UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES SCHOOL OF LAW LIBRARY TREATISE ON SPRINGING USES, AND OTHER LIMITATIONS BY DEED, CORRESPONDING WITH * Crecutorg >etri$e0; ACCORDING TO THE ARRANGEMENT IN MR. FEARNE'S ESSAY. BY JOHN WILSON, or LINCOLN'S INN, ESQ. BARRISTER AT LAW, EDITOR OF ROBINSON ON GAVELKIND AND BOROUGH ENGLISH. LONDON : PRINTED BY A. STRAHAN, LAW-PBINTKR TO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY; FOR J. & W. T. CLARKE, LAW BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS, PORTUGAL-STREET, LINCOLN'S INN. 1824. T 133.H- PREFACE. MR. FEARNE, in his essay on contingent re- mainders and executory devises, intimates (a), that future and shifting uses, and other springing and executory interests, which are not remainders, are to be considered as subject to the same limits and restrictions as executory devises. His very learned Editor also observes (b) 9 that executory devises are the immediate subject of the second part of Mr. Fearne's essay, but that his positions and illustrations are always, either directly or in- directly, referrible to the general doctrines of law, on all limitations of this description either in deeds or wills. It appeared to the compiler of the present treatise, that Mr. Fearne's inestimable work might be rendered in some degree more per- (a) P. 441. (6) Mr. Butler's edition, p. 385. A 2 73/230 IV PREFACE. feet, and its utility increased, by a collection and analysis of authorities, in illustration of his positions with reference to such limit- ations by deeds ; and particularly as, from the difference in the nature and construction of deeds and wills, some distinctions must necessarily exist between those limitations and executory devises. To supply such a collection, and exemplify such distinctions, is the principal object of the following pages, which are submitted to the profession, with the consciousness that a charge of temerity may be incurred by the attempt, but in the hope that it has not been made without due consideration. The arrangement of Mr. Fearne has been closely adhered to, and the subdivisions of Mr. Butler have been adopted, so that the corresponding passages in the two books will be found under the same chapter and section. 2. New Square, Lincoln's Inn, August 1st, 1824. NAMES OF CASES CITED. Abraham i>. Twigg, 101, 115 Adams v. Savage, 69, 154 Arundell, Lady, v. Phipps & Taunton, 4-3, 45, 46 Avelyn v. Ward, 57 Baker v. Bay ley, 138 Barlow v. Salter, 121 Battersbee v. Farrington, 43 Beck's Case, 99 Benson v. Hodson, 64 Blake v. Blake, 138, 141 Boreton v. Nichols, 99 Bostock's Case, 67 Bromfield v. Crowder, 21 Buckler's Case, 164 Buckmere's Case, 77 Bullock v. Knight, 87 Burnell v. Crutchley, 94, 96 Cadogan v. Kennett, 30, 34, 35, 38, 45, 62 Campbell v. Sandys, 139 Campion v. Cotton, 39, 45 Carpenter v. Smith, 9, 25, 67 Carwardine v. Carwardine, 8, 65 Cholmondely, Marquis of, y. Lord Clinton, 80 Clere's Case, Sir Edward, 151 Clifton v. Chancellor, 37 Coltman v Senhouse 78 Crisp v. Pratt, 44 Crump d. Woolley v. Norwood, 15,26 Dafforne v. Goodman, 126 Davies v. Speed, 8, 66, 73, 144 Dillon v. Dillon, - 141 Doe d. Davy v. Burnsall, 13, 26 Doe v. Lyde, 119 Doe d. Roake v. Nowell, 22 Doe d. Roake v. Randall, 22 Doe u.Webber, 116 Doe d. Dyke u. Wittingham, 25, 72 Edwards v. Hammond, 20 Emily t). Grey, 44 Exel o. Wallace, 106, 116, 131 Focus v. Salisbury, 52 Foley B. Burnell, 46, 93 Fonnereau v. Fonnereau, 145 Forster v. Forster, 134 Forth v. Chapman, 111 Fryer v. Flood, 44 Glaister t>. Hewer 44 Goodman v. Goodright, 81 Goodtitle v. Billington, 6 VI NAMES OF CASES CITED. Goodtitle d. Weston v. Bur- tonshaw 71, 156 Goodtitle v. Morse, 160 Goodwin v. Clark, 109 Gore v. Gore, 68 Goring v. Bickerstaff, 27 Gower v. Grosvenor, 93 Grafton, Duke of, v. Lord Eus- ton, 133 Grey v. Mannock, 140 Gulliver v. Wickett, 11,26,54 Halloway & others v. Millard & others, 43 Hartop v. Hoare, 46 Harwell v. Lucas, 67 Haselington & another v. Gill & another, 45 Havergill v. Hare, 167 Helps v. Hereford, 160, 3 Hey wood v. Maunder, 104, 109, 117, 147 Higgins v. Dowler, 29, 147 Hoare v. Parker, 46 Hobson v. Trevor, 160 Hodgson v. Bussey, 127, 131 Hoi croft's Case, 155 Idle v. Cook, 99,115 Jarman v. Woollaston & an- other, 45 Jervoise v. the Duke of North- umberland, 97 Jones v. Morgan, 79 Jones d. Roe v. Perry, 157 Kent, the Earl of, v. Seward & Scott, 165 Kentish v. Newman, 61 King v. Cotton, 123 Kirsley v. Duck, 82 Lamb v. Archer, 150 Lilly v. Osborn, 44 Littleton v. Marlow, 44 Lockyer & others v. Savage & others, 44 Loddington v. Kime, 14 Loeffes v. Lewen, 43 Longhead d. Hopkins v.Phelps, 85, 109 Lloyd v. Carew, 9, 26, 48, 73 Lytton v. Lytton, 79 Macclesfield, Earl of, v. Davis, 38,46 Mainwaring v. Baxter, 82 Marsden v. Panshall, 46 Massenburgh v. Ash, 30, 73, 75, 105, 147 Milborn v. Dashburne, 78 Moore Nicholas, Case of, 50 Moore v. Parker, 81 Mullineux's Case, 51 Newcastle, Duke of, v. the Countess of Lincoln, 89, 90, 94, 97, 147 Norfolk's Case, Duke of, 63, 103, 117 Norton v. Frecker, 132 Oakes v. Chalfont, 29, 121 Ormond's Case, the Earl of, 151 Parker v. Patrick, 46 Partridge v. Gopp, 43 Peacock u. Spooner, 125 Pearse v. Reeve, 81, 120 Peck v. Parrot, 170 Pells v. Brown, 49 Penhay . Chambers, 37 Taylor v. Jones, 43, 44 Taylor v. Phillips, 161 Theebridge v. Kilburne, 88, 125, 128 Thomasin v. Mackworth, 52 Tomkins v. Pooley, 33 Tucker v. Cosh, 44 Vaughan v. Burslem, 93 Vick v. Edwards, 161, 3, 4 Walker v. Burrows, 44 Ward v. Bradley, 129 Ward v. Shallett, 43 Warman v. Seaman, 82 Wasteney's v. Chappell, 133 Weale v. Lower, 7, 25, 78, 151, 161,4 Webb v. Webb, 88, 125, 127 Williams v. Jekyl, 142 Wills & others t>. Palmer & others, 154 Winchelsea, Earl of, v. Went- worth, 9, 26, 73, 169. Woodliffv. Drury, 8,27,150 Wright v. Cartwright, 30, 62 Wright v. Wright, 159, 163, 8 A TREATISE, &c. CHAPTER I. SPRINGING USES AND OTHER LIMITATIONS COR- RESPONDING WITH EXECUTORY DEVISES DE- FINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 1. CONDITIONAL limitations, secondary, future, springing, or shifting uses, are limitations of future estates or interests in real property, which the law admits, in deeds operating under the statute of uses, though contrary to the rules of limitation in conveyances at common law. (a) (a) The distinction be- Statute of Uses, is explained tween conveyances at com- by Mr. Butler in a note to mon law, and those which Mr. Fearne's Essay, p. 417. derive their effect from the 2 SPRINGING USES, 4c. Such of those limitations as arise from the act of some person, authorised to raise or ap- point them, are said to arise by the execution of a power. Such of them as arise upon an event pro- vided for by the deed which creates them, and limitations of personal property, are the sub- ject of this treatise. Whenever a future interest is so limited, as to fall within the rules prescribed for the li- mitation of contingent remainders, or that it may take effect as a remainder, it can never take effect as a conditional limitation or fu- ture use. The case of Smith v. Belay (b) was a limit- ation to the use of R. for life, and after, of his eldest issue which should be at the time of his death, remainder in fee to S. R. had issue J. ; R. and S. made a feoffment, and levied a fine, with warranty and proclamation. J. could not enter on the death of R., for the limitation was a contingent remainder, and was destroyed by the feoffment and fine. The limitation to the issue did not operate to divest or determine, but was to commence from the expiration of the preceding estate, which was capable in its nature, of supporting (b) Cro. Eliz. 630. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 3 a remainder ; nor was the limitation contrary to the rules of conveyances at common law ; it could not therefore, be construed a condi- tional limitation. Cawardine v. Cawardine (c) was the case of a settlement, previous to the marriage of J. C., by which the lands in question were conveyed to trustees and their heirs, to the use of J. C. (the settler) for life ; remainder to M. W. (his intended wife) for life (except in such cases as should be thereafter excepted) for her jointure ; remainder to the heirs of the body of the said J. C., begotten on his said intended wife ; remainder to the said J. C. and his heirs ; followed by a " proviso, and the special trust and confidence in the said trus- tees and their heirs were thereby declared to be, that if the said J. C. should happen to die, and leave such issue as aforesaid behind him, he, the said J. C., not making otherwise a provision for such child or children in his life- time, then and in such case the said trustees should stand seised of one moiety of the said premises, from and immediately after the de- cease of the said J. C., to the use of such child or children as aforesaid, and be empow- ered, out of the rents, issues, and profits of (c} 1 Eden's Ch. Ca. 27. B 2 4 SPRINGING USES, &c. the said moiety, to raise such provision for such child or children as the said trustees and their heirs should think fit." J. C. and M. his wife, after their marriage, joined in levying a fine ; and he, by will, de- vised all his estate from his eldest son, who was totally disinherited and left wholly un- provided for. The principal question in the case was, whether the plaintiff, who was the eldest son of J. C, was entitled to any, and what pro- vision, under the proviso in the said settle- ment. The Lord Keeper Henley, after entering into a consideration of the intention of the parties, observed upon the legal operation of the deed, that it was admitted it must be either a springing use or a contingent re- mainder ; whichever it was, the consequence was also admitted, if that was once known. That he did not know by what rule of law he could construe that a springing use ; spring- ing uses were introduced to answer the exi- gencies of mankind, in providing for all the contingencies in their families, in like man- ner as executory devises were allowed of; in order that, after a departure with the whole fee, a new limitation of the fee might take place, upon a contingency to arise within a DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 5 reasonable compass of time, and not within the danger of a perpetuity ; not that a fee could be limited upon a fee, but upon the contingency happening, the former uses were to give way. And he did not recollect any case, where a springing use had been created in the middle of other uses, but always de- termined the first limitation of the fee, and displaced the first gift, and changed the uses in favour of other persons. And that it made no difference, whether the whole fee was given away at once, or in particular estates, and by way of remainders. That it was a certain rule of law, that if such a construction could be put upon a limitation, as it might take effect by way of remainder, it should never take place as a springing use, or executory devise. That the best construction he could put upon the limitation, was that of its being a contingent remainder ; and that the limit- ations ought to stand thus : viz., to husband for life ; remainder as to one moiety, to the wife for life ; remainder as to the other moiety, to the children during the wife's life, if they are left unprovided for ; remainder as to this moiety, to the wife for life ; remainder of the whole, to the heirs of the body of the husband ; remainder to the husband and his heirs. Now if this estate was executed, he B 3 6 SPRINGING USES, &c. could give it no other construction than what a court of law would do ; and he was of opi- * i. nion it was executed, and not an estate exe- cutory remaining in the trustees. That he must determine according to the legal opera- tion of this deed, and as he thought it was a contingent remainder, the consequence was clear, that the fine had destroyed it, and that the plaintiff's bill must be dismissed. And in Goodiitle v. Bittington (d) 9 Lord Mansfield, in delivering the opinion of the court, said, it was perfectly clear and settled, that where an estate can take effect as a re- mainder, it shall never be construed to be an executory devise or springing use. And where the contingent estate may, in the nature of its original limitation, take effect during, or at the time of the determination of the particular estate, the possibility or pro- bability of its not doing so, in the common course of things, or from its relation to other interposed limitations, will not take it out of the general rule now under discussion. o Thus, if real estate be limited to the use of A. for life, remainder to his wife for life, re- mainder to E. (his son) for 99 years, if he should so long live ; and after the deceases of (rf) Dougl. Rep. 725. