Jacksons v. Sanders
Jacksons v. Sanders
Opinion of the Court
The question depends mainly upon the 18th section of the statute of 'descents: but before I discuss the ’x'meaning of that provision, I will take a brief view of the doctrines of the common law with respect to alienage, and the changes wrought in them by british statutes, so that we may see distinctly the state of the subject, at the passage of our law>.
By the common law, an alien is defined to be, “one born out of the ligeance of the king.” Upon such a person many disabilities were imposed. He could take real estate by contract, but he could not hold it against the king; neither could he transmit it by hereditary descent. He was disabled to take by any act in law; for the law, as lord Hale says, quae nihil frustra facit, will not give him an inheritance or freehold by act in law, for he cannot keep it. The law, therefore, will not give an alien the benefit of either descent, curtesy, dower, or guardianship. His incapacity resembles “that of a person attaint, yet with this difference: the law looks upon a person attaint, as one it takes notice of; and therefore the eldest son attaint over-living his father, though he shall not take b3r descent, yet he shall hinder the descent to the younger son. But if the eldest son be an alien, the law takes no notice of him; and therefore, as he shall not take by descent, so he shall not impede the descent to the younger brother.” There is also what lord Hale calls a consequential, consecutive disability, which reflects to an alien from one, that must derive by or through him, though such one be perchance a natural born subject. Thus, if there be a grand-father a natural born subject, father an alien, and son a subject, and the father dies, and then the grand-father dies intestate, seized of an inheritance; the son cannot inherit his grand-father; because he must derive his descent through his father, the medius ancestor, whose alienage opposes an insurmountable obstacle. So, in collateral descents, if there be three brothers, the eldest an alien, and the two younger natural born subjects; one of the y’ounger brothers dies seized of lands, living the other native born, and also a native born son of the alien brother: this son cannot inherit, though he is capable to *hold and to transmit inheritance, and though he would be heir of his uncle who died seized; but he must derive his descent through his father, and he, as lord Hale expresses it, stands as ‘ ‘a block in the way. ’ ’ In Collingwood v. Pace, where this whole doctrine is so ably treated, the case was, a father alien, and two sons naturalized, one of whom died leaving a son natural born ; and the question was, whether this son should inherit his uncle? He was considered as standing exactly in the shoes of his father, and presenting the question, as between the two brothers, whether they could inherit each other, or were impeded by the alienage of their father? It was adjudged in the exchequer, by seven judges against three, that they could: and the reason given was, that the descent between them was immediate, so that there was no necessity of deriving it through their father.
Whether these doctrines had their root in the feudal tenures, or, as Blackstone thinks, were founded “rather upon a principle of national or civil policy, than upon reasons strictly feudal,” it would be useless to inquire. With a change of times and manners, the rigour of them, and the hardships and injustice produced by them, were felt, and the" statute of 11 and 12 W. 3, ch. 6, was enacted to correct them. That statute cured the mischief, by removing the bar of alien-age both in lineal and collateral descents. I think it clear too, that it contemplated the case of a party claiming through a living ancestor. Those words, “though the father or mother &c. from whom he may derive his title or pedigree, was, is, or shall be born out of the king’s allegiance,” mean nothing more than though the father &c. through whom &c. was, or is, or shall be an alien. This is clearly the meaning put upon it by the statute of 25 G. 2, ch. 39.
Such was the state of the law, when our committee of revisors came to act upon the subject: the harsh features of the common law had been softened down, and parties permitted to make descent, both linea and collateral, through *alien ancestors though living. The object of that
The objections of the alienage and life of the mother being removed, the case is the common one of a brother of the intestate, and nephews and nieces concurring. He takes per caput; they, per stirpes, the share which their mother would have taken, had she been capable.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jacksons v. Sanders and Wife and Others
- Status
- Published