Baker v. Shy
Baker v. Shy
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of -the Court.
The questions of law in this case arise upon a bill for rescission, filed in the Chancery Court at Linden. The complainant, in .1863, bought a small tract of land lying in Perry county, from the defendant, who purchased the land of H. A. Delobelle, a citizen and. subject of France. A judgment at law on complainant’s note for the purchase money was obtained by the defendant, and -thereupon the complainant brought .his bill praying an injunction and a rescission of the-
At the December Term, 1868, the cause was heard upon bill, answer and exhibits. The defendants had produced and filed with the Master the new deed- of Delobelle, duly executed on the 29th February, 1868,. and authenticated before the American Consul at Paris, and registered in the proper office at London — but without a revenue stamp upon it. They had also filed with the Master their own deed to complainants, both
The Chancellor held that Delobelle beihg an alien could not convey land in Tennessee; that his vendee would hold subject to the laws of escheat, and that -therefore the defendants could not convey a perfect title. The Chancellor rejected the deed of Delobelle also because it was unstamped. Under the recent decisions of this Court it is unnecessary to discuss the latter point. He decreed a rescission of the contract and a perpetual injunction. The 'defendants appealed.
It will be observed in the statement of the case, that thete is no averment' in the bill of a fraudulent purpose on the part of the vendor, and no imputation of concealment of the state of the title or other bad faith on his part. In the answer the defendants positively disclaim all fraudulent intent, and aver that at the time of the contract they thought their title from Delobelle was unquestionable.
A court of equity regards the solemnity of a con.tract, and upon a bill for rescission it demands a strong case on the part of the complainant to authorize its interference. It is the policy of the law to hold parties to their contracts, when fairly and deliberately made without fraud. The complaint in the case is the inability of the vendo'rs to make a perfect title, and thé bill discloses no extraordinary circumstances of hardship that would demand the interference of the Court upon other grounds. The court of equity may entertain such a case, but it is matter of discretion,
In this case the defendants asked a reasonable time to perfect their title, which the Court very properly allowed: 6 Yer., 36: 7 Ves., 205; Hay. (Coop, ed.) 138. And the complainant would have properly been compelled to have accepted the after acquired title in the absence of fraud, if the title be a good one: 6 Hum., 309; 8 Hum., 439; 4 Johns. Ch. R., 84; 6 Yer., 36; 7 Ves. 205.
Was the title of Delobelle, a citizen and subject of the Empire of France, a good title? It seems that he was once a denizen here, but returned to France in 1859, and it does not appear that he had taken any steps to forswear his allegiance to his native country and become a citizen of this country, or that he had intended .to do so. ' It is urged that he was an alien and had no right to convey real estate here, and the Chancellor took this view of it. In this ruling we hold that the Chancellor erred. At common law an alien has no inheritable blood; but he could hold lands and grant them by devise or deed, burthened, however, with the right of escheat in the sovereign. The rule was, that “if an alien purchase land, the king shall have it upon office found:” 1 Bac. Ab., 203. This “'office found,” or inore properly
Though an alien, says Chancellor Kent, may purchase land or take it by devise, yet he is exposed to the danger of being divested of the fee, and of having his lands forfeited to the State upon office found. His title will be good against every person but the State; and if he dies before any such proceeding be had, we have seen that the inheritance can not descend,, but escheats of course. If the alien should undertake to sell to a citizen, yet the prerogative right of forfeiture is not barred by’ the alienation, and it must be taken to be subject to the right of the government to seize the land: 2 Kent, 60. An alien may-take lands here by devise or by purchase and hold the same against all persons but the government. The government alone can allege the escheat: 7 Cranch, 619; Shep. Touch, 56; 2 Bl., 293; 1 Wash, on Real Property, 63. In a controversy between the alien and the citizen, to dispossess the alien, then he too must be treated as a citizen: Williams v. Wilson,
There is here a kind of denization by which the alien holds and enjoys the rights of a citizen in real estate. He may take and hold, dispose of or transmit by descent, any real estate as a native citizen,, when he has declared his intention under the naturalization laws to become a citizen of the United States: Code, 1998. When fully naturalized, he becomes invested with all the rights of the native citizen, except as restricted by the Constitution from holding certain offices. In England this denization was by the king’s letters patent. It received the alien into society as a new man, says Bacon, and makes him capable to purchase and trasmit lands by descent, but not inheritable to any other relative. But if naturalized by act of Parliament, then he in all things inherits like a natural born subject: 1 Bac. Ab., 198. Under our Code, “ an alien . may take and hold real estate in this State,, by purchase, inheritance, or in any other way, which may be agreed upon by treaty between the United States and the country of which he is a citizen or subject: Sec. 1998. The difficulty, we suppose, in construing that section in this particular case has arisen from the use of the words, “take and hold, dispose of or transmit by descent any real estate,” in the sue-
“As to the States of the Union by whose existing-laws aliens are not permitted to hold real estate, the President engages to recommend to them the passage of such laws as may be necessary for the purpose of conferring this right.
“In like manner, but with the reservation of the ulterior right of establishing reciprocity in regard to possession and inheritance, the government of France accords to the citizens of the United States the same-rights within its territory in respect to real and personal property, and to inheritance, as are enjoyed there by its own citizens.”
At the time of the execution of Delobelle’s deed, in this case, the State of Tennessee was one of the
We hold, therefore, that the alienage of Delobelle at the time he executed his deed, does not affect its validity as a conveyance of the fee, and that the effect of the section of the Code referred to, and the treaty with France, was to abrogate and annul all right of escheat the State may have had in said lands prior to said treaty and enactment.
It results that the decree of the Chancellor must be reversed, the injunction dissolved and the bill dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William W. Baker v. James L. Shy
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- Published