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 7 A., and his wife, and E., to the sons of E,, as tenants in common in tail : the death of the father and mother during the life of. the son, is highly probable, and is obviously contem- plated in the creation of the limitations ; yet, in that event, the limitation to the sons of E. must fail as a remainder, for want of a parti- cular estate to support it ; but A. or his wife may survive E., and that limitation would then take effect as a remainder, and it cannot therefore be maintained as a springing use. But where a future interest, without a pre- ceding estate, or a contingent interest unsup- ported by any preceding freehold, or any estate after a preceding vested fee simple, is limited by way of use, such limitation, as it cannot be good as a remainder, may take effect as a conditional limitation or springing use, provided it falls within the limits which the law prescribes, for the validity of such future estates ; which limits will be hereafter stated j and in this place, a few instances will be ad- duced, of such limitations, and uses as have been mentioned. Thus, according to the dictum of Lord Hale C. J., in Weale v. Lower (e), if a feoffment be (e) Poll. C5. B 4 g SPRINGING USES, &c. made, to the use of C. and his heirs, after the death of A. and B., this is no remainder, but a future use. So if the limitation of a use be, that after two years, or after the death of John Stiles, it shall be to the use of J. N. in fee, this is a future use. And in Davies v. Speed (g), Holt C. J. said, a feoffment to the use of another and his heirs, to commence four years from thence, is good as a springing use ; so it is if it [the use] were to commence after the death of another without issue, if he die within twenty years. In these cases no preceding estate is sup- posed to be limited, and the future interest would be vested. The effect is the same if the future inte- rest be contingent. Thus in the case (h) of a feofFment by A., to the use of himself and B. his feme, that should be, after their marriage, and of the heirs of their bodies ; on the marriage this new use arises and vests. So if there be a preceding estate, not capa- ble in its nature of supporting a remainder : as a limitation to the use of trustees for 500 years, in trust to pay an annuity to T. for (g) Holt's Rep. 731. (A) Woodliff v. Drvry, Cro. Eliz. 439. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. - Q Jife, remainder to the eldest son of T. (who has no son at the time) this would be good as a future use. And the following are instances of limita- tions, after a preceding vested fee-simple. In Carpenter v. Smith (i) 9 land was limited, by deed and fine, to the use of J. his heirs and assigns for ever; and if J. died before W., then to the next heir of ,W., and to the heirs and assigns of such next heir. The court was of opinion that the limitation, "being by way of use, was good. The Earl of Winchelsea v. Wentworth (k) was a limitation to J., the second son [in fee], proviso that if the eldest son died without issue, J. should, within six months after the death of the eldest son, pay 1500/. to a sister, or in default thereof, the land to go to the sis- ter and her heirs. The eldest son died with- out issue, and the sister died within the six months ; J. refused to pay the 1500/. It was decreed that the land should go to her heir. And in the case of Lloyd v. Carew (/), where lands were limited, by marriage-settle- ment, to the use of A. and his wife for their lives, remainder to trustees and their heirs during the lives of A. and his wife, to pre- (/) Poll. 70. Keb. v. 3. (k) 1 Vern. 402. p. 18. 92. 122. 176. (/) Show. Parl. Cas. 137. JO SPRINGING USES, &c. serve contingent remainders, remainder to the first and other sons of the marriage suc- cessively in tail male, remainder to the right heirs of A. ; with a proviso, that if no issue of the marriage should be living, at the decease of the survivor of the husband and wife, and the heirs of the wife should, within twelve months after the decease of the survivor of the husband and wife, pay 4000/. to the heirs or assigns of the husband, then the remainder in fee-simple, so limited to the husband, should cease, and thenceforth should remain to the use of the heirs of the wife. The House of Lords held this springing use to the heirs of the wife to be good. In the Treatise on Executory Devises, Mr. Fearne states, that even where there is a limit- ation after a devise in fee-simple, though such antecedent devise in fee be not vested but contingent, yet if the ulterior devise is so limited as to take effect in defeazance of the estate first devised, on an event subsequent to its becoming vested, it has been held to operate as an executory devise. This doctrine is equally applicable to con- ditional limitations and springing uses ; it has been the subject of considerable discussion, and deserves particular consideration. Mr. Fearne cites, in exemplification of his DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. \\ position, the case of Gulliver v. Wickett(m} 9 where a testator devised lands to his wife for life, and after her death to such child as she was then supposed to be ensient with, and to the heirs of such child for ever ; provided, that if such child as should happen to be born should die before the age of C 2\ years, leaving no issue of its body, the reversion should go over. The wife of the testator was not with child, and the question for the consideration of the court was, whether the devise over was a good devise or not ; and it was held that the birth of a child was not a condition precedent, and that whether the limitation to the child never took effect, or whether it did and was determined, was the same thing ; and that as the remainder to the child never could take place, the next devise over must take effect. Mr. Fearne, in commenting on this case, observes (n), that the court held it to be a devise to the wife, remainder to the child in contingency in fee, with a devise over, which he says they held a good executory devise, as it was to commence within 21 years after a life in being, and that if the contingency of a child never happened, then the last remainder (m) 1 Wils. 105. (n) P. 396. 12 SPRINGING USES, &c. was to take effect upon the death of the wife. And that the number of the contingencies were not material, if they were all to happen within a life in being, or a reasonable time after. And after noticing an observation of the reporter on this case, that the court used a difference of phraseology, viz. executory and remainder, in respect of the same limitation, from whence it seemed to him uncertain, whether they determined it an executory devise or a contingent remainder, Mr. Fearne intimates, that this doubt would have been prevented, by adverting to the language of the court, when they said it was good as an exe- cutory devise, as it was to commence within 21 years after a life in being ; and that the number of contingencies were not material, if they were to happen within a life in being, or a reasonable time after ; neither of which circumstances hath any sort of relation to a contingent remainder, or can be understood as applicable to the idea of it. And he fur- ther remarks, that although one of the con- tingencies on which the ulterior devise was o construed to depend, viz. there being no child to take as supposed, must have been decided immediately on the determination of the particular estate, without the antecedent limitation in fee ever becoming vested, and DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 13 therefore such devise would, had it depended on that event only, have been considered as a contingent remainder, equally with the alternative one to the child ; yet that the other event, and that indeed on which the limitation over was expressly limited to take effect, viz. the death of the supposed child under the age of 21 years, could not possibly happen till after the fee-simple had actually vested in such child on its birth ; in which case it clearly could not operate as a remain- der, and therefore must have been void in its creation, if not allowed to ensue as an execu- tory devise. But it is difficult to distinguish the last mentioned case from Doe d. Davy v. Burn- sail (o), which was a devise of all the tes- tator's estates, to M. and the issue of her body, as tenants in common ; but in default of such issue, or, being such, if they should all die under 21, and without leaving issue, then over. After the testator's death, M. suffered a recovery and levied a fine of the lands, and she never had any issue. And Lord Kenyon C. J. observed, " the devisor seems to have reasoned thus, if the children of my niece live to attain the age (o) 6 T. R. 30. 14 SPRINGING USES, &. of 21, when they will be qualified to dispose of this property prudently, I give it to them in fee; if they happen to die under 21, and without leaving issue, then I will consider to whom I can best dispose of the estate, and in such an event, I will give to my collateral re- lations. That brings the present case within that of Loddington v. Kime (p), which is the leading case upon this subject, and converts all the subsequent limitations into contingent remainders. Those depended on the parti- cular estate given to the niece, and she hav- ing destroyed this particular estate, before they could take effect, they consequently fell to the ground. Perhaps the devisor was not aware, that the niece could destroy the estate given to her children ; but the plaintiff's argument goes to admit that she had that power ; and it is a necessary consequence of our putting such a construction on the will, as will best effectuate the intention of the devisor. In determining the present case, I proceed on the words of the will, giving legal effect to every word contained it ; and they all lead to this conclusion, that it was a contingency O *' with a double aspect ; if M. had any children, the estate was limited to them in fee ; if she had no children, or if she had any, and they (p) Salk. 224-. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 15 died under 21 and without issue, then it was to go to the lessor of the plaintiff. But all these rested in contingency ; and the parti- cular estate of freehold, by which they were supported, having been destroyed before they were capable of taking effect, they were also destroyed with it." The case of Crump and Woolley v. Nor^ wood(q), is similar to Gulliver and Wickett, so far as regards the question which arose in that case. It was a devise of gavelkind land to the testator's three nephews, sons of his bro- ther J., during their lives, as tenants in com- mon ; and after their respective decease, the share of him or them so dying, unto the heirs lawfully issuing of his and their body and bodies respectively, and if more than one, equally to be divided, as tenants in common ; and if but one, to such only one, and to his, her, or their heirs ; and if any of his said ne- phews should die without such issue, or leaving any such, they all should die without attaining 21, then the share of him and them so dying, unto the survivor and survivors of his said nephews, and the heirs of the body of such surviving and other nephew, equally, as tenants in common, and to hold the same as he had thereinbefore directed as to the original (?) 