Gilsum v. Sullivan
Gilsum v. Sullivan
Opinion of the Court
The provision of the statute upon which the decision of this case depends is this: “ Any person, of the age of twenty-one years, having real estate of the value of $150, or personal estate of the value of $250, in the town where he dwells and has his home, and paying all taxes duly assessed on him and his estate for four years in succession, shall thereby gain a settlement in that town.” Rev. Stat., chap. 65, sec. 1.
If Charles Nash acquired estate within the meaning of the statute, by the mortgage or conditional conveyance from his son Charles, the exception is well taken; otherwise the ruling of the court below was correct. It is clear that he acquired no such interest by the conveyance as gave him a settlement on the ground that he thus became the owner of real estate. Until
It has not, however, been urged in the argument that the case can be sustained on the ground that the interest of Charles Hash, Sen., under the conveyance, was real estate, but it is claimed that it was personal estate within the meaning of the act.
The right which the mortgage secured to him was the right to bó supported himself, and to be relieved from the liability to support his wife and minor children. The case does not find that there was any contract or agreement beyond that shown by the mortgage itself. Whether the transaction between the father and son is to be viewed as the mere giving of security by way of the mortgage for their support, the only remedy for non-fulfillment of the condition being by enforcing the mortgage, or whether it is to be regarded as a contract between the parties, binding the son to the fulfillment of the conditions, and for a breach of which the father might have a remedy by action for his damages as well as his remedy by enforcing the mortgage, in either case there is nothing which can be viewed as property, in the ordinary sense of the term, which is promised or which can result from the contract or the mortgage, until the mortgage is enforced for breach of the condition, or damages are recovered for a violation of the contract.
The right which the mortgage secures is in the strictest’ sense personal to the mortgagee; the right to claim support for himself, and to he relieved from his legal liability to support his wife and children. Such right, it is true, may be of great value. There are many such rights which may be estimated and measured in money, and for a violation of which compensatory damages may be recovered, but which are want
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.