Thompson v. Bennet

1 Smith & H. 327
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 15, 1814
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Smith & H. 327 (Thompson v. Bennet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Bennet, 1 Smith & H. 327 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1814).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

At common law, the mode of transferring a freehold estate in lands was for the seller to go with the purchaser on to the lands, and there declare (for in early times writing was very little known), in the presence of the neighboring tenants, the sale; show the boundaries; and deliver possession to the purchaser. This was called a feoffment, and, for ages, was the only mode of passing a fee-simple; and, though it serves equally well to pass other estates of freehold, yet it was held properly to' signify a conveyance in fee. Estates less than freehold were deemed of so little consequence that little solemnity or notoriety was necessary in the transfer of them. Though a writing, a deed, or charter was not essentially necessary, yet in time it became usual. The writing was very brief. The substantial part of the conveyance was not, and could not be, included in it, though usually indorsed upon it; I mean, livery and seisin. Without it, the deed, or any words of conveyance, passed only an estate at will. It is strange that what was once of the essence of the transaction should, in time, come to be considered as a ceremony; for so it is alluded to in our statute of conveyance. When the object of the conveyance was a fee-simple, it may easily be supposed that the persons called to bear witness might easily retain in their memories all that was necessary to be remembered. The witnesses were the neighboring tenants, who held their lands of the same superior. But when the proprietor of lands became desirous of making such a disposition of them as his prudence, justice, the convenience of his family, or caprice, dictated, it is very obvious that written deeds would be indispensably necessary. The conveyance by feoffment is calculated for a well-settled country, where the lands are holden of a superior, where the feudal system prevails, and the tenants are illiterate. It is not adapted to a refined, commercial, and improved state of society. For some time before the reign of Henry VIII., deeds, or charters of feoffment, were in general use; and in these deeds the peculiar purpose and intention of the parties were expressed. Still, they were only used in company with that which in fact passed the land, — livery and seisin.

It is well known that the feudal system imposed many [329]*329restraints on alienation. It may easily be supposed that men, in early times, must have been desirous of getting rid of these restraints; and the clergy of that day, who had nearly all the learning, were desirous, for the best purposes in the world, of getting into their possession some portion of the land, which was then the only source of wealth in the nation. The statutes;, of mortmain restrained religious houses from purchasing or hold-1' ing lands. About the year 1377, thejr contrived a new method of conveyance, and which was held not to come within the prohibition of the statutes. Lands were granted, not to themselves directly, but to nominal feoffees, to the use of the religious houses; the latter, as entitled to the use, receiving the actual profits, while the seisin of the land, or the legal title, remained in the nominal feoffee. The courts of equity compelled the feoffee to account, to him who had the use, for the rents and profits. In this way, the clergy became, in fact, the owners of the land. The feoffee was, in equity, considered as a naked trustee, and held the legal title for the benefit of another. The barons, who were jealous of the clergy, and dreaded their influence over the common people, procured an act of parliament disabling the clergy from holding lands even in this way. It was soon, however, perceived by the sturdy and illiterate barons themselves, that this mode of conveyance, thus invented and practised by the clergy, suited their views ; for, in effect, it conferred the power of devising, which was not permitted by law. In this way, too, the owner of lands was enabled, in his lifetime, to charge and incumber them, and to make his real estate liable to a multitude of conditions and minute designations [?], for the purpose of raising money without an absolute sale of the land. He could also make provision for the numerous branches of his family ; and, which was, perhaps, of still more consequence, he could secure his ¡ estate from forfeiture for his treasons and other crimes, and : relieve it from the rigor of many feudal burdens. Accordingly, it is said that uses had grown almost universal before the end of the fifteenth century, and the courts of equity had reduced this method of conveyance into a regular system.

It is not to be imagined that this mode of conveyance would [330]*330be agreeable to the King and the great feudal lords. It was, moreover, attended with many and great inconveniences to all classes of the people, inasmuch as it was secret, and received no countenance from the courts of law. These evils were attempted to be remedied by several statutes, the provisions of which tended to consider him who had the use as the real owner of the estate; and, at length, that idea was carried into complete effect by the statute of 27 Henry VIII., which is usually called the Statute of Uses. If it was intended, by this statute, to destroy uses, as some have supposed, the end was not answered. They abolished the estate of the feoffee by annexing it to the estate of him who had the use. In short, the statute, instead of destroying, legalized this mode of conveyance. I think it must have been foreseen that it would, in practice, entirely supersede the old mode by feoffment. Indeed, while it labored under the disadvantage of having no legal foundation, — depending on the courts of equity entirety for its execution, — we are told that it was in general use in the nation. The sentiments of the nation called for the change.

It was the excellence of this statute that it legalized conveyance by deed without livery of seisin. But it certainty was a very great defect that it made no provision for giving notoriety to the transaction. To prevent, therefore, clandestine conveyances of freehold estates, it was enacted, in the same session of Parliament, that such bargains and sales should not inure to pass a freehold, unless made by indenture and enrolled. It is not easy to perceive why the form of indenture was required, but the reasons for enrolment must strike every mind. If a nation were about to devise a mode of conveyance, and the people were generally able to read and write, that mode would doubtless be a deed which should contain the evidence of the agreement of the parties, the terms and conditions of the sale, a description of the land sold, the estate or interest intended to be passed; which should be solemnly executed, to prevent surprise, fraud, and imposition ; and recorded in some public and convenient place, for the double purpose of preserving the evidence of the sale and of [331]*331making it manifest to all men. Substantially, the Statute of Uses, with the Statute of Enrolment, extended to all estates as well as those of freehold, answers this description; but the manner in which this conveyance operates is the effect of the peculiar circumstances which gave it birth. It was not an original invention, but an improvement of an invention; the doctrine of uses then in being. Hence it results that a conveyance by deed of bargain and sale can only be made when an use can be raised. If the use is raised by deed, there must be a pecuniary consideration. The deed does not pass the land ; it passes the use, and the statute passes the land to him to whom the deed conveyed the use. The feoffment transferred the actual possession ; the bargain and sale transferred it in law.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Smith & H. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-bennet-nhsuperct-1814.