7 Taunt. 362. ]6 SPRINGING USES, &c. share, and with the like contingency of sur- vivorship on failure of issue. And for want, or in default of such issue of his nephews, unto his own right heirs. The testator died leaving his said brother J., and the son of an- other brother, his co-heirs in gavelkind. J. died leaving his three sons surviving. After- wards William, one of the three nephews, died without ever having had any issue. The case related to his share only. Best, Serjeant, contended, that by the limit- ation, the nephews took a life estate, and the heirs of the bodies of the nephews (or chil- dren) a remainder in fee, as purchasers ; and that this was not a substitutionary contingent remainder, but an executory devise ; and in support of this he cited Gulliver and Wickett, and the language attributed to the Court in the report of Mr. Serjeant Wilson, and the observations of Mr. Fearne ; and he observed that though a child of the nephew were born, it was possible that he might die before 21 , and until that time, therefore, the estate was defea- sible. Consequently, it could not be good as a contingent remainder; it was either void, or it was an executory devise. It was not a substitu- tionary fee, because the whole fee was given away, and yet, in certain events, the fee first given might take effect, and, nevertheless, the DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. J7 subsequent limitation might, in certain events, take place after it. Onslow, Serjeant, contra, contended that this was not an executory devise, but a contin- gent remainder. And he observed, that though both estates were given to the same person, yet there were two estates; and the one might be good, the other not. He supposed the case of a devise to A. for life, remainder to the first son of A. in fee ; but if the first son of A die under 21, then to X. in fee; and if there be no son of A., then to W. in fee. Here, he said, are two different estates and two different devises ; and the devise to one may be good, to the other may be bad ; and it makes no difference though both estates are given to one person. The Court, after taking time to consider, held the devise to be to William for life, and if he has children, then to them in fee ; if he has no children, then to the testator's other two nephews ; and the only question was, whether the descent on William of a portion of the reversion destroyed the contingent re- mainders, pro tanto. Gibbs C. J., in delivering the judgment, after stating the facts, observed, that " the defendant contended that this was a contin- gent remainder, descending on William, which c 18 SPRINGING USES, &c. required a particular estate to support it ; and that the particular estate being merged in the fee, the contingent remainder was destroyed with it. That the plaintiff said the contin- gent interest was not destroyed by unity of estate, because it was not a contingent re- mainder but an executory devise, for it was not to take effect but on the decease of the children of the first grantee under 21, and, therefore, was not supported by the particular estate given to William, because it was not to take effect on the decease of William. These are the points on which the case depends. On the decease of William it must be deter- mined whether he has children, who are to take in the one event, or whether the persons who are to take, in the event of his having no children, are to succeed ; this must be de- termined on the decease of William ; and, as a contingent remainder may be limited with a double aspect, where one or the other of two limitations must take effect on a certain event, I see no reason why this should not fall within that class of cases. But it is said it cannot be so, because there is one event which may not then take effect, viz., that of the nephews having children, and the children dying under 21, after the decease of the tenant for life. It is true that it may so happen, but that is not DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 19 the event which lias happened, and I can find no principle on which we are called on to de- termine that, because there are two limitations depending upon several events, one of which may possibly not take effect within the limits which the rule of law prescribes, therefore, the other, dependent on an event which ne- cessarily conforms to the rule of law, shall not be effectual if that event happens." He then cited the case of Davy and Burnsall, and continued, " on precedent, therefore, as well as on principle, we think so much of the contin- gent remainder as was co-extensive with the portion of the reversion which descended to William, the nephew and devisee for life, was thereby destroyed." Upon the authority of the cases of Davy and Burnsall, and Woolley and Norwood, it must be admitted that, in the event which happened, the limitation over in Gulliver and Wicket would now be considered a contingent remainder, and not an executory devise, and, consequently, that case is not an authority for the doctrine in question. None of these cases, however, in the events which happened, and according to the con- struction which was adopted, involved the position which we are now considering ; the ulterior devises did not take effect in defeas- c 2 20 SPRINGING USES, &c. ance of the estates first devised, on an event subsequent to their becoming vested, for, no child having been born, the estates first de- vised never did vest ; and the question, whether, in those cases, if a child had been born and died under 21 without having had o any issue, the ulterior devises would have taken effect, is not decided by those authori- ties ; and it is submitted that they would have been allowed to operate as executory devises. Some of the expressions of Lord Kenyan in Davy and JBurnsall, and of Gibbs C. J., in Woolley and Norwood, may seem to convey an intimation that the limitations to the children were contingent upon the event of their at- taining 21, and as such a construction would O ' materially affect our argument in limine, it is necessary to consider that point with atten- tion. In the cases now under consideration, there are no words which even appear to import that attaining 21 was a condition precedent, and in a large class of cases where such words have been found, they have not been so con- strued : As Edwards v. Hammond (r), which was a (r) 1 New Rep. 324-. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 21 surrender of customary lands, to the use of the surrenderor for life, and after his decease, to the use of J. and his heirs, if it should happen that J. should live until he attain 21 ; provided that if it should happen that J. should die before he attain 21, then over. The surrenderor died, leaving J. under 21 ; and it was held that he took a vested estate. Also in Bromfieldv. Crowder(s), where the testator devised, in substance, to R. for life, and at his decease to D. in fee, if he should live to attain 21 ; but in case he died before he attained that age, and C. should survive him, then to C. if he lived to attain 21. D. was under 21 at the death of the preceding devisee; it was held that D. took a vested estate in fee, determinable upon the contingency of his dying under 21. The judgment in the last noticed case was affirmed in the House of Lords. It may be contended that there is a distinc- tion between the cases in question, and those of Edwards v. Hammond, and Bromfield v. Crowder, inasmuch as in the former cases, until a child was born there was no person in esse, in whom the estates limited to the chil- dren could vest ; but in the latter, the estates (s) 1 New Rep. 313. c 3 22 SPRINGING USES, &c, in remainder were given to persons then ca- pable of taking. But in Doe d. Roake v. Nowell (t) that distinction did not exist; the testatrix de- vised to R. for life, and on his decease to and among his children equally at the age of 21, and their heirs as tenants in common ; but if only one child should live to attain such age, to him or her and his or her heirs, at his or her age of 21. And in case R. should die without issue, or such issue should die before 21, then over. At the death of the testatrix R. had not any issue: in 1787 he married, and afterwards had four children ; and in Michaelmas Term, 1789, levied a fine sur conuzance de droit, &c. of the lands. Two of the children were born before the levying the fine. In Trinity Term, 1797, R. suffered a recovery of the lands. It was held that the children took vested remainders, and that the fine and recovery did not bar their title. Doe d. Roake v. Novell was argued at Serjeants' Inn, and Doe d. Roake v. Ran- dall, which related to other property in- cluded in the same devise, was decided in the same manner on appeal to the House of Lords (u). (t) I Maule & Sel. 327. (u) 5 Dow 203. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 23 It may therefore be assumed that, on the birth of a child, the estate in fee devised to that child would immediately vest. The event on which the limitation over is to take effect in Gulliver and Wickett is, " if such child as should happen to be born should die before the age of 21 years, leaving no issue of its body :" one of the events in Davy and JBurnsall is, " being such [issue], if they should all die under 21, and without leaving issue ;" and in Woolley and Nomvood " leaving any such [issue] they all should die without attaining 21." It is obvious that be- fore these events could happen the whole fee must have been disposed of and vested ; the limitations over could not therefore operate as remainders ; they are not estates for life which might be let in, as in Carwardine v. Car- war dine (x) ; they could only take effect by determining and displacing the vested fee, even if the child should die in the lifetime of the tenant for life, the heir being incorporated with the ancestor; they are void in their crea- tion, if not allowed to enure as executory devises ; they are confined within the bounds prescribed by law ; and there is no other alternative than that of admitting them as (x) Ante, p. 3. c 4 24 SPRINGING USES, &c. executory devises, or rejecting all those words, and thereby defeating the intention of the testators, (y) The description suggested by Mr. Serjeant Onslow in Woolley and Norwood (z), seems to convey a clear and accurate idea of the limita- tions in question, viz. that they are a gift of two distinct estates to the same person. 2. Where a particular estate of freehold is first limited, capable in its own nature of sup- porting a remainder, followed by a limitation not immediately connected with, or com- mencing from the expiration of the particu- lar estate ; as the latter limitation is incapable of taking effect as a remainder, there seems to be no obstacle to its validity as a condi- tional limitation or springing use, if it be confined to the limits prescribed by law for estates of that description. Thus, in the case of a limitation to the use of A. for life, and after his death and one day after, to the use of B. for life, the principles by which limitations of this kind are governed warrant the assumption, that the ulterior limitation would take effect as a future use, (y) See post, c. 2. s. 1. similar to Gulliver and Wic- Observations upon a case kett. (z) Ante, p. 1 7. DEFINED AND DISTINGUISHED. 25 although it would be void in a conveyance at the common law. (a) The distinction will be observed between this case, and the case proposed by Hale C. J. in Weale v. Lower (6), viz. a feoffment to the use of A. for life, and after the death of A. and B. to the use of C. in fee ; this is a con- tingent remainder to C., for the ulterior limitation may, by the death of B. in the life of A., take effect at the expiration of the pre- ceding estate. But on a covenant by A., to stand seized, after the death of A. and his wife, to the use of a daughter in fee, although no estate was vested in the wife, and she survived A., the limitation to the daughter took effect, (c) 3. Conditional limitations, secondary, future, springing or shifting uses, may be distin- guished into two kinds. The first sort in this distribution is, where the whole fee-simple is first disposed of, but upon some contin- gency that disposition is qualified, and another estate is limited to arise. To this class the term future use, in the technical sense, does not perhaps apply. Of this first kind the above-cited cases of Carpenter v. Smith (d), the Earl of Winchelsea (a) Plow. 25. Raynu U4. (c) Doe d. Dyke v. Whit- (b) Poll. 65. tingham. 