Yeager v. Farnsworth

145 N.W. 87, 163 Iowa 537
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 27, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 145 N.W. 87 (Yeager v. Farnsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeager v. Farnsworth, 145 N.W. 87, 163 Iowa 537 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

On the 2d day of October, 1911, Sarah Yeager filed in the district court of Wayne county, her petition, wherein she claims that on the 7th day of November, 1893, one Wm. Yeager executed and delivered to her the following deed:

Know'all Men by These Presents: That William Yeager, of Wayne county, and state of Iowa, in consideration of the sum of three thousand dollars, in hand paid by Sarah Yeager, of Wayne county, and state of Iowa, do hereby sell and convey unto the said Sarah Yeager, the following-described premises: (Here follows a description of the premises;) and he hereby covenant with the said Sarah Yeager that he'hold said premises by title in fee simple; that he has good right and lawful authority to sell and convey the same; that they are free from incumbrance, and he covenants to warrant and defend the said premises against the lawful claims of all persons whomsoever, as long as the said Sarah Yeager still lives, and after her death, to be equally divided between her and his heirs, J. It. Yeager, T. J. Yeager, M. Farnsworth and Jessie M. Yeager, and the said-hereby relinquishes her right of dower in and to the above-described premises.

The petition further shows that the said William Yeager was the owner of the property at the time said deed was made; that Sarah Yeager was then his wife; that on the 24th day of May, 1907, Yeager died; that M. Farnsworth, who is mentioned in the deed, T. J. Yeager, and Jessie M. Yeager are the children of plaintiff and William Yeager; that J. R. Yeager, mentioned in said deed, was a son of William Yeager by a prior marriage; that, while the consideration named in said deed is $3,000, the real consideration was love and affection ; that the M. Farnsworth, mentioned in said deed, died on the 11th day of December, 1896; that she left surviving her her husband, the defendant, and one child, Edna, who died without issue, March 8,1911.

Plaintiff says that she is in the actual possession of said land; wherefore she asks that her title in said land be quieted [540]*540against the defendant, and that she be decreed the absolute and unqualified owner of the same as against this defendant.

To her petition, the defendant demurred on the following grounds: (1) That the facts stated in the petition show that plaintiff is not entitled to the relief demanded. (2) That it shows upon its face that she had only a life estate in the land, and not a fee. (3) That, under the deed, defendant is entitled to a one-fourth interest in said land, subject to the life estate of the plaintiff. This demurrer was sustained, and plaintiff electing to stand upon the petition, the petition was dismissed at her costs; to all of which she excepted, and brings this case on appeal.

1. conveyances : estate in fee. The deed under consideration, upon its face, conveys to Sarah Yeager the fee title to the land in controversy. Under our present statute, the term “heirs” or other technical words inheritance, are not necessary to create and convey an estate in fee simple. Section 2913 of the Code of 1897. “Every conveyance of real estate passes all the interest of the grantor therein, unless a contrary intent can be reasonably inferred from the terms used. ” Section 2914 of the Code of 1897.

2. Same : present interest : future enjoyment. It is well settled by a long line of adjudications that a deed conveying a title to, or interest in, land, to be effectual, must be m prcesenti. The deed itself must create and define the character of the interest intended to, be conveyed, and must give to the party, by its terms, the interest which he seeks to enforce, or to have recognized and enforced. Our statute provides that estates may be created to commence at a future date. This means that a present interest granted makes the conveyance good, although the taking and enjoyment of the interest conveyed is postponed to a future time.

3. same: construction. We must look to the instrument itself for the intent of grairtor, and the nature of the estate granted.

Under the modern doctrine, courts are required to con[541]*541strue and give effect to every part of the instrument in ascertaining the intent and purpose of the grantor, and, where it is possible to do so, under the recognized canon of construction and interpretation, must give effect both to the granting clause and habendum.

4. Same. Where an estate of inheritance is created in the premises or by the .granting clause, under the common law, the habendum may be resorted to to explain or qualify the estate granted, but would not be allowed to contradict or defeat it. But, where the estate granted may or may not be of inheritance, then, according to the common law, the habendum was permitted to control, for, the estate not being defined definitely in the granting clause, there would be nothing inconsistent with it in the habendum declaring the quality or character or extent of the interest transferred, or, in other words, where it is not definitely shown by the granting clause that an estate of inheritance was intended to be granted, and the habendum discloses an intent to enlarge, restrict, or repugn the granting clause, the habendum will be given full force.

5. Same. The object of an habendum clause is to define the grantee’s estate. Where it has already been definitely defined and clearly expressed, then anything in the habendum which would tend to destroy the object, purpose, or intent of the grantor, as shown in the grant, would, of necessity, be repugnant thereto and void. Two estates could not stand repugnant to each other in the same instrument.

6. Same. At common law, a grant or conveyance, without words of inheritance, gives the grantee, by implication, but a life estate, but even then the habendum might enlarge the estate.

In the case before us, we have a deed in which the grantor undertakes to sell and convey unto the plaintiff the land in controversy, without words of inheritance. He does, by the terms of the deed, sell and convey unto her the land, but [542]*542without words of inheritance. Under section 2913, nothing further appearing in the habendum, she would take a fee-simple title and an estate of inheritance. It is claimed, however, that the habendum reduces the estate conveyed from a fee to a life estate, and the claim is based upon the provision in the deed, “after her death, to be equally divided between her and his heirs, ’ ’ naming them. There is no other provision in the deed which suggests a limitation on her fee, except in the clause preceding the above quoted, wherein the grantor recites: “He covenants to warrant and defend the said premises against all persons whomsoever as long as the said Sarah Yeager still lives.” This is a limitation either upon the warranty or upon the estate. It is claimed that he might well have concluded to warrant and defend the title in her while she still lived, and to withhold any warranty of defense thereafter. We are satisfied that this limitation must be construed with the clause that follows in order to ascertain the intent of the grantor.

If the plaintiff, under this deed, which in its granting clause conveys to her a fee title to the premises in controversy, is to be reduced to a life estate, then, of course, the fee title must, by the deed itself, be invested in others. It could not remain in abeyance. The parties named in the habendum appear for the first time there.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.W. 87, 163 Iowa 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeager-v-farnsworth-iowa-1914.