Wight v. Thayer

67 Mass. 284
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 67 Mass. 284 (Wight v. Thayer) 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
Wight v. Thayer, 67 Mass. 284 (Mass. 1854).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is a petition for partition of real estate in Boston, claimed by the petitioners, in right of the wife, Phebe Ann Wight, one of three children of Sarah Ockerhousen, originally Sarah Hall. Sarah Hall was a daughter of Benjamin Hall, who died leaving two children only, to wit, the said Sarah, by his first wife, and Charles Hall, one of the respondents, by his second wife. Benjamin Hall was one of three children, and the only son of Hugh Hall and Elizabeth Hall, the other two being daughters.

By the will of Susannah Jacobs, made in 1727, the estate in question was devised as follows: “ To my granddaughter. Elizabeth Hall, wife of Mr. Hugh Hall, and the heirs of her body ■ lawfully begotten, and to their heirs and assigns forever.” Hugh [285]*285Hall and his wife Elizabeth entered under this devise, and became seized thereof, in her right, until her death, after which her husband.held the same as tenant by the curtesy, until his decease in 1773. The children of Hugh and Elizabeth Hall were Elizabeth, who married Welsh, Sarah, who married Clark and afterwards Hobby, and Benjamin, the oldest and only son, but the youngest of the three children.

Several deeds have been introduced by the respondents, the apparent object of which was to show that Susannah Jacobs, the devisor, had a leasehold estate only in the premises, and not an estate of inheritance, and therefore had no devisable estate. But that position was not relied upon in argument, and we have not considered it. We assume therefore that Susannah Jacobs had an estate of inheritance in the premises, that Hugh Hall and Elizabeth entered and claimed, and for a long time held, under her will, such estate as the terms of the devise would give; and the question is what estate it gave, and how it is derived from them. It is said that the respondents claim under deeds from the two daughters of Hugh Hall, Sarah and Elizabeth, as well as deeds of the son Benjamin; but for the present, we do not consider that material; the petitioners must recover, if at all, upon the strength of their own title, and until that title is established, the respondents have no occasion to show any title.

The claim of the petitioners is, that by the clause above cited, the devise of Susannah Jacobs was either a devise to her granddaughter Elizabeth, and her heirs generally, inasmuch as the devise, although in the first instance it was to the heirs of her body, yet was afterwards enlarged in the habendum by the words “to their heirs and assigns forever;” or, if it was an estate tail, to her and the heirs of her body, which would be an estate tail to her son Benjamin, yet it was then enlarged and went to his heirs general, and so one half of it descended to their mother, who took it in equal shares with her brother Charles Hall, the two surviving children of Benjamin.

In the first place, we have no doubt that the devise in question gave an estate tail to Elizabeth Hall. The words are ex [286]*286plicit, to her and the heirs of her body; the only words, which make it an estate of inheritance at all, limit it specially to heirs of the body. Estates tail, with their legal incidents, have been top long and too often recognized in this commonwealth to be now questioned. Davis v. Hayden, 9 Mass. 514. Corbin v. Healy, 20 Pick. 514. Buxton v. Uxbridge, 10 Met. 87.

Supposing it then an estate tail to her and the heirs of her body, under that designation Benjamin, her oldest son and heir at law, would take the whole to the exclusion of his sisters. This also has been repeatedly settled, and is now established by authority. The law of descent of Massachusetts, by force of which all the children, male and female, share equally, limits the rule to estates in fee simple, and does not abrogate the rule of the common law, in regard to estates tail; it leaves them as they stood at common law. It seems, from the cases cited by the petitioners’ counsel,

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Related

Davis v. Hayden
9 Mass. 514 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)
Hamilton v. Hempsted
3 Day 332 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1809)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Mass. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wight-v-thayer-mass-1854.