PETERFIELD TURPIN, who was brother of all the parties, by his testament, dated in february, 1789, among other devises, gave and bequeathed to the defendant Horatio the land and plantation whereon his father lived, also 732 acres of land in Buckingham, near the head of Appomattox, and. also ten negro slaves distinguished. by names.
At that time, this testator owned not any of the things thus *given and bequeathed, and possessed only the land in Buckingham.
His father Thomas Turpin, who was owner, of them, and possessor of all, except the Buckingham land, by his testament, dated in March, of the same year, gave the same lands and slaves to Peterfield Turpin. Both the testators are dead, the son having survived the father.
The plaintiff claimed a share of the lands and slaves, insisting they descended to the heirs of Peterfield Turpin, who were his brothers, not being disposed of by his testament, because he had them not at the time when he made it, although he had them at the time when he died.
Some examinations of witnesses were taken, to prove, on one side, a revocation, and, on the other, a republication of his testament by Peterfield Turpin; but the proof was defective.
By the court, 8 day of november, 1791.
Decisions of questions, arising both on the english statutes, and on the customs of particular places in that country, authorizing alienations of land by testament, had declared the law to be, that a devise of land which the testator had not, i. e. of which he was not seised, at the time when he made the devise, was void, although he should have the land at the time when he died.
Memorable examples, of these decisions occur, one on the statutes, in the case between Butler and Baker, 200 years a go, which, as Coke the reporter of it says, had been argued one and twenty times, and the other on the custom of gavelkind, in a case between the heir and widow, who was devisee, of William Buckenham, near 100 years ago, which is published, with the arguments, in the book called, law of devises and revocations.
If the law with us had not been altered, these two cases might have been relied upon, as authorities, in the present controversy, with respect to the lands.
But a statute of this commonwealth, made in 1785, and taking effect in January, 1787, and therefore being the law by which the. question in this case must be decided, hath enacted that every one, aged twenty one years or upwards, being of sound mind, and not a married woman, shall have power, at will and pleasure, by last will and testament in writing, to devise all the estate, right, title, and interest in possession, reversion or remainder, which he or she hath or, at the time of his or her death, shall have, of, in, or to, lands, tenements, or hereditaments.
By the terms of the statute, power being given to devise an ^estate in possession, reversion or remainder, which one hath, that is, at the time of making his testament hath, or an estate in
The devise, understood in the former sense, that is, a present inchoate alienation of the right which he then had in the lands, would be adjudged void ; unless the executor would have been bound to purchase the lands for the legatary or pay the value of them to him, out of the testators estate, as the executor, by the roman civil law, was bound to do, in a like case, where the testator knew the 1hing bequeathed not to be his. 1. 1. II. tit. XX l 4. ; C. 1. VI. tit. XXXVII. 1. 10. yea, if the testator had owned an estate in the lands, but an estate [164]*164less than that which was bequeathed to him by his father, the devise, understood in the former sense, would have been void; because an ademption of the legacy, without a republication of the testament, would have been wrought by the change of the estate devised.
But the devise may be understood, with equal propriety in the latter sense; for the words i give and bequeath the land and plantation where my father lived, also 732 acres of land in Buckingham, near the head of Appomatox, do not confine the devise to an estate, which Peterfield Turpin had in the lands at one time, more than to the estate which he should have in them at another time. indeed, the terms, i give, although they purpoftan immediate alienation of the thing given, are, when used *'in a testament, from the nature of that act, no more than a declaration of a testators will, that the legatary, at a future day, shall have the thing said to be given to him, and even that not certainly, but subject to a change of will, which may appear by revocation, ademption, translation, &c. SO that the terms, i give in a testament, are understood more properly of a future, than of a present time, and the testator, having a power to devise, and no doubt, expecting to own, a future estate in these lands, and willing in every event that his brother Horatio should succede to them, and not having altered that will, the law, which favours acts authorised by itself, as testaments are, will suppose the testator to have exercised his power to devise a future estate, and accordingly approve that exposition of the devise by which it will be valid; that is. in the same sense as if the testator had used these words: i give to Horatio Turpin the land &c. if i have them at the time of my death, and do not alter my will.
