Van Ausdall v. Van Ausdall

135 A. 850, 48 R.I. 106, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 135 A. 850 (Van Ausdall v. Van Ausdall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Ausdall v. Van Ausdall, 135 A. 850, 48 R.I. 106, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 20 (R.I. 1927).

Opinion

*107 Barrows, J.

This is an appeal from a decree in equity ordering partition of certain real estate. Title came to the parties, husband and wife, by deed in 1911. In 1923 a divorce from bed and board was granted the wife. The bill for partition was filed in 1925.

The only question is whether title was held by the parties as tenants by entirety or as joint tenants. If the former, the bill can not be maintained.

The language of the deed of conveyance réferred to a consideration of f 100 paid to the grantors by the grantees “Walter M. Van Ausdall and Mary E. Van Ausdall, his wife” and conveyed the property “unto the said grantees as joint tenants and their heirs and assigns forever”. The habendum clause provided for a holding “unto and to the use of the said grantees as joint tenants and not as tenants in common and their heirs and assigns and the he'irs and assigns of the survivor of them”.

At common law when a deed was made to A and B, not being husband and wife, the nature of the tenure depended on the wording of the deed. Without explanatory words the deed was interpreted as creating a joint tenancy because such tenancies were looked upon more favorably than tenancies in common. 2 Bl. Com. 180. Apt language, however, could create a tenancy in common. 2 Bl. Com. 193. The subsequent marriage of A and B did not alter the nature of the tenure whether it were “joint” or “common”. Den v. Hardenbergh, (N. J.) 18 Am. Dec. 371, note at 385. Joint tenants were “seised per my et per tout— by the half or moiety and by all”. But “if an estate in fee *108 be given to a man and his wife they are neither properly joint tenants nor tenants in common; for, husband and wife being considered as one person in law, they can not take the estate by moieties but both are seized of the entirety per tout et non per my.” 2 Bl. Com. 182. See also elaborate exposition in Den v. Hardenbergh, supra. From this developed the presumption, Hoag v. Hoag, 213 Mass. 50, often applied that “the same words of conveyance which would make two other persons joint tenants, will make a husband and wife tenants of the entirety”. Freem. Cot. (2d ed.) Sec. 69; Den v. Hardenbergh, supra, at 374, citing cases at common law; 30 C. J. § 89. p. 560. In Massachusetts this form of tenure early and often has been the subject of judicial consideration. In addition to the four unities of joint tenancy a fifth, unity of two natural persons as one person in law, existed in tenancy by entirety. Topping v. Sadler, 5 Jones, 357. Tenancy by entirety is treated as a species of joint tenancy and not as a distinct tenancy apart from joint tenancy by some of the leading authors on real property. Note to Den v. Hardenbergh, at 379, but a full consideration of its attributes has led others to classify it as an independent cotenancy. Freem. Cot. § 71.

Tenancy by the entirety sharply differed from joint tenancy by reason of inseverability by act of one grantee. 2 Bl. Com. 182. It could not be the subject of a judicial decree for partition. Bennett v. Child, 19 Wisc. 383. Freem. Cot. (2d ed.) §§ 63-65; but an absolute divorce destroyed the estate because “one legal person had been resolved . . . into two distinct individual persons who could no longer hold a single legal seisin but must hold by moieties.” Ames v. Norman, 4 Snead 696; Thornley v. Thornley, (1893), 2 Ch. 229.

At common law the capacity of a husband and wife to hold by moieties after marriage an estate taken by moieties before marriage was recognized. So too was inability to- take by moieties after marriage because of legal oneness. This inconsistency was ea,rly attacked in this country by *109 statute and they were allowed to take as well as hold as tenants in common. Most American authorities hold that a husband and wife if apt language be used can take as well as hold by moieties as joint tenants. Hoag v. Hoag, 213 Mass. 50.

We commented on the peculiarity of tenancies by entirety in Quinn v. Drummond, 47 R. I. 215, 132 Atl. 439. That they have been uncommon in Rhode Island is noticeable by the absence of reference to s'uch an estate in any of our legislation prior to 1926, Public Laws, Chapter 810 (p. 179). There the term is used in connection with taxation. Nor prior to Quinn v. Drummond, supra, is such an estate mentioned in any of our reported decisions.

Though its existence at common law is recognized in most states, 30 C. J. 555, n. 36, on account of its peculiar attributes a few states have refused to consider a tenancy by entirety as part of their common law. Whittlesey v. Fuller, 11 Conn. 337. See Ohio cases cited in Den v. Hardenbergh, supra, at 381. In our opinion the possible existence of such tenure may be accepted without necessarily indulging presumptions in its favor. We think such possibility came to us as a part of our common law. Upon this ground, together with absence of any legislation or decisions expressly relating to such estates, respondent bases her claim that the tenancy here created must be presumed to be one by entirety.

Complainant’s claim is that in the light of Rhode Island legislation there is a presumption in the absence of words indicating a contrary intention that a deed to husband and wife as joint tenants creates a joint tenancy as distinguished from a tenancy by entirety.

*110 *109 On the facts before us at early common law a presumption would exist in favor of construing this deed as creating a tenancy by entirety. This was only a presumption, i. e., an aid to legal reasoning. It arose because grantees were husband and wife and legal policy favored a holding “per tout et non per my". It was employed in English law at a time when a married woman had few *110 property rights. It was created for what was conceived to be the wife’s protection, If she now has full propetry rights and needs no such protection, the reason for its employment has disappeared and a court properly may decline to be guided by it. One of the glories of t,he common law has been that it is not static. It grows as new conditions arise. When the basis for a presumption has gone, there is small reason for a court longer to act upon that presumption. If nothing has taken the place of such basis, perhaps the presumption may continue to be applied. Where for that basis has been substituted an entirely altered conception of the property relation of husband and wife, the imputation of intent, as if no alteration had been made, is not . sound.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 850, 48 R.I. 106, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-ausdall-v-van-ausdall-ri-1927.