4- Taunt. (d) Ante, p. 9. 26 SPRINGING USES, Ac. v. Wentworth (e), and Lloyd v. Carew (g), are instances. And under the same description we may, I think, rank such cases on deeds, operating under the statute of uses, as would in effect correspond with the cases of Gulliver and Wickett(h) 9 Davy andJ3urnsall(i), and Woolley and Norwood(k); a child being born, and dying under 21 , without having had any issue ; where though the fee is not immediately dis- posed of, yet it is made defeasible after a con- tingent disposition of it has taken effect. The second sort in the above-mentioned general distribution is, where, without any disposition of the immediate fee, a future estate is limited to arise, either upon a con- tingency, or at a period or on an event certain, unpreceded by, or not having the requi- site connection with, any immediate freehold to give it effect as a remainder. To this class the terms secondary or shifting use, or the term conditional limitation, when the estate is to arise at a period or on an certain, do not apply. Of the first branch of this second kind, the case stated by Holt C. J. (/), of a feoffment () P. 22. E 3 5.4 GENERAL QUALITIES OF has a fee, subject to an executory devise, or springing or shifting use, or a base or deter- minable fee, his fine with proclamations never could become a bar to the title afterwards arising under this executory devise, Sac. In a case which arose a few years ago, si- milar to Gulliver and WOckett^q), it was con- tended (r), by gentlemen whose opinions are entitled to a very high degree of respect, that such cases are exceptions to the general rule, that an executory devise cannot be destroyed, by any alteration in the estate after which it is limited. Under a devise, as to the point in question, to M. for life, remainder to the chil- dren of M. that he should leave, or have living at the time of his decease, and their heirs, as tenants in common; and in default of a child or children of M., or, being such, all of them should die under 21, then to J., W. and H., and their heirs as tenants in common ; it was held, in the opinions to which I have referred, that by the feoffment of the tenant for life, the contingent remainder to his children, and the contingent remainder to J., W. and H. were destroyed ; and that the limitation in favour of J., W. and H. was also defeated, as far as it was to operate by executory devise. ~(y) Ante, p. 11. (r) M. S. Opinions.. SPRINGING USES, &c. 55 The author, with great diffidence, ventures to suggest a doubt upon the accuracy of doctrine, which is sanctioned by such distin- guished authority. It is clear that the feoffment would destroy, as well the contingent remainder to the chil- dren, as that to J., W. and H., and the only question is, whether it would defeat the limit- ation to J.,W. and H. 5 so far as it was to take effect as an executory devise, that is, in the event of children surviving the tenant for life, o and afterwards dying under 21. The opinions appear to be founded on the assumption, that a limitation which was to take effect in defeasance of an estate after it had vested, could not take effect if such estate never did vest. There is not, it is apprehended, any ex- press authority on this point ; it must there- fore be governed by the general principles of executory devises and by analogous cases. The principles on which it is held, that by the feoffment of a tenant for life, contin- gent remainders are destroyed, are not in any degree applicable to executory devises ; that is the doctrine of the common law, founded on feodal principles ; the effect of the feoff- ment is to determine the estate for life, and the rule was established to prevent the incon- E 4 56 GENERAL QUALITIES OF venience of there being no tenant to the free- hold, to do services to the lord, or answer the praecipe of a stranger. Executory devises would have been void at the common law ; they were originally admitted under the sta- tute of uses, and, in the modification of them, the courts, being emancipated from the rigid rules of the common law, have annexed such restrictions only, as appeared calculated to render them of the greatest general utility. The courts are bound so to construe wills as to effect the declared intention, if that in- tention be not inconsistent with the rules of law. In the case which we are considering, the intention is declared to be, that, after the death of M., the land should go to the chil- dren of M., living at his decease in fee ; but the particular estate being destroyed before that contingent remainder could vest, the courts are restrained by the rule of law from o-iving effect to that limitation : the inten- tion is also declared to be, that if there should be such children, and they should all die under 21, the land should go to J., W. and H. ; if that limitation be not inconsistent with any rule of law, the courts are bound to carry it into effect ; and it is apprehended that that there is no rule of law, which compels the courts to adopt such a construction, with SPRINGING USES, Ac. 57 regard to the latter limitation, as will defeat the testator's intention. And although this question may not have been decided on any case precisely similar, one of the points determined in Avelyn v. Ward(s), and the observations of Lord Hard- nycA;e,are so apposite as perhaps to amount to an authority. That case was a devise by A. of his real estate, to his brother B. and his heirs, on con- dition that, within three months after the tes- tator's death, B. should give a release ; but if B. should neglect to give such release, he de- vised to R. and his heirs ; B., who was heir- at-law of the testator, died in his life-time. The Lord Chancellor said, he knew no case of a remainder, or conditional limitation over of a real estate, whether by way of a particular estate, so as to leave a proper remainder, or to defeat an absolute fee before, by a conditional limitation, but if the precedent limitation, by what means soever, is out of the case, the subsequent limitation takes place. And, after showing that the devise over was not to be considered a condition, but a conditional limitation, he said, as it was a conditional limitation, it came to the question, whether it was necessary every particular fact (s) I Ves. 420. 5g GENERAL QUALITIES OF should take place ? or whether it was not to be construed according to the sense and in- tention of the testator, that if, in any event, the first could not take place, the subsequent should ? if so, the substance of this was the intent of the testator, that if no such release was executed, whereby the demand against his estate would exist, the estate should go over. He held that there was no distinction between the case of a remainder over, after an executory particular estate only, and those cases wherein an executory devise was intro- duced, after a disposition of the whole fee ; and he decreed that the devise over should take place. Upon principle, therefore, as well as au- thority, so far as the case of Avelyn v. Ward, and others of the same class, can be con- sidered authority, there seems to be strong ground for contending that, in the case in question, if the event on which the exe- cutory devise was limited to take effect had happened, that limitation would not have been defeated by the feoffment of the tenant for life ; and this construction would avoid the anomaly which a contrary decision would involve, with regard to the rule now under consideration. SPRINGING USES, Ac, Whether these future uses are liable to be destroyed, or affected, by any act of the per- son, out of whose seisin they are to arise, is a question which has been so ably discussed by Mr. Fearne (w), and the author of the excel- lent Treatise on Powers (v), that it is not thought necessary, in this place, to enter into a particular consideration of the point. On a careful perusal of the cases upon the subject, and the observations to which I have referred, it will, I think, satisfactorily appear, that the judgments in those cases did not decide the point in question ; and there seems strong ground for the assumption, that at this time, the courts would not admit the artificial doc- trine of scintilla juris, unless they were ex- pressly bound by authority. If, as it is gene- rally admitted, although there may be contin- gent remainders or future uses, the whole seisin be divested out of the feoffees, and ex- ecuted in and exhausted by the cestuis que use in esse, to whom the fee is limited or results, is it not the most rational construction to hold, that it is the property and quality of the estate so executed, to be subject to let in, or be defeated by, the contingent remainders or fu- (M) Fearne's Essay, p. 290. (v) Sugden on Powers, p. 1 2, 60 GENERAL QUALITIES OF ture uses when they arise, and that such con- tingent remainders or future uses take effect out of the original seisin of the feoffees ? This construction appears to be strictly in conformity, as well to the language as the spirit of the Statute of Uses, and by it all the inconveniences of the doctrine of scintilla juris, which are pointed out in the treatise referred to, would be avoided. In the Essay on Executory Devises, a dis- tinction is here noticed, between the cases of the first limitation being in fee, and being only in tail, in regard to the effect of the ul- terior contingent devise. In the first case it is shown, that the limitation over upon a dying without issue living A., is good as an executory devise; because the whole fee being, in the case there cited, first limited to a person in esse, there was no considering the subsequent limitation as a remainder. But it is observed, that if the first limitation had been in tail only, then the subsequent devise might have been considered as a contingent remainder, depending on that estate tail; and as limited to take effect, only in case that estate tail determined in the life of A. ; that is, in case the first devisee in tail died with- out issue in A's lifetime. SPRINGING USES, &c. (51 In the case of Spalding v. Spalding(w), refer- red to in support of that proposition, the court held the subsequent devise to be a contingent remainder, in order to fulfil the intent of the testator, as collected from the context of the will ; to have construed the subsequent devise an executory devise, would have deprived the objects of the testator's bounty of the provi- sion intended to be made for them. This principle governed the case of Kentish v. Newman (x). By articles before marriage it was agreed, that the wife's portion should be laid out in land, to be settled on the hus- band and wife for their lives, remainder to the heirs of their bodies ; and if not laid out in land during their joint lives, the money to be to the sole use of the wife, if living, but if she should die before her husband, then to go to her brother and sister. The wife died first, leaving issue of the marriage a daughter ; and the question was, whether the money, which was not laid out in land, should go to the daughter or to the wife's brother and sister. It was decreed that the daughter should have it, for that the intention of the articles was, to provide for the wife and the issue of the mar- riage. That it could not be intended that the (w) Cro. Car. 185. (x) 1 P. Wms. 234. 