Whether the defendent Horatio hath a title also to the slaves bequeathed to him by the same paragraph in the testament? would not be a different question from that already discussed, if the statute be supposed to have designed to comprehend slaves, which in some instances are an hereditary kind of property, in the term, heredita-ments, used in the statute to designate one of the subjects of devises which it authorizes.
But this statute is supposed not to have comprehended slaves; because that kind of property was bequeathable by the common law, which lands are said not to have been; and because, as the law is now, and always hath been, a bequest of slaves transfers the property of them in the same manner as if they were chatels. ■
Then let the bequest of the ten slaves here be considered independently of the act of 178S, and as a bequest of chatels.
A man bequeaths slaves by their names, which at the time of making the testament were not his property, but afterwards became his property; whether hath the lega-t.ify a right to the slaves?
Swinburne (part III. ? VI. no.
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PETERFIELD TURPIN, who was brother of all the parties, by his testament, dated in february, 1789, among other devises, gave and bequeathed to the defendant Horatio the land and plantation whereon his father lived, also 732 acres of land in Buckingham, near the head of Appomattox, and. also ten negro slaves distinguished. by names.
At that time, this testator owned not any of the things thus *given and bequeathed, and possessed only the land in Buckingham.
His father Thomas Turpin, who was owner, of them, and possessor of all, except the Buckingham land, by his testament, dated in March, of the same year, gave the same lands and slaves to Peterfield Turpin. Both the testators are dead, the son having survived the father.
The plaintiff claimed a share of the lands and slaves, insisting they descended to the heirs of Peterfield Turpin, who were his brothers, not being disposed of by his testament, because he had them not at the time when he made it, although he had them at the time when he died.
Some examinations of witnesses were taken, to prove, on one side, a revocation, and, on the other, a republication of his testament by Peterfield Turpin; but the proof was defective.
By the court, 8 day of november, 1791.
Decisions of questions, arising both on the english statutes, and on the customs of particular places in that country, authorizing alienations of land by testament, had declared the law to be, that a devise of land which the testator had not, i. e. of which he was not seised, at the time when he made the devise, was void, although he should have the land at the time when he died.
Memorable examples, of these decisions occur, one on the statutes, in the case between Butler and Baker, 200 years a go, which, as Coke the reporter of it says, had been argued one and twenty times, and the other on the custom of gavelkind, in a case between the heir and widow, who was devisee, of William Buckenham, near 100 years ago, which is published, with the arguments, in the book called, law of devises and revocations.
If the law with us had not been altered, these two cases might have been relied upon, as authorities, in the present controversy, with respect to the lands.
But a statute of this commonwealth, made in 1785, and taking effect in January, 1787, and therefore being the law by which the. question in this case must be decided, hath enacted that every one, aged twenty one years or upwards, being of sound mind, and not a married woman, shall have power, at will and pleasure, by last will and testament in writing, to devise all the estate, right, title, and interest in possession, reversion or remainder, which he or she hath or, at the time of his or her death, shall have, of, in, or to, lands, tenements, or hereditaments.
By the terms of the statute, power being given to devise an ^estate in possession, reversion or remainder, which one hath, that is, at the time of making his testament hath, or an estate in
The devise, understood in the former sense, that is, a present inchoate alienation of the right which he then had in the lands, would be adjudged void ; unless the executor would have been bound to purchase the lands for the legatary or pay the value of them to him, out of the testators estate, as the executor, by the roman civil law, was bound to do, in a like case, where the testator knew the 1hing bequeathed not to be his. 1. 1. II. tit. XX l 4. ; C. 1. VI. tit. XXXVII. 1. 10. yea, if the testator had owned an estate in the lands, but an estate [164]*164less than that which was bequeathed to him by his father, the devise, understood in the former sense, would have been void; because an ademption of the legacy, without a republication of the testament, would have been wrought by the change of the estate devised.
