Maslin v. Thomas

Supreme Court of Maryland
Maslin v. Thomas, 8 Gill 18 (Md. 1849)
Magruder

Maslin v. Thomas

Opinion of the Court

Magruder, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

It appears from the record now before us, that the plaintiffs instituted, in Queen Anne’s county court, an action of ejectment to recover a tract of land called “Boothfyy’s Fortune,” granted in fee on the 1st day of February, 1695, to one Thomas Jackson. A trial was had, and the defendant obtained a verdict. In the course of the trial, three exceptions were taken by the plaintiffs; and wherein (if at all,) the court below erred, according to these exceptions, it is for this court now to decide.

Of the land in controversy, granted as aforesaid, one Samuel Wallis is supposed to have died seized in fee, and his will, dated the 19th September, 1717, is to be found in the first bill of exceptions. By this will, the testator devises to his son, William Wallis, the tract of land, aforesaid, called “Boothby’s Fortune;” and in a subsequent clause he declares it to be his will, that “if his son William should die without issue, then the survivors of his sons (previously mentioned,) shall have the aforesaid land, equally to be divided between them.” Much oral testimony is introduced into the bill of exceptions, but of this we shall take no notice, as the questions of law which we are to decide, do not at all depend upon it. Next is produced, by the plaintiff, a deed executed on the 25th May, 1819, by another William Wallis, (the then tenant in tail of the land in controversy, it is supposed,) conveying this land in fee to Lewis Blackiston.

Thus far, there can be no disagreement between the parties before us about the title to this land now, whatever may be the *24case in any other trial. Both must assume that the bargainor in that deed was, at the time of its execution, the tenant in tail, and thereby destroying the estate tail, as the plaintiffs undertake to derive their title from the bargainee in that deed, and the defendant claims the land simply because of the execution of that deed. The ground taken by the latter is, that at the time of this conveyance, there was an unsatisfied judgment against the then tenant in tail, (the bargainor in the deed,) and that the deed destroying the entail, and creating an estate in fee, that judgment was a lien upon the estate thus created or enlarged. He then shows a sale of this land in satisfaction of that judgment, and would thus prove himself the owner of the land.

The first question, then, to be decided is, whether, if there-be a judgment against a tenant in tail, and without satisfying that judgment, he enlarges his estate tail into a fee simple, by a deed of bargain and sale to another, that land upon which, while it was an estate tail, the judgment was no lien at all. can be sold (the fee simple,) for the payment of such judgment? The defendant maintains the affirmative of this proposition, and relies upon our act of Assembly of 1782, ch. 23, and the law of common recoveries, to sustain it. It must be admitted that this is a new case. The act of Assembly has been in force more than half a century; very many estates tail have, in the mode prescribed by it, been enlarged into estates in fee, and, until now, it is believed the idea was never entertained, that a man, by divesting himself of all title to an estate tail, and conveying it to a stranger, makes the estate of that stranger, or the fee simple conveyed to him, answerable for debts of the bargainor, with the payment of which, while it remained the debtor’s own estate, it could not have been charged. Other-notions have certainly prevailed, and in respect to them, perhaps, it is almost allowable to believe, that communis opinio (it is sometimes written communis error,) facit jus. According to Lord Ellenborough, (3 M. & Selw., 396,) this communis opinio might furnish some evidence of the law with which we are now to deal. When so many estates tail have been con*25veyed, since our act of Assembly of 1782, lor bona fide purchasers, who, relying on the obvious meaning of the act of Assembly, to be collected from its Wolds, have paid the full price of an unincumbered fee simple, it may well be said, that the communis opinio in regard to such a conveyance, and its legal operation, was not an opinion merely theoretical and speculative, floating in the minds óf persons, but has been made the ground-work and substratum of practice.”