62 GENERAL QUALITIES OF wife ever thought of preferring her brother and sister before her own child; and though the words were, if the wife should die, leav- ing the husband, then the money to go to the wife's brother and sister, yet must they be construed to mean, if the wife should die without issue. The courts, therefore, in these cases, sup- plied the words, " without issue," in order to effectuate the apparent intent, the issue in tail being the primary objects of provision. III. It seems scarcely necessary to state, that executory limitations of chattels, when made by way of trust, are equally secure as such limitations of real estates, against the disposition of the person entitled to the pre- ceding or limited interests therein. And that, by analogy to executory devises, the same doctrine applies to such limitations of chattels real, when made without the inter- vention of trustees, may be assumed upon the the reasoning and observations of Lord Mans- Jield, in Wright v. Cartwright (?/). And that it also applies to executory dispositions of personal chattels, is evinced by the above noticed case of Cadogan v. Kennett (z), and the observations and authori- (y) Ante, p. SO. (z) Ante, p. 34. SPRINGING USES, &c. g3 ties, mentioned in a preceding page of this treatise, (a) IV. And the union of a term with the inheritance, by a surrender to, or any act done by a person having notice of the trust, will not, in equity, be allowed to defeat the executory limitations. Thus in the Duke of Norfolk's case hereafter cited, the trustee, after the death of the eldest son without issue, merged the term of 200 years by a surrender to the second son,whowas seised of the reversion. Lord Nottingham, in refe- rence to that circumstance observed, " this point is not worth speaking to, for whether the law be so or not, it is not material, because the trust of the term, if well limited unto Charles, whatsoever hath been done to break in upon this trust and to defeat it, by them who had notice of the trust, and were privy to it, though it be never so good in law, yet it ought to be set aside in equity ; and in this we all agree in opinion." V. And though, in general, these future uses cannot be barred by the first taker, yet where, in lands of inheritance, an estate tail is first limited, and then a conditional limitation is made upon that estate, a recovery suffered (a) Ante, p. 46. (34 GENERAL QUALITIES OF by the tenant in tail, before the event or con- dition happens on which the ulterior use was to arise, will bar the estate depending on that event or condition. In the case of Benson v. Hodson (b} 9 M. co- venanted to levy a fine of lands, to the use of himself and the heirs male of his body, re- mainder in tail to several others, remainder to his own right heirs. Provided that, if there should be a failure of issue male of his bodv, * ' and E. be dead, and A. be married or of the age of 21 years, then A. should have 2001. per annum for ten years. M. died, leaving issue a son, who made a lease for 1000 years, then levied a fine and suffered a recovery, and died without issue male, E. being dead, and A. being married and of age. It was held that the rent was barred by the common recovery. The estate tail was subsisting when the re- covery was suffered, and the rent was not to arise until the determination of that estate. The case itself is not an authority for the position in question, because the limitation of the rent being to take effect, not in abridg- ment, but at the regular determination of the estate tail, was in the nature of a contin- gent remainder, similar to the limitation in- (V) 1 Mod. 108. SPRINGING USES, &c. (tf troduced by the proviso in the above-noticed case of Carwardine v. Carwardine (c) ; but, in giving judgment, Hale C. J. said, " a man made a gift in tail, determinable upon his nonpayment of a thousand pounds, the re- mainder over in tail to B., with other remain- ders ; the tenant in tail, before the day of payment of the thousand pounds, suffered a common recovery, and doth not pay the thousand pounds ; yet, because he was tenant in tail when he suffered the recovery, by that he had barred all, and had an estate in fee by that recovery." Also, " if there be tenant in tail reserving rent, a common recovery will not bar it : so, if a condition be for payment of rent it will not bar it ; but if a condition be for doing a collateral thing it is a bar ; and so, if tenant in tail be with a limitation so long as such a tree shall stand, a common re- covery will bar- that limitation." VI. This privilege of conditional limitations and future springing uses, which exempts them from being barred or destroyed, except by a tenant in tail, is the foundation of an invariable rule, with respect to the contin- gency upon which an estate of this sort is permitted to take effect ; which is, that such (c) Ante, p. 3. F 66 GENERAL QUALITIES OF contingency must happen within a short space of time ; such as a life in being, or some few years after ; a rule which was adopted, in order to prevent property being rendered unalien- able during an inconvenient period. In Dames v. Speed (e), where husband and wife levied a fine of the wife's land, to the use of the heirs of the body of the husband on the wife begotten, and for default of such issue to the use of the right heirs of the hus- C3 band ; they had issue which died, then the wife died, and then the husband died. The land being the wife's, no estate could result or arise by implication to the husband for life ; and the issue and wife dying in the lifetime of the husband, and, consequently, before the limitation to his heirs could vest, that contin- gent limitation failed for want of a preceding freehold to support it ; and (which is the point material to the present purpose) it was said, that as a springing use it was void, being to arise after a dying without issue, a remote possibility which, the law will not allow, (g) But Holt C. J. observed, " a feoffment to the use of another and his heirs, to commence four years from thence, is good as a springing (e) 2 Salk. 675. Holt, (g) But see post, c. 4. s. 6 750. Shaw, Cas. Parl. 104. and 7. SPRINGING USES, &c. ffl use ; and the whole estate remains in the feoffor in the mean time ; so it is if it were to commence after the death of another with- out issue, if he die within twenty years." In Harwell v. Lucas (^), one made a feoff- ment to the use of the feoffees and their heirs, upon condition that if he did not pay 10,0()0/. within fifteen days to B. or his assigns, then they should stand seised to the use of B. and his wife, remainder to T. their second son in tail, with several remainders over : the money was not paid, and it was held that this spring- ing use was valid. And so in BostocVs case (i), a fine was levied of land to the use of A. for life, re- mainder to the use of the heirs male of A. on the body of B. begotten, with other remain- ders over; and if the said A. should die, liv- ing the said B., that then the said fine should be of the said land to the use of the said B. for the term of her life, and after her decease to the uses aforesaid. A. had issue male and died, living B., and it was resolved that B. was entitled to an estate for life in the land. And in Carpenter v. Smith (k), land was limited by deed and fine to J. in fee ; and if (h) Moore's Rep. 99. () Poll. 70. (0 Ley, 54. F 2 68 GENERAL QUALITIES OF J. die, living W., then to the heir of W. ; J. died in the lifetime of W., and the court was of opinion that the limitation over was good. Mr. Fearne observes, that in respect to estates of freehold, by the time of vesting is meant the time of vesting of the freehold ; for although land should be limited for a term of 200 years or upwards, with remainder to an unborn son of a person then living, this executory devise to such unborn son would be good ; because the vesting of the freehold is confined to the period of a life then in be- ing ; for, upon the birth of such son, the free- hold will vest in him, or, upon the death of such person without any son, it must vest somewhere else (only subject in either case to the preceding term). And in support of this doctrine the case of Gore v. Gore (/) is referred to ; where A. de- vised his lands to trustees for 500 years upon trusts, and after the determination of that term to the first son, &c., of B. (who had no son born at the testator's death), and this ex- ecutory devise to the unborn son of B. was held good ; because it was clear the freehold must vest, either on the birth of such son, or on B.'s death without having had any son. (I) 2 P. W. 28. SPRINGING USES, &c. 69 Some decisions upon deeds appear to have- created a doubt, whether upon this point the analogy between executory devises and spring- ing uses exists. Thus, in Adams v. Savage (m), determined in 1701, A., by lease and release, conveyed lands to trustees and their heirs, to the use of himself for 99 years, if he should so long live, remainder to the use of the trustees for 25 years, remainder to the heirs male of his own body, remainder to his own right heirs. The question was, whether A. was tenant in tail or only tenant for years; and the court held the limitation to the heirs male of the body of A. to be void, because there was no pre- ceding estate of freehold limited to support it ; and that it should not be implied contrary to the intent of the conveyance. And in Rawley v. Holland (n) 9 determined in 1712, A., on his marriage, conveyed lands to trustees and their heirs, to the use of himself for 99 years, if he should so long live, and after to the trustees for 200 years, re- mainder to the heirs male of his own body, remainder to his right heirs. Upon a case (m) 2 Salk. 679. Lord () 22 Vin. 189. pi. 11. Raym. 854. 2 Eq. Ca. Ab. 753. F 3 70 GENERAL QUALITIES OF referred from the Court of Chancery to the judges of the Court of Common Pleas, they held the limitation to the heirs male of the body of A. void, no freehold being limited to any person precedent to that estate ; and that no freehold could result to A. for his life by implication, because another estate, viz., for 99 years, if &c., was expressly limited to him, which would be inconsistent with a free- hold by implication ; and that a freehold, either expressed or implied, was necessary to support such limitation. The case of Adams v. Savage did not, in fact, involve the point in question ; for A. would not have been tenant in tail, but for years only, if the limitation to the heirs male of his body had been admitted effectual as a future use. And neither in that case, nor in Rowley v. Holland did the court advert to the doctrine of springing uses ; they held the li- mitations to the heirs male of the bodies of the respective grantors to be void as remain- ders. There seems but little reason to doubt that such limitations would now be supported as springing uses ; they have all the requisite qualities of a valid springing use ; they de- rive their effect from the Statute of Uses ; SPRINGING USES, &c. 71' they cannot operate as remainders ; and they must take effect, if at any time, at the expira- tion of a life in being. The case of Goodtitle d. Western v. Burton- shaw (o) may, without due consideration, ap- pear to militate against the application of this, rule to springing uses. N., by lease and release, conveyed lands to trustees and their heirs, to the use of himself for 99 years, if he should so long live ; and from and after the decease of the said N., to trustees and their heirs during his life, to pre- serve contingent remainders, with remain- ders over. One of the points argued was, that all the contingent uses in the settlement were void, as there was no freehold to support them, the first use of N. being for 99 years, which is but a chattel ; and the interest of the trus- tees not being to commence till after his death. That was attempted to be answered on the foot of a resulting use in N., the sett- lor for life ; but the court was of opinion there could be no resulting use in the settlor in this case. It was then argued that a suffi- cient estate. passed to the trustees to support the