Henry v. Carson
Henry v. Carson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered, October 28th 1869, by
The main question presented by the assignments of error in this case is, was the right of the children and heirs at law of Elizabeth Duffield and Isabella Shields, under whom the plaintiff below claimed title to the land in controversy, barred by the Statute of Limitations ? The adverse possession, set up by the defendants as a bar to the ejectment, began on the 3d of April 1839, and continued without interruption until the 18th of April 1866, when the writ in this case was issued. When the adverse possession commenced, both Elizabeth Duffield and Isabella Shields were under coverture. The former died in 1845 and her husband in 1846 ; the latter in 1848 and her husband in 1851. If the heirs were severally entitled to twenty-one years after the death of the respective husbands, who'were tenants by the curtesy, in which to bring their ejectment, then their right of action was not barred, and the court rightly instructed the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the interests conveyed to her by their deeds. But if they were only entitled to the same time in which to bring their action, that the wives would severally have had, if they had survived their respective husbands, then their right of action was barred, and the court erred in the instruction given to the jury. Had then the heirs twenty-one years after the death of their ancestors’ husbands in which to bring their action, or were they bound to bring it in ten years after their death, if at the expiration thereof the adverse possession of the defendants had continued for twenty-one years ? This depends on the true construction of the Act of 26th March 1785, for the limitation of actions. The 2d section provides that “ from henceforth no person or persons whatsoever shall make entry into any manors, lands, tenements or hereditaments, after the expiration of twenty-one years next after his, her or their right or title to the same first descended or accrued; nor shall any person or persons whatsoever have or maintain any writ of right or any other real or possessory writ or action, for any manors, lands, tenements or hereditaments of the seisin or possession of him, her or themselves, his, her or their ancestors or predecessors, than within twenty-one years next before such writ, action or suit so hereafter to be sued, commenced or brought.” If the act stopped
There can be little or no doubt in regard to its meaning when construed in connection with the restraining provisions of the 2d section. Its purpose, as already intimated, was to enlarge the time limited therein for bringing the action or making the entry in favor of all such persons as might be under disability when their right or title first descended or accrued; and accordingly it provides that such persons may bring their action or make their entry within ten years after the removal of the disability, notwithstanding the twenty-one years’ limitation may have expired before its removal; and in the event of their death after the removal of the disability, that their heirs shall have the same time for bringing the action or making the entry as they themselves would have had, if they had lived. In other words, it allows to all persons under disability, when their right or title first descends or accrues ten years after its removal in which to bring their action or make their entry, whatever may have been the length of time which has elapsed since the right or title first descended or accrued ; and in case of their death, it gives their heirs the same time for bringing the action as they would have had if they had lived, and no longer, though the heirs may be under disability when their ancestor dies. If the ten years after the removal of the disability expire before the twenty-one years limited for
But if a person who is under disability when his right or title first descends or accrues, dies before its removal, within what time must his heirs bring their action or make their entry in order to avoid the bar of the statute ? If this contingency is not provided for in the succeeding clause of the section, then no provision is made for it, as the words “ or death” in the statute of 21 Jac. 1, ch. 16, § 2, are, as we have seen, omitted in our act. But in lieu thereof we have the provision in the next clause: “ And in case such person or persons shall die within the said term of ten years under any of the disabilities aforesaid, the heir or heirs of such person or persons shall have the same benefit that such person or persons could or might have