But the devise may be understood, with equal propriety in the latter sense; for the words i give and bequeath the land and plantation where my father lived, also 732 acres of land in Buckingham, near the head of Appomatox, do not confine the devise to an estate, which Peterfield Turpin had in the lands at one time, more than to the estate which he should have in them at another time. indeed, the terms, i give, although they purpoftan immediate alienation of the thing given, are, when used *'in a testament, from the nature of that act, no more than a declaration of a testators will, that the legatary, at a future day, shall have the thing said to be given to him, and even that not certainly, but subject to a change of will, which may appear by revocation, ademption, translation, &c. SO that the terms, i give in a testament, are understood more properly of a future, than of a present time, and the testator, having a power to devise, and no doubt, expecting to own, a future estate in these lands, and willing in every event that his brother Horatio should succede to them, and not having altered that will, the law, which favours acts authorised by itself, as testaments are, will suppose the testator to have exercised his power to devise a future estate, and accordingly approve that exposition of the devise by which it will be valid; that is. in the same sense as if the testator had used these words: i give to Horatio Turpin the land &c. if i have them at the time of my death, and do not alter my will.
Whether the defendent Horatio hath a title also to the slaves bequeathed to him by the same paragraph in the testament? would not be a different question from that already discussed, if the statute be supposed to have designed to comprehend slaves, which in some instances are an hereditary kind of property, in the term, heredita-ments, used in the statute to designate one of the subjects of devises which it authorizes.
But this statute is supposed not to have comprehended slaves; because that kind of property was bequeathable by the common law, which lands are said not to have been; and because, as the law is now, and always hath been, a bequest of slaves transfers the property of them in the same manner as if they were chatels. ■
Then let the bequest of the ten slaves here be considered independently of the act of 178S, and as a bequest of chatels.
A man bequeaths slaves by their names, which at the time of making the testament were not his property, but afterwards became his property; whether hath the lega-t.ify a right to the slaves?
Swinburne (part III. ? VI. no. 17.) hath stated this case, without any important variation, propounding the same question, in considering it, he observes that, by the civil law, the thing bequeathed is not due to the legatary, but in some few cases, he adds, by the laws of this realm (England) it seemeth that we are to distinguish whether some special thing be devised or not. for if a special or certain thing be devised, as if the testator do bequeath the manor of Dale, then tho the testator had no such manor, when the will was. made, yet by the purchase made ^afterwards, the testator is presumed to have had this meaning from the beginning, to purchase the same for the benefit of the legatary: and so the devise is good, but if the legacy be not special, but general, as if the testator do bequeath all his lands, then the testator having some lands at the time of making the testament, and purchasing other lands after-wards, those lands purchased after making the testament shall not pass.
This writer quoted, for the civil law, what is called the regula catoniana, and for the english law, the case between Brett and JRigden, in Plowdens commentaries; neither of which is satisfactory, as to this question.
The regula catoniana, which occurs in Dig. lib. XXXIV. tit. VII. is this: quod si testamenti facti tempore decessit testator, inutile foret: id legatum, quandoc unque decesserit, non valet, this rule, in several instances there mentioned, is said to be false, it is true, without doubt, in other instances: e. g. if one, before he is the proper age, if one, non compos mentis, if a married woman, making a testament, and surviving the inability to perform such an act, die without a republication, the testament is void no less than it would have been void if the inability had not ceased, before the death happened, but it seems, an improper canon in many cases to which it may be extended, and perhaps is true only where the vice in the original constitution of the testament is defect of age, understanding, or freedom of will, in the testator.
The quotation from Plowdens commentaries is apposite to the principal case, and a rational opinion, but is not of decisive authority, because the example is a devise of lands, and because it is an opinion only of serjeant Eovelese, and denied to be law by the chief justice Holt' and Trevor, in their arguments of the case on Bocken-hams will.
Chief justice Holt, in his argument, on that occasion, mentions two cases, one in Goldesborough 93, and the other in March 137, which may seem, at first view, not unlike this; but, upon consideration, they are thought to differ from it so as not to be applicable. in the former case, the surrender of the lease was an ademption of the legacy; and in the latter case, if the executor did not assent to the legacy before the death of the legatary, who bequeathed the sub[165]*165ject of it, and whether he did assent or not doth not appear, the case cannot be compared with the principal case.
In this disquisition, any case adjudged, which is a direct authority, not being' remembered, we must have recourse to some other topics.
I£ a bequest, like a gift among the living, were a present alienation *or conveyance of a right in the thing said to be given, the objection to the validity of this bequest must prevale, for the transition of a right, which doth not exist, or, rather before it exists, is preposterous.