contingent limitations ; and the court was of that opinion, holding that, in the clause (o) Appendix to Fearne, 570. F 4 72 GENERAL QUALITIES OF introducing the remainder to the trustees, the words, " after the decease of the said N.," might be rejected as repugnant ; or the words, " or other sooner determination of the term," might be implied. Lord Mansfield, in delivering the opinion of the court, is represented to have observed, that this being by way of feoffees to uses, no such thing as a springing use could arise in the trustees to support the subsequent estates, analogous to executory devises. There ap- pears to be some inaccuracy in the language attributed to his lordship, for it does not very explicitly convey his meaning ; the negative, however, seems to imply an affirmative, that, if the limitation to the trustees could have taken effect by the Statute of Uses, a spring- ing use might have arisen in them, analogous to executory devises, in case it had been ne- cessary to resort to that doctrine. A springing use may be limited to take effect within the compass of several lives in being ; for whatever may be the number of such lives, the whole period can amount to no more than the life of the survivor of them. In Doe d. Dyke v. \VJiittingham (p), B., in consideration of love and affection, gave and (p) 4 Taun. 20. SPRINGING USES, &c. 73 I granted to his daughter M., her heirs, &c., (after the deceases of himself and his then wife,) certain freehold hereditaments, to hold the same (from and after the decease of him and his then wife) absolutely. The court held that the instrument operated as a cove- nant to stand seised, and that the future use was good. And the above-mentioned cases of the Earl of Winchelsea v. Wentworth (q) 9 and Lloyd v. Carew (r) 9 show that a springing use, to vest within a short time after a life in being, is good. I have not been able to discover any case, expressly defining the utmost limits allowed for springing uses. Lord Holt's observation in Davies v. Speed (s) extends the period to 20 years. (/) An estate tail may, by law, be unalienable during the period of gestation and minority ; and that consideration furnished the standard for the boundary within which executory de- vises were admitted ; no greater inconveni- ence, or tendency to a perpetuity, is produced by this fetter upon alienation, than by the policy of the law might otherwise exist ; and (q) Ante, p. 9. (*) And see Masscnburgh (r) Ante, p. 9. v. Ash, post. (s) Sup. p. 67. 74 GENERAL QUALITIES OF it is immaterial, with regard to the interest of the public in the property, whether the sus- pension arise from the law or the act of the party. These are the principles on which the limits of executory devises were esta- blished, and it is obvious that the same prin- ciples apply, with equal force, to the executory limitations which are the subject of our en- quiries ; for it can make no difference, with regard to the influence upon the property affected by them, under what instrument such secondary limitations arise; no inconvenience, or tendency to a perpetuity, can result from suspending alienation by a springing use, which would not also be produced from such suspension by executory devise. But this rule does not apply to springing uses upon or after an estate tail ; the tenant in tail may, as we have seen (u), bar those uses by common recovery ; in such a case, therefore, the alienation of the property is not restrained. The common limitations in settlements, for shifting the settled estate from one branch of the family, tenants in tail, to a different branch, upon the accession of another estate, or on the refusal or neglect to take the sett- (M) Ante, p. 63 & seq. SPRINGING USES, &c. 75 lor's name and bear his arms, and the powers of leasing, sale, and exchange usually inserted, are therefore valid, although such limitations or powers possibly may not take effect or be exercised until a remote period. That the rule in question applies to chattels appears by the case of Massenburgh v. Ash (v) , which was a settlement of a term on mar- riage, in trust for the husband and wife during their lives and the life of the survivor ; and if there should be issue male of the marriage living at the decease of such survivor, then in trust that the eldest son should be maintained out of the rents and profits until 21, and then the term to be assigned to him ; and in case he should die before 21, then in like manner for the other sons successively ; but if there should be no such issue living at the decease of the survivor of the husband and wife, or being such they should all die under 21, then to W. M. The husband and wife died, leav- ing an only son, who died under 21. The question was, whether the trust for \V. M. was good. The Lord Keeper, observing that he took the rules in Chancery, touching the limitations of trusts of terms of years, to be the same with executory devises of terms for (v) I Vern. 234. 304. 76 GENERAL QUALITIES, &c. years at law, directed a case for the opinion of the judges of the Common Pleas ; and the judges being unanimously of opinion that the contingent limitation to W. M. was good, the Lord Keeper decreed for him. The period now fixed as the boundary for executory devises, and, consequently, for these future uses, is, during the lives of persons in being, and the life of the survivor of them, and 21 years after the survivor's decease, and a further number of months, equal to the du- ration of pregnancy. And it has been held, that an executory devise may be limited, to take effect at the end of an absolute term of 21 years after a life in being at the death of the testator, without reference to the infancy of the person intended to take, (w) The act of 40th G. 3. c. 98. " for restrain- ing all trusts and directions in deeds or wills, whereby the profits or produce of real or per- sonal estates shall be accumulated, and the beneficial enjoyment thereof postponed be- yond the time therein limited," is explained in a note by Mr. Preston to Mr. Fearnes essay. (#) (to) Fearne, 433. n. (1.) (a?) P. 538. 7ed. CHAPTER IK. OF SPRINGING OSES AND OTHER LIMITATIONS, UPON A FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. > I. WHENEVER a future use is limited to take effect after a dying without heirs or without issue, subject to no other restriction, the li- mitation is void ; for the policy of our law will not suffer property to be tied up, and rendered unalienable, in expectation of such remote contingencies. In legal construction dying without issue means an indefinite failure of issue; for in afor- medon in reverter or remainder, although the first donee had many issues in lineal descent inheritable to the estate tail, and who held the estate, the demandant need not name any of the issues in the clause, et quaepost mortem, &c., but shall say, et quae post mortem of the donee, ad ipsum reverti, or remanere debet, eo quod the donee died without issue, (a) (a) 8 Co. 88. a. BuekmerJs case. 78 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. In Coltman v. Senhouse (6), H. covenanted that if he should die without issue of his body, then he the said H. did give, grant, re- lease, and confirm the lands in question to E. his mother, and her heirs. H. died with- out issue ; and it was adjudged that no estate passed from the son to the mother by this deed, which clearly might have operated as a covenant to stand seised. The judgment was affirmed in error. Where, however, an estate tail is subsisting, and the reversion er limits an estate to take effect on failure of issue of the tenant in tail, that is, at the regular expiration of the sub- sisting estate, such limitation is not a future use, but is an immediate disposition of the reversion, and is valid by the common law. Thus, in Milborne v. Dashburne (c), a grant of the reversion, when it should happen after the death of the tenant for life, was construed a good grant of the then present reversion, notwithstanding the words seemed to be other- wise, and sound futurely. In Weal and Lower (d), A. made a feoff- ment to the use of himself for life, and after the death of A., and M. his wife, to the use (b) Poll. 523. (d) Poll. 57. (c) Cro. Eliz. 324-. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 79 of B., &c. : it appeared that M., by a former deed, had an estate for life. Hale C. J. held, that the mentioning the death of M. was only expressing when B. should take the profits in possession, and that the deed was a convey- ance of the then subsisting reversion or re- mainder, expectant on the death of M. But if the use be limited to take effect in default, or on failure of issue not inherit- able to the subsisting estate; as, if that estate be in tail male, and the future use be limited to arise on failure of issue generally of the tenant in tail male, that limitation, as it may not take effect till several generations after the determination of the preceding estate, is too remote and void; In two modern cases of this latter descrip- tion, which arose on wills (e), the courts, col- lecting the intention of the testators from the context and general tenor of the wills, restrained the meaning of more general ex- pressions to failure of such issue as were inheritable to the preceding estates. And it is apprehended that the same construction would be adopted, with regard to a limitation by deed, apparently too remote, if the intention (e) Jones v.Morgan, SBro. Fearne, 577, and Lyttonv. Parl. Ca. 323., Appx. to Lyttoii, 4 Bro. Ch. Ca. 441. 30 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. to conform to the rule of law were sufficiently manifested; for in the Marquis of Cholmonddy v. Lord Clinton (gO, the Master of the Rolls, after a minute investigation of the cases, observed, " I conclude, from these authorities (to which many more of similar import might have been added), that the law on this subject is com- pletely settled, and the rules of construction, both of deeds and wills, established in a way not to be shaken ; that though there is always a strong presumption in favour of technical meaning and inference, yet it is no more than a presumption ; that it is not necessarily and universally binding and conclusive, but sub- ject to be controled by the manifestation of a contrary intent : that the primary object of enquiry is the intention of the party ; and where that is, on the face of the instrument, clearly and satisfactorily ascertained, and found not to be contrary to any rule of law, the court is bound, if the words will admit of a construction conformable to the intention, to adopt that construction, however contrary it may be to technical meaning and infe- rence." Another point connected with the rule in question, arose upon the cases of Moore v. (g) 2 Jac. and Walk. 101. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. gj Parker (h) and Goodman v. Goodright (z), men- tioned by Mr. Fearne, viz., whether, if a re- versioner limit a contingent use in tail, to arise at the regular expiration of the subsist- ing estate, with remainder in tail, and the estate tail should not take effect, the remain- der can take effect as a substituted estate. Some observations applicable to the point will be found in a subsequent page of this treatise. (&) II. The like rule holds in the limitation of a term or personal estate, viz., that a dispo- sition thereof to take effect after failure of heirs of the body, or dying without issue, without other restriction, is too remote. Mr. Fearne mentions the case of Pearse v, Reeve (/), where there was a limitation of a term (by deed) in trust for R. during his life, then in trust for his wife during her life, and after their deaths in trust for their children during their lives ; and if R. and his wife should die within the term without issue, or, having issue, if that issue die within the term, then to W. ; this limitation to W. was held void. And he observes that there is a long (h) Lord Raym. 37, 4 (*) Post, c. 4, s. 7. Mod. 316, Skinner 558. (/) Poll. 29. (0 2 Burr. 873. s Q 8>2 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. series of cases to this purpose reported by Pollexfen, from p. 24 to 44. To these the case of Warman v. Seaman, p. 112 of the same book, may be added. And in Kirsley v. Duck (m), a man possess- ed of land for a term of 2000 years, granted the land to K. for life, and to the heirs of his body; and in default of issue to D. for 1800 years ; the limitation to D. was adjudged void ; for it would create a perpetuity not to be barred by any common recovery. In Mainwaring v. Baxter (n) lands were conveyed to trustees in fee, in trust for C. for life, remainder to the trustees for 1000 years, remainder to H. for 99 years, if he should so long live, remainder to trustees to preserve contingent remainders, remainder to his first and other sons in tail male, with other re- mainders over. And it was declared that the term of 1000 years was so limited, to the in- tent and purpose that all and every the per- son and persons (other than the said C.) on or to whom any estate or interest in the said premises was thereby before settled or in- tended, might be content to accept the same in such manner as the same was in and by the said indenture before limited and appointed; (m) 2 Vern. 684. (n) 5 Ves. 458. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 83 and that it should not be in the power of them or any of them to anticipate, prevent, or destroy the trust, estate, or benefit of him or them appointed to succeed ; and it was declared, that the trustees, their executors, &c., should or might, after any contract or agreement made touching alienation of the premises or any part thereof, but before any alienation should be actually made, or any act, matter, or thing done which might amount or be construed to prevent the said premises or the trust thereof from going, re- maining, coming, or being, according to the limitations aforesaid, by sale or mortgage of all the said premises for and during the re- mainder of so much of the said term as should be then to come, or of a competent part thereof, raise the sum of 5000/., or pro- portionably, according to the shares and pro- portions of the premises that should be con- tracted or agreed to be sold as aforesaid ; or otherwise enter in and upon the said pre- mises, and keep the same, until the said 5000/. or such proportion thereof as aforesaid, with interest at 5 per cent., should be fully satis- fied and paid ; and until the raising of such sum should raise out of the rents and profits the yearly sum of 500/., or proportionably, according to the value of such part as should 84 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. be contracted to be sold, and pay the same unto such person or persons respectively as would from time to time be entitled to the premises, in case such person or persons con- tracting to alien the premises were actually dead, or as would from time to time, or for the time being, be injured, or intended so to be, by any alienation, act, matter, or thing, in case the person or persons so contracting or agreeing to alien were actually dead ; and after raising the said 5000/., or such propor- tion thereof as aforesaid, should place out the same at interest, and from time to time yearly pay such interest to such person or persons so injured or disappointed by such alienation, act, matter, or thing, or intended so to be, other than the person or persons so contracting or agreeing to alien ; and that the said principal sum of 5000/., or such pro- portion thereof and interest as aforesaid, should be reserved and employed for the be- nefit of such person or persons respectively and successively, to whom the estate, use, and trust of the said premises, according to the true intent and meaning of the aforesaid limitation, is appointed, other than the person or persons so contracting, &c., as aforesaid ; and after .raising the 5000/., or such proper- ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. g tion thereof and interest as aforesaid, with costs of the trustees, the term should cease. The deed contained a power to C. by deed or will to revoke the uses and appoint new uses. The Master of the Rolls declared the trusts of the term of 1000 years, as tending to a perpetuity, and being inconsistent with the rights of the several persons to whom estates in tail were limited by the said deed, were void and of no effect. But the trust of a term for raising portions on either of two contingencies, of which one was within the allowed limits, has been held to be good on the happening of that event. In Longhead d. Hopkins v. Phelps (o) a term of 1000 years was created by marriage-set- tlement, upon trust, " that in case the settlor should happen to die without issue male of his body, on the body of his intended wife begotten, or if all the issue male between them should happen to die without issue, and there should be issue female of the marriage, which o * should arrive respectively at the age or ages of 18 years, or be married ; then, from and after the death of the survivor of the settlor and his wife without issue male, or in case at (o) 2 Black. 704. G 3 86 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. the death of the survivor there should be issue male, then from and after the death of such issue male without issue, the trustees should raise 500/. for one daughter, WOOL for two, and in case of three or more, should assign the whole term to their use." There was issue of the marriage one son and four daughters, who all lived to 18, and were mar- ried. The father died, then the son died without issue. Afterwards the mother died, and then the four daughters entered, and an ejectment was brought against them by a de- visee of the son. And in support of the ejectment it was argued, that the trusts of the term were void, being on too remote a contin- gency, viz., the dying of the issue male of the marriage without issue generally. But the court were clear that the first part of the contin- gency was good, viz., " in case the settlor and his wife died without leaving issue male ;" and as that happened in fact to be the case, the court would not enter into the consideration, how far the other branch of the contingency might have been supported, which could only come in question in case the son had survived both his parents. Mr. Fearne observes, that a term or per- sonal estate cannot, properly speaking, be in- tailed, for where a term or other personal ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 87 x estate is limited to one in tail, it is an abso- lute and complete disposition of the whole term to him and his executors ; he may dis- pose of it as he pleases ; if he does not dis- pose of it, it goes to his executors and not to his issue ; and it does not revert for default of issue. And after noticing a distinction taken by Lord Coke between a devise of a term in gross, and of a term de novo, out of the inhe- ritance, viz., that a devise of a term de novo to one and the heirs of his body, shall endure no longer than he has heirs of his body ; he shows that such distinction has been since overruled or denied to be law. III. That the limitation in a deed of chattels to one in tail vests the whole in him, is proved by the following cases. In Bullock v. Knight (p), (1682), B. being possessed of a term for 1000 years, in consi- deration of a marriage to be had between H. his son and C., granted the same to trustees, in trust that B. should receive the profits till the marriage, and after the marriage to per- mit H. and his assigns to hold the premises and receive the profits for so long of the said term as he should live, and no longer ; and, after his decease, should permit the said C. (p) 1 Ch. Ca. 265. 2 Ch. Ca. 114. G 4 88 OF SPRINGING USES, Ac. and her assigns to hold and enjoy the pre- mises and receive the profits for so long of the term as she should live, and no longer ; and after the decease of the survivor of H. and C., should permit the premises to be en- joyed by the issues of the bodies of the said H. and C. between them to be begotten, for and during so long of the said term as such issue should have a being and continue in rerum naturd, to take and enjoy in like man- ner as heirs in special tail by course of de- scent do hold and enjoy ; and for default of such issue then over. The Lord Chancellor, after great delibera- tion, declared that the limitation to the issue in this case vested the estate in H. and C., and not in the issue. In Webb v. Webb (q), (1710), on the mar- riage of A., his grandfather assigned a term of 1000 years in trust for A. for life, then to A.'s wife for life, and, after their deaths, for the heirs of the bodies of A. and his said wife ; the wife died leaving issue ; A. sur- vived. It was determined that the whole term vested in A. In Theebridge v. Kilburne (r), (1750-1), a term was limited by deed in trust for S. dur- (?) 1 P. W. 132. (r)2 Ves. 233. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 9 ing her life, and immediately from and after her decease to the heirs of the body of S. lawfully to be begotten, if the term should so long endure ; and in default of such issue then to B. Lord Hardwicke expressed him- self of opinion that the whole term vested in S. (s) The effect is the same if the limitation of the chattels be made by reference to the limit- ations of real estate in strict settlement ; they vest absolutely in the first tenant in tail who comes in esse, even although the words " as far as the law will admit" are added (t) ; it is, therefore, now usual (u) to insert a de- claration, that such chattels shall not vest ab- solutely in any child, by the settlement made tenant in tail of the fee simple hereditaments, unless such child shall attain the age of 21 years : this has so far the effect of assimilat- ing the trusts of the chattels to the uses of the real estate, and keeping both in the same line of devolution, that no child will become absolutely entitled to the former, until he is of sufficient age to acquire the complete do- minion over the latter. (s) But see post, ch. iv. Lincoln, post 90, and the s. 1. cases there cited. (t) See the Duke of NOD- (u) Co. Litt. 290 b . n. ( 1 ) x. castle v. the Countess of 90 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. But when the limitations of trusts of chat- tels are executory only, a future instrument being requisite for the accomplishment of the trusts, greater latitude of construction is ad- mitted, and a court of equity, having the di- rection of the settlement, assumes the power of moulding the limitations to effect the pur- pose of the parties, so far as those purposes can be collected from the executory instru- ment. The case of the Duke of Newcastle v. the Countess of Lincoln (v) is an important au- thority on this subject. By deeds dated in 1772, freehold estates were settled by A. and his father to certain uses, with a power of re- vocation; and A.'s father covenanted to con- vey leaseholds for years in trust for himself for life, and after his decease in trust for A. for life, and after his decease in trust for the first and other sons of A. successively, as far as the law would allow. By the marriage- settlement of A., dated in 1775, the uses of the freehold estates were revoked, and those estates were limited to him for life, remainder to his first and other sons successively in tail male, remainder to his brother B. for life, re- mainder to his first and other sons succes- (v) 3 Ves. Jun., 387. