ordinary legal meaning, embraces grandchildren and remoter descendants, as well as children. When used in a will, a more restricted meaning may be attributed to it, if, from- the terina of the testamentary disposition, it appears that the testator used the word, in a particular moaning less general than the ordinary meaning.”

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Bluebook (online)
91 A. 120, 83 N.J. Eq. 361, 13 Buchanan 361, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tantum-v-campbell-njch-1914.