But. when and how did the judgment relied upon become a lien upon this inheritance? Surely not while the defendant in it had the estate tail. The question, it will be remembered, is relative to the inheritance, and whether that was ever answerable for the amount of the judgment? If there was no such lien upon this land, while the defendant in the judgment was the tenant in tail, was the lien created by the agreement to sell the land, or by the conveyance, which expanded the estate tail into an estate in fee? Surely there could be no lien of the description spoken of, which had no existence until the debtor, who had given judgment, had parted with all title, or pretence of title, to the land. It is a concessum, that the deed barred the estate tail of which the defendant in the judgment was seized when the judgment was rendered, and until the execution of that deed. But surely that deed did not vest in the bargainor a fee simple in the land conveyed, and unless it can be made to appear, that at the time of the rendition of the judgment, or afterwards, the defendant therein had a fee sinir pie, no title to this land could be acquired under the judgment which would not have expired when the defendant died. The act of 1782, does not, in express words, make the judgment a lien upon this fee, or, it would seem, benefit the judgment creditor in any way whatever, unless it be that it enables the tenant in tail, by a sale of the inheritance, to procure the means of discharging this debt. It is said, however, that a former mode of bailing estates tail (by common recovery,) did let in such incumbrances. Be it so; but this estate tail was not barred by any such mode, and, therefore, it does not aid the plaintiff’s case at all to show, that if in this case there had been a com*26mou recovery,- then this incumbrance would have been let in. This was one of the incidents to that mode of assurance, but it is no incident to the deed of bargain and sale; nor is it incident to an estate tail, that every mode of defeating it shall have such effect. It has been said by this court, in 1st G. & J, 128, that “the ancient mode of docking estates tail by common recovery, is abolished by the act of 1782;” and Chancellor Kent, in his Commentaries, says, “ the law of common recoveries, in those States which have made laws like our act of 1782, has become obsolete.”' If so, and there is no more recent legislative enactment declaring this, which was an incident to a mode of assurance no longer in force, to be an incident to that conveyance which the legislature has substituted in its place, it wmuld be difficult to prove that this must be an incident to a deed of bargain and sale, which destroys an estate tail, because it was incident to another mode of accomplishing the same object, until that mode of accomplishing it was abolished by act of Assembly. Chancellor Kent, speaking of common recoveries, says, they were given “by a bold and unexampled stretch of judicial legislation.” Had it been given by those who alone can rightfully legislate, we should have heard of no such incident to common recoveries. But legislation in fraud of the rights of the legislature, is very apt to produce results not anticipated by judicial lawmakers. “ Hence it was that a common recovery suffered by a tenant in tail, lets in all his preceding incumbrances, and renders valid all the acts of ownership which he has exercised over the estate tail.” In 5th Cruise, 493, ch. 9, we are told how this became an incident to a common recovery: “The judgment in a common recovery being of equal force with that which is obtained in an adversary suit, operates as an estoppel or record against all those who are parties to it, and concludes them from averring any thing against it. ” “ The recoveror derives an estate in fee simple out of the estate tail, and also all those acts which bound the tenant in tail, will also bind the recoveror, who cannot aver that the person against luhom he recovered, had an estate tail. ’ ’ Surely it cannot be pretended, that a man who takes a deed *27which he is expressly authorised by our act of 1782, to take from a tenant in tail, is thereby estopped from denying that the tenant in tail had the estate, and only the estate which the law authorises him to convey.

But, for the words shall be good and available to all intents and purposes, against all and every person and persons whom the grantor, bargainor, or vendor might or could debar by any mode of common recovery,” See., (which words are to be found in the act of 1782, ch. 23,) it is presumed that no one could easily persuade himself that the enlargement of an estate tail into an estate in fee, (as authorised by that act,) would give to (he creditor of the bargainor any incumbrance, charge or lien to which he was not otherwise entitled. Any person seized of any estate tail in possession, remainder or reversion, is authorized by any mode of conveyance spoken of in the law to convey to his grantee an estate in fee. The power to convey, and thereby enlarge the estate, is given to the tenant in tail, to be exercised by him in that and no other character. In thus conveying, lie parts with all his estate, and conveys a fee simple, although of that estate he never had been, and never may be seized. The words of the law do not express its meaning, if they can be made to give to any other than the grantee, an estate which he could not have claimed, but for the deed, But, then, the act of Assembly, in its concluding words, speaks of those who could then be debarred by a common recovery. These words, it may be thought, merely introduces a new, more convenient and less expensive common recovery, with all the incidents of the more ancient and inconvenient mode. Why use those words, when, if (hey do not let in the incumbrances as formerly, they are supposed to be superfluous? And then we are told that we must find a meaning for, and give effect to every word in a law, if it bo possible. It may be, indeed, that these words may not have been indispensable, in order to give full effect to the intent of the legislature, but then it must, be permitted to our lawgivers, sometimes, to use ex abundanli cautela, words not absolutely necessary; and does not there seem to be some good reason for *28such caution in this Jaw? All .common recoveries have not the same legal operation. Sometimes a common recovery may answer its .purpose, although suffered with a single vou.cher; but, in many cases, it must be suffered \yi.th at least, a double voucher, or it only bars the estate .of which the tenant in .tail is actually seized at the time, not estates in remainder. Watkins on Conveyancing, p. .69. There are many niceties,” Wooddeson tells .us, ‘ ‘ on these subjects. ’ ’ It was the policy of the legislature to pnfetter the landed property, and make it a subject of absolute alienation, and but for these words, lawyers might have contended that a deed of bargain and sale, or other conveyance of an estate tail, would only perform the office of a fin.e, or of a common recovery, with a single voucher. Although it was evidently not the intention of the legislature not to let in the incumbrances, it was wise in them to introduce these words,and thereby “preventcontentions and mischiefs to the disq.piet pf the Ipw.”