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. QJ sively in tail male, with other remainders over ; and the father covenanted to assign to trustees the same leasehold estates, in trust for and for the benefit of such person and per- sons, and for such or the like estate and estates, and for such or the like ends, intents, and purposes, as are therein before-mentioned of and concerning the freehold estates, as far as the law in that case would allow and permit. A. died, leaving issue a son and a daughter; the son died without issue, being an infant of the age of nine months; B. died leaving sons. The bill was filed by the eldest son of B. to have the covenant to convey the leaseholds carried into execution, and praying that such a clause might be inserted in the conveyance as should prevent the absolute vesting of the leaseholds, until the persons successively en- titled to the possession thereof should have attained the age of 21 years. Lord Lough- borough C. decreed, that the leaseholds should be settled in trust for B.'s eldest son, his exe- cutors, administrators, and assigns ; but if he should die under the age of 21 years, without leaving issue male of his body living at the time of his death, then in trust for B.'s second son, his executors, administrators, and assigns ; with a limitation over in case of his 92 O p SPRINGING USES, &c. death under 21, without issue male living at his death, &c. This decree was varied upon appeal (w) 9 by omitting such part thereof as is subsequent to the declaration, that the leaseholds ought to be settled in trust for B.'s eldest son, his executors, administrators, and assigns, it being then unnecessary, from the circumstance of his having attained the age of 21 years, to decide anything touching that part of the decree so left out. It seems important to notice, that the power of revocation in this case did not attach upon the leasehold estates, nor did the marriage settlement affect to execute the power with reference to them ; and that the only trust by the deed of 1772 created of those estates, subsequently to that for A. for life, was for the first and other sons of A. successively, as far as the law would allow. Lord Eldon observed upon that point, " if the decision upon the settlement of 1772 (#), [be] that the property either should vest in the first son, not upon his birth, but at the age of 21, or should divest if he died under that age without issue male, as the fact hap- (W>) 12 Ves. 218. (x) It is 1775 in the report, but that is obviously an error. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 93 pened, the covenant is gone by the course of events that have happened, and so much of the leasehold estates as was not taken out of the Duke [ A's father], remained in him, to be considered as the subject of the settlement of 1775." In this case, the prior decisions on the sub- ject were investigated and discussed by Lord Eldon as a peer, Lord Erskine being then Chancellor, and the reasoning of Lord Hardwicke in Gower v. Grosvenor (/), in op- position in some measure to the later cases of Foley v. Burnell(z) 9 and Vaughanv.Burslem(a), appears to have furnished the principles on which it was determined. Lord Hardwicke said, it was the known practice of convey- ancing, to limit leasehold estates to a tenant for life ; then to the son, either to be abso- lutely vested in him when he shall attain the age of 21, or upon his birth, to be divested if he dies under that age, and to go over, but not upon the simple contingency of his death under the age of 21, as Sir Joseph Jekyll says, but if he shall die under the age of 21 without issue generally, if the object be to limit an estate in tail general, or without (y) 3 Barnard. (a) 3 Bro. C. C. 101. (z) 1 Bro. C. C. 274. 94 op SPRINGING USES, &c. issue male, if an estate in tail male be the object. But Lord Eldon pointed out the inadequacy of these provisions, for effectuating that which is assumed to be the primary purpose, viz. to keep the freehold and leasehold estates together as far as the law will admit ; this, his Lord- ship observed, is not carrying it as far as the law will permit; for the moment a son comes to the age of 14 he may, subject to the contin- gency of his death under the age of 21, not leaving male issue, bequeath the leasehold estate. Suppose he dies under the age of 21, leaving issue male, that issue male would not take the leasehold estate, as he would the real estate ; but the leasehold estate would be part of his general personal estate ; which may go to his next of kin, and equally to the wife with them ; or in some parts of the kingdom, the larger portion to the wife. His lordship said, this decree cannot serve as aguide to conveyancers, as to what is to be done under any other circumstances than a tenant in tail in possession attaining the age of 21. And in Burnett v. Crutchley (&), he observed, that he did not take the case of the Duke of Newcastle to have decided anything, with (b) 15Ves.553. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 95 regard to any case that might possibly arise, except that precise case. The Duke had attained the age of 21, but the difficulty that always occurred to his Lordship upon it was, what was to become of it, if the party died under that age leaving issue. It seems difficult to suggest any other mode of settlement which, in such a case, would approximate nearer to the obvious in- tention ; to limit the leaseholds over to the second son on the death of the first, leaving issue inheritable to the estate tail, would at once defeat the intention ; the absolute vest- ing could not be suspended during the mi- nority of such issue ; a provision of that nature would be too remote ; and the pur- poses might not be executed by limiting over the leaseholds to the issue, on the death of the parent under twenty-one, for the issue might die in early infancy : but if he ab- solute interest be vested in the parent, there is a great probability that the freehold and leasehold estates will be kept together, during a longer period than could be provided for by the settlement; and this mode of limitation appears to unite, more than any other, con- formity to practice and execution of the pur- pose. Such a settlement would, perhaps, as nearly as any which, without too much of 96 F SPRINGING USES, &c. refinement, could be devised, be consistent with that which Lord Eldon thought, if it were res Integra, the best principle ; that it should be considered, that the court was furnished with all the means of enabling the o party to tie up the property, not as long as the rules of law will admit, but to that con- venient extent which will enable him to execute the general primary purpose of the will or settlement, to carry together the real and personal estates. And indeed this prin- ciple seems to have been admitted in the above-mentioned case of Burnett v. Crutchley, for there Lord Eldon C. expressed his opinion, that the settlement intended, of the two thirds of the portion, was in conformity to the limit- ations of the real estate, (which was devised in strict settlement,) and that the interest of an eldest son would be divested only by his death without issue male under the age of 21. It should be observed, that under that which is stated to be the usual qualification of trusts of personalty, declared by reference to the limitations of real estate in strict settle- ment (c), in the event of a son dying under 21, leaving issue inheritable to the estate tail, the real and personal estates would im- (c) Ante, p. 49. ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 97 mediately be separated. It is submitted, therefore, the declaration should be, that the chattels shall not vest absolutely in any child, by the settlement made tenant in tail of the fee simple hereditaments, unless such child shall attain the age of 21 years, or die under that age, leaving issue of his body living at his decease. It is true, that according to the usual mode of limiting personalty in settlements of that description of property only, although an ab- solutely vested interest is given to daughters at 21, or marriage under that age, such an interest is only given to sons on their attain- ing that age ; but this does not appear to be inconsistent with a different arrangement when real estate is also the subject of settle- ment ; in the former case the object may be to discourage or provide against early and imprudent marriages ; in the latter the pri- mary purpose generally is to carry together the real and personal estates. In the Duke of Newcastle v. the Countess of Lincoln, Lord Eldon is represented to have said, that there is no difference in the execu- tion of an executory trust created by a will, and of a covenant in marriage articles ; but in Jervoise v. the Duke of Northumberland (d), ( It was admitted that there was no real estate. In contending that dying without issue meant living at her death, it was said that one circumstance which occurred in this case, that the limitation over upon the failure of issue was for life, had been considered as de- cisive evidence of the intention for the limit- ed construction. The Master of the Rolls said, where no- thing but a life interest is given over, the failure of issue must necessarily be intended a failure within the compass of that life ; but where the entire interest is given over, the mere circumstance that one taker is confined to a life interest, furnishes no indication of an intention to make the whole bequest depend upon the existence of that person, at the time when the event happens, on which the limitation over is to take effect. And he added, if there is any case which has ascribed to the circumstance of a devise over for life, ON FAILURE OF HEIRS OR ISSUE. 123 the effect here contended for, I must beg o leave to doubt the soundness of the decision. Certainly the rule, as contended for by Mr. Fearne, does not go to that extent ; for in this case it will be observed, that one only of the four persons, to whom the bequest over is made, is to take a life interest, and her part is to be divided equally among the survivors, the other three persons taking absolute inte- rests : to this case, therefore, the principle in question clearly does not apply. So it seems that future uses or trusts, li- mited to take effect at a period which exceeds the boundary of such limitations, may be va- lid, if created in estates or interests, the extent or duration of which does not exceed that boundary. Thus, in King v. Cotton (p), where A., tenant for life, demised to trustees for 99 years, if she should so long live, in trust for herself during her widowhood, and after her marriage, then in trust for C., her second son, and the heirs of his body ; and if he died without issue, then in trust for D., her next son. Upon the question, whether the limit- ation over to D. was good, it was said, that the only objection to limiting a term to one (p) 2 P. W. 676. 124 OF SPRINGING USES, &c. and the heirs of his body, and then over in default of issue, was, because it would make a perpetuity ; but here the whole term being to determine on A.'s death, there could be no perpetuity ; nor, indeed, as Mr. Fearne says, could there, for the subsequent limitation could not possibly take effect unless it was in the lifetime of A. And he observes, the court, it appears, gave no opinion on this point ; but the reporter (with good reason, as it seems), adds, ideo queer e, though it seems rather to be a good limitation of the trusts, and within the reason of the Duke of Norfolk's case, and the several other subse- quent resolutions grounded thereupon. ( 125 ) CHAPTER IV. OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO SPRINGING USES, AND OTHER LIMITATIONS CORRE- SPONDING WITH EXECUTORY DEVISES. I. WE have seen by the cases of WM v. Webb and Theebridge v. Kilburne (a), that if a term be limited for one for life, and after- wards for the heirs of his body, these words are generally words of limitation, and the whole vests in the first taker. But if there appear any other circumstance or clause in the deed, to show the intention that these words should be words of purchase, and not of limitation, then it seems the an- cestor takes for life only, and his heir will take by purchase. As instances of this, Mr. Fearne mentions two cases of limitations of the trusts of a term in marriage-settlements. Peacock v. Spooner (6), (1690), where a term for 900 years was assigned, in trust to permit (a) Ante, p. 88. (b) 2 Vern. 43. 1 95. 2- Freem. 1 1 4. 