had by living until the disabilities should have ceased or been removed.” What is the meaning of this clause ? If it were not for the phrase “ within the said term of ten years,” there would be no difficulty in its interpretation, or any doubt as to its meaning. The corresponding clause in the Delaware Act of June 16th 1793, which was evidently borrowed from ours, omits the phrase and avoids the difficulty. But as the clause stands in our act, giving to the language its ordinary signification, it appears to be contradictory and insensible. If we are at liberty to reject the phrase as repugnant to the general and evident purpose and intent of the whole clause, its meaning is obvious. It gives to the heirs of a person dying under disability the same time in which to bring their action or make their entry as their ancestors would have had, if they had lived until the disability had ceased or been removed. But we are not at liberty to reject the phrase if we can possibly give it such a construction as will make it consistent with the residue of the clause and with its manifest purpose and intent. We cannot give it such a construction unless we interpret the preposition “within” as referring and applying not to the time included in “ the said term of ten years,” lout to the time intervening between the disseisin and the removal of the disability, when “the said term” commences. Thus interpreting it, the clause will read: “ and in case such person or persons shall die within, that is to say, inside of, not overstepping, before the commencement of the said term of ten years, under any of the disabilities aforesaid, the heir or heirs of such person or persons shall have the same benefit,” &c. If this is not the ordinary and proper meaning of the preposition “ within,” it is the meaning which the context requires, and the only one of which it is susceptible, if the phrase is-retained. If we
In support of this construction we have the authority of Tilghman, C. J., in Thompson and others v. Smith, 7 S. & R. 209, where he says: “ Our Act of Assembly is indeed not clearly or accurately expressed, when it speaks of persons dying under a disability within ten years. But the meaning is that if the title first descends or accrues to a person under disability, and that person dies before the disability cease or be removed, his heir, whatever may be his condition as to ability or disability, shall have the same benefit that he himself might have had by living until the disability had ceased, that is to say, he shall have ten years from the death of his ancestor; but if - the person to whom the title first descends or accrues, being then under disability, shall live till the disability cease, then ten years and no more shall be allowed to him and his heirs, in case he shall die within the ten years.” In saying that the heir “shall have ten years from the death of his ancestor,” he evidently refers to a case where the heir has an immediate right of entry, and not to a case where the right of entry or action is suspended by the intervention of a particular estate.
Substantially the same construction has been given to the British statute 21 James 1, already referred to, and to similar statutes in some of the states of our Union, as the following cases will show: Doe d. George and Wife v. Jesson, 6 East 81; Demarest v. Wynkoop, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 136; Jackson v. Johnston, 5 Cowen 74; Moore v. Jackson, 4 Wend. 58; Carpenter v. Schermerhorn, 2 Barb. Ch. Rep. 314; Lewis v. Marshall, 5 Pet.
In Doe ex dem. George and Wife v. Jesson, the ancestor died seised of the premises, leaving a son and daughter, infants, and on the ancestor’s death a stranger entered, and the son soon after went to sea and died abroad within age; and in ejectment brought by the daughter, the plaintiff’s lessor, as heir of her brother, Lawrence, J., said: “Upon the death of the father, Thomas Jesson, the right descended to John, the son, then under age, who died under that disability. The lessor, Frances, is the heir of John, and the statute gives to the party to whom a right of entry accraes, and who is under disability at the time, ten years after the disability is removed, notwithstanding the twenty years should have elapsed after his title first accrued; and to his heir the statute gives ten years after the death of such party dying under the disability. It was accordingly held, that as the ejectment was not brought.until more than ten years after the death of the brother, and more than twenty years after adverse possession was taken, that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.”
