Saylor v. Kocher
Saylor v. Kocher
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In Denn v. Kemys, (9 East 375), it was certainly supposed that freehold may pass by the name of leasehold where there is no other property to answer the description; and the same principle was applied in Knotsford v. Gardiner, (2 Atk. 450), to the word estate, which, though it properly comprehends only freehold, was thought to pass leasehold because there was nothing else for its operation. Now, beside the admitted fact that the testator had no other real estate than that which is the subject of the present contest, there is enough on the face of the will to designate it as the subject of this devise. He begins by giving to his wife what he calls her residence on the, premises “ in which he then dwelt,” with an annual allowance for her maintenance out of the produce of the farm, and also particular articles of household furniture. He then devises to his two sons, George and Edward, subject to the payment of certain legacies, all his leasehold estate
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.