Wood v. Taylor

30 N.Y.S. 433, 9 Misc. 640
CourtThe Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo
DecidedSeptember 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 N.Y.S. 433 (Wood v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Taylor, 30 N.Y.S. 433, 9 Misc. 640 (superctny 1894).

Opinion

McADAM, J.

James Wood, in 1872, conveyed the premises in question to his son, William G. Wood, and to his heirs and assigns, forever, by a warranty deed in the usual form, purporting in the premises or granting clause to convey the entire fee, but with an habendum clause reading as follows;

“To have and to hold the above granted, bargained, and described premises with the appurtenances, unto the said party of the second part, for and during the term of his natural life only, and at his decease then to go to Ms own lawful heirs, to and for their own proper use, benefit, and behoof, forever; but, in case of his death without lawful issue, then the said property conveyed shall revert back to said party of the first part, his heirs and assigns, forever.”

[434]*434The plaintiff, the grantee, afterwards, in 1883, by a quitclaim deed, conveyed the same premises back to his father, the grantor. His father died after that, leaving a will by which he devised all his real estate to the plaintiff and Elizabeth Wood, the plaintiff’s mother, to be equally divided between them; and then Elizabeth Wood conveyed to the plaintiff all her interest in the property in question, and has since died. The plaintiff has a wife, but has never had any children. Assuming to be the owner of the land in fee simple, he made an agreement with the defendant to- sell it to him; and the defendant now refuses to take title, on the ground that, as he claims, the plaintiff has only a life estate in the premises, and that, in case of his death, leaving a child or children, the title would vest in them, or that there is now a vested remainder in the heirs at law of the plaintiff. In this he is mistaken. It is clear from the language of the habendum clause, particularly taken in connection with the premises or granting clause, that by the words “his own lawful heirs” the grantor meant children of the grantee, the grantee’s own lawful children. In no other way can the different parts of the habendum be reconciled or made consistent. He clearly desired and intended to say that his son should have the land during his life, and then at his death that it should go to the son’s children, if he had any, but, if he had none, then that it should come back to himself (the grantor); and he evidently supposed that the words he used were appropriate words to accomplish that purpose. It is no uncommon thing for such blunders to be made, nor for courts to construe the word “heir” to mean “child,” and to so read a deed or will. Scott v. Guernsey, 48 N. Y. 106, 107, 122; Heath v. Hewitt, 127 N. Y. 166, 27 N. E. 959. The deed, or rather the habendum clause, then, if it is to have any effect, should be read as giving the land to the plaintiff for and during the term of his natural life, and then at his death to go to his children, if he has any, and, if not, then to revert to the grantor. So construing the deed, and assuming that the habendum qualifies and describes the estate granted in this case, if the plaintiff, at the time of the delivery of the deed, had had a child living, the child would then have been vested with an estate in remainder in fee, as there would then have been a person in being who would have been entitled to immediate possession on the termination of the intermediate estate; that is, if his father had then died. 1 Eev. St. p. 723, § 13. This is assuming that the estate of the plaintiff was only a life estate. But as the plaintiff had no child or children at the time of the delivery of the deed, and holding, as we must, that the word “heirs,” in the habendum clause, should be read “child ”or “children” or “heirs of the body,” it is not clear that the limitation in the habendum has any validity. Where, as in this case, the grantor, by the principal or granting clause, called the “premises,” conveys or uses words purporting to convey his entire estate, there must be some person in being in whom, on the delivery of the deed, the entire estate vests. The fee cannot be in abeyance. Billings v. Baker, 28 Barb. 367. It cannot swing in abeyance to await the coming of some one into being, in whom the title may vest. Henderson v. Henderson. 113 [435]*435N. Y. 2, 20 N. E. 814. A conveyance to a grantee and Ms heirs gives to the grantee a fee. But a conveyance may be to a grantee for life, and the remainder to his heirs, and be good as a conveyance of a remainder to the heirs, if at the time of the delivery of the deed there are then persons in being who, if the grantee should die, would be his heirs. Such was the case of Moore v. Littel, 41 N. Y. 66. In such a case, there being a person in being at the time of the delivery of the deed who would take and be entitled to immediate possession of the life estate, the grantee, under our statutes, since the abrogation of the rule in Shelley’s Case, would take but a life estate. Sheridan v. House, 43 N. Y. 569. In this case the remainder, by the terms of the habendum, is limited to the issue, the children or heirs of the body of the grantee; and at the time of the delivery of the deed there were none such, nor have there ever been any. There was no person in whom the remainder vested or could vest, and, as the fee must always be in some one, the fee either vested in the grantee, or it never passed out of the grantor. The deed in this case, if the habendum is to have effect, instead of being a conveyance to the grantee and his heirs, which would have given him a fee, is a conveyance to the grantee for life, and at his death to certain designated heirs, or rather heirs of his body, which, prior to the statute abolishing entails, would have created an estate tail, but which now, by our statutes, is converted into a fee simple. 1 Rev. St. p. 722, § 3. By that statute the fee, in such a case, is not vested in the grantee or first taker, but in the tenant in tail,—the one who takes after the determination of the life estate. Wendell v. Crandall, 1 N. Y. 491; Jenkins v. Fahey, 73 N. Y. 364; Barber v. Cary, 11 N. Y. 397; Van Rensselaer v. Poucher, 5 Denio, 35. But that is only in cases where a valid remainder is limited on the intermediate estate. Where it is not, the grantee of the life estate takes the fee. 1 Rev. St. p. 722, § 3. In this case there was no child of the grantee in existence when the deed was delivered, and no valid remainder was limited on the estate granted; and certainly, if the limitation in the habendum is void, then by the terms of the deed, as expressed in the granting clause, the grantor conveyed Ms entire estate to the grantee.- There are two reasons for so considering and holding it void: One is that by the premises or granting clause in the deed the grantor conveys, or uses language appropriate to convey, the entire fee; and the other is that there was no person in being in whom the remainder could vest at the time of the delivery of the deed.

Ordinarily, if there is an irreconcilable inconsistency between the premises or granting clause in a deed and the habendum (which is not essential to the validity of a deed) the habendum must yield. Greenl. Cruise, tit. 32, p. 273, §§ 75, 76; 2 Washb. Real Prop. (2d Ed.) 691 (644), § 63; Mott v. Richtmyer, 57 N. Y. 49, 63. Such appears to be this case. By the premises or granting clause in the deed, it is a conveyance in fee simple to the grantee, his heirs and assigns, forever. If, by the premises or granting clause, the conveyance had been to the grantee and Ms heirs, and in the habendum it had been limited to the grantee for life, and at his death to the heirs of his body, as it is, it would have been what, prior to the abolition of en[436]*436tails, was an estate tail.

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Related

Wood v. Taylor
31 N.Y.S. 1135 (Superior Court of New York, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.Y.S. 433, 9 Misc. 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-taylor-superctny-1894.