It is contended, in behalf of the .defendant, that although this be the law, yet there was no error committed by the court, below, for which the first exception cap be reversed. The éxception is taken to a decision by the court, that the testimony offered by the defendant was admissible, and because, notwithstanding the plaintiff’s objection, the court suffered it to go to the jury. This testimony, thus suffered to go to the jury, consisted of the judgment against the tenant in tail, ( Wallis,) a revival of that judgment by sci. fa., the sale of this land under ■A.fi. fa. issued thereon, and its purchase by a person from whom the defendant attempted to derive title. For what purpose the testimony was introduced, or the grounds upon which it was objected to, the exception does not tell us; and it is said, if for any reason it is admissible, the court below was right in suffering it to go to the jury. Now this will not be denied. The evidence, however, must relate to the issue, and in this case the defendant’s testimony, if admissible, must have a tendency to prove title in the defendant, or, more properly speaking, title out of the plaintiff. According to the opinion already expressed, the testimony now under consideration had no such *29tendency. But the defendant, it is said, might have liad other testimony. Certainly; and testimony, too, which was as valuable to him as it has been suggested it might be. But, the objection made to the testimony which was offered, if sustained, would not have prevented the defendant from offering any other, and, in truth, we cannot know that he did not obtain the verdict because of testimony before the jury which is not in this record. The existence of other testimony (whether before the jury, or not yet submitted,) could not authorise the admission of this proof. We, therefore, think the court erred in suffering it to go to the jury.

In the course of the argument, much was said about the proceedings on the judgment, and many of these proceedings were objected to, and many authorities, too, were cited, to show what were defects in the proceedings by sci. fa., and how and when these objections, if sustainable at all, ought to have been made. The opinion of the court, already expressed, renders an examination of these several questions, and the authorities relied on, unnecessary to the plaintiffs. It was not understood that the defendant supposed that his case was made at all better by the issuing of the sci. fa., and the proceedings thereon, than it would have been if no sci. fa. had been necessary, if the original judgment had been kept alive, and the /?, fa., under which the land was sold, had been issued upon that, and not after a fat. According to the opinion already expressed, the land in controversy was never answerable for this debt, and a sale of it was not authorised by any process issued after the death of the tenant in tail.

There remains one other exception, (the second,) which will briefly be noticed. The plaintiff offered to prove what William Wallis, the tenant in tail, had been heard to say, his declarations in his life time, and, among other things, that “he had got the land now in controversy by intailment.” The court was asked, by the defendant’s counsel, to say, and did say, that these declarations were admissible for the purpose of proving pedigrees. So far the exception presents nothing to be noticed by us. But, an exception is taken by the plaintiff to a further *30instruction given by the court at the instance of the defendants, that these declarations by Wallis, were not admissible to prove his title to the land as tenant in tail. We can perceive no error in this instruction. Estates tail are created by deed or will, which must be produced,, or a proper foundation must be laid for presuming that they existed. The existence of them is not to be proved by oral testimony of this description. We have not forgotten the reference which was made to 1st Green-leaf on Evidence, sec. 109, that declarations in disparagement of the title of the declarant, are admissible.” But, without stopping to enquire when, about what, under what circumstances, or in what sections of our .country such declarations can be received, we say, that these declarations by Wallis were inadmissible to prove, in this suit, anything about his title, If there had been admissible testimony (title papers,) to prove that he was, at the time of those declarations, seized in fee of the land, no declarations made by him, whether before or after the deed to Blackiston, or while under age, or when of age, could take from him his fee simple, and give him a fee tail estate for life, or for years. If, on the other hand, he had not the evidence which the law requires of his title, how could any declarations which he might make, be in disparagement of his title ?

Reversed on 1st and 3rd exceptions. 2nd exception affirmed, and procedendo awarded.

JUDGMENT REVERSED, AND

PB.OCEDENDO AWARDED.

Reference

Full Case Name
John Maslin, Ann Maslin, and others, Lessee v. John H. Thomas
Cited By
2 cases
Status
Published