In Jackson v. Johnson, a-case involving the construction of the New York statute, adverse possession had been taken of the land of an infant and feme covert in 1793. She became of age in 1796, and died in 1797, leaving her husband and a son and a daughter, the plaintiff’s lessor, surviving. The son died in 1816, and the husband in 1817, and the daughter brought ejectment in 1825. It was held that as the plaintiff’s mother was under the disability both of infancy and coverture when the adverse possession commenced, she or her heirs should have ten years after the removal of her disabilities, and at least twenty years after the adverse possession commenced, within which to enter or bring ejectment, and that as the husband’s tenancy by the curtesy suspended the right of entry or action of her heirs, the plaintiff had ten years within which to bring ejectment, after the estate by the curtesy terminated by the death of the father in 1817. The doctrine of that case is that the disability which entitles a party to the benefit of the proviso in the statute, must exist when the right of entry or action first accrues; and if several disabilities exist together in the owner of an estate, as infancy and coverture, when the adverse possession commences against her, she, or, if she die, her heirs, have at least ten years within which to enter or bring an action, after both disabilities are removed, and they are entitled to full twenty years for this purpose from the time when the adverse possession commenced; and though these disabilities be removed, if the right of entry or ejectment be suspended by the intervention of a particular estate, existing at the time of their removal, as a tenancy by the curtesy initiate during their existence and consummate eo instanti that they determine,
In Sicard v. Davis, a case arising under the Kentucky statute, Marshall, O. J., in delivering the opinion of the court says: “ The construction of the act, — that if adverse possession be taken in the lifetime of the ancestor, and be continued for twenty years, and for ten years after the death of the ancestor, no entry being made by the ancestor or those claiming under him, the title is barred, — is established by the decisions of this court as well as the courts of Kentucky; 4 Wheat. 213.”
The uniform doctrine of the cases cited, as will be found on examination, is, that if twenty years have elapsed since the right of action accrued, and ten of those years have been free from disability, the right of entry is barred; in other words, the owner is not entitled to twenty years after the disability ceases within which to bring his action; but to ten years only if, at the expiration of the latter period, twenty years have elapsed since the right of entry or action first accrued, and if the owner dies, the heirs, if under disability, have no longer time for bringing the action or making the entry than he would have had if he had lived. This is also the construction given to our own act in Carlisle v. Stitler, 1 Penna. Rep. 8, where it is said that the infant child of a woman who dies covert, can have no longer period than its mother would have had if she had survived her husband. So, in Bensell v. Chancellor, 5 Wh. 371, the decision is in conformity with this interpretation of the statute.
But it is insisted that a different construction was given to the act in Marple v. Myers, 2 Jones 122, and that it was there decided that where adverse possession is taken of the land of a married woman, and she dies under the disability of coverture, the heirs have twenty-one years, and not ten years only, in which to bring ejectment, after the termination of the husband’s estate as tenant by the curtesy. It may perhaps be difficult to reconcile the language used by the judge who delivered the opinion of the court in announcing the conclusion to which he was brought by his argument, and to show its consistency with what we regard as the proper construction of the act. But whatever the difficulty in this respect, he nowhere declares in terms that the heirs of a feme covert dying under disability are entitled to twenty-one years after the death of her husband in which to bring their action. Nor under the facts of the case was it necessary for him to do this in order to justify the decision of the court. He does indeed say : “ By the death and conveyance of the tenant by the curtesy, a new right was acquired which was untouched because not embraced by the Act of Limitations; for every new right of entry confers an additional period within which it may be exercised.” But what is the additional period which this new right
It follows from the view we have taken of the statute:—
1. That if a person is under no disability when his right or title first descends or accrues, his right of entry or action, and, if he dies, that of his heirs, will be barred by twenty-one years’ continuous adverse possession.
2. If a person is under any of the disabilities mentioned in the act when his right or title first descends or accrues, he or his heirs
3. If a person under disability when his right or title first descends or accrues, dies before it has ceased or been removed, his heirs have the same time in which to make entry or bring ejectment as he himself would have had if he had survived the disability: and, therefore, the heirs of a married woman, who dies leaving a husband surviving, have the same time in which to bring an action or make entry after termination of the husband’s estate as tenant by the curtesy, as the wife would have had if she had outlived her husband, viz., ten years and no longer, though they may be under disability when their right of entry accrues.
As the ejectment in this case was not brought until more than ten years after the death of the husbands of Mrs. Duffield and Mrs. Shields, and more than twenty-one years after the adverse possession commenced, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
Whether the plaintiff is estopped by the receipt of the purchase-money by the heirs of Mrs. Duffield after her death, we need not now consider, as the bar of the statute is fatal to her right of action.
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Henry versus Carson
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published