But a bequest is not a present alienation ; the testator doth not intend nor doth the law declare it to be so. it is no more than the appointment of him whom the testator wishes to succeed him after his ■death in the ownership of the thing said to be bequeathed and why such an appointment should not be fulfilled, if the testator at his death, before which it is not intended to be effectual, have the thing, no good reason hath yet been, nor, as is believed, ■can be assigned.
On the contrary, by the roman civil law, which is ordinarily thought a reasonable rule of decision, the bequest of that which the testator never had is valid in many cases, and in some cases, whether he knew or did not know the thing to be the property of another; so that the executor was bound to purchase it for the legatary, or pay the value of it to him out of the testators estate, this is manifest by the institutes and Code in the places before mentioned, and that this particular doctrine is still approved in those countries where that law has been generally adopted, appears by the Code dc l’Humanite, in the word EEGS, if, to sustain such an appointment, where the testator never owned the thing, be reasonable, to sustain it, if he do own the thing at the time of his death, when the ■succession is to take effect, can not be less reasonable, all other circumstances remaining the same.
And the appointment seems authorised by deductions from legal principles, nothing' is pretended to invalidate this bequest, but that the testator, when he made it, did not own the slaves said to be given, although when he died, he did own them, but, if the proposition that the testator must own the thing at the time of bequeathing it were true, which is not admitted, because it is thought not possible to be proved, the testator in this case is affirmed to have bequeathed the slaves at the time when he owned them, that is, to have bequeathed them when his father died; for, the testament not having been •revoked, the law supposed the benevolence of the testator towards the legatary to have continued. this is assumed as a proposition incontrovertible. now, the continuance of Peterfield Turpins desire, when he became owner of the slaves, that, after his death, his brother Horatio should have them, is by operation of law, a repetition or republication of the bequest at that time, because it hath the same effect; for a republicatiori is no more than an evidence that the testators desire continues; *and if the law supposes it to continue, the republication is unnecessary'. if indeed a man who had lands at the time of making his testatment, devise his lands, by a general description, and afterwards purchase other lands, a republication might perhaps be necessary, to transfer the after purchased lands, if necessary in any case. Holt, in his argument of the case on Bockenhams will, calls the notion, stated in the preceding part of this section, to wit, that the testator, eo instanti that he becomes owner of the thing devised, may be supposed to make his will, absurd and repugnant, but it is denied to be absurd and repugnant, and seems dictated by the spirit of the law, which doth not appoint a successor, unless the deceased owner hath omitted an appointment, and will always, if it can, establish the right of the testamentary successor.
The right of Ho ratio Turpin is thought to be supported no less by authorities, as far as those authorities will apply, than by the principles of law and reason.
By a bequest of chatels generaly, those which are acquired after the testament was made, have been frequently adjudged, and are universaly admitted, to be transfered to the legatary, so that if Peterfield Turpin, who bequeathed some slaves to several of his relations, had bequeathed the residue of the slaves, without naming them, to his brother Horatio, he would have been inti-tled to these ten confessedly: but they who confess this deny him to be intitled to them in this case, where they are bequeathed to him by their names.
This distinction, between a general and specific bequest, seems thus founded: its favourers say, the law allows a power to bequeath future acquisitions of chatels, by general descriptions, to prevent the inconvenience of making a testament, which otherwise might be necessary, every time changes, frequent in that kind of property, happen, whereas there is not the like reason to allow that power in the case of a .specific bequest, but, if the opinion before explaned, be correct, the distinction doth not exist; the power of the testator is the same in both cases; and the times when the bequest of chatels generaly, and the bequest of a specific thing, shall begin to operate upon the after acquired property, are the same; and those times are when he becomes owner of the things; although neither bequest is an act so complete as to transfer the property before his death.
Dismiss the bill.
The plaintiff appeal. [See it, 1 Wash.
75.— Ed.]
The decree was affirmed.
No man, as Is believed, will refer the terms, shall have, to a.n estate, in revision or remainder only; for a revision, or a vested remainder is a present estate, and a remainder contingent at the death of the testator, if his death wore before the event, oa.miol, be called a,n estate which the testator either had or should have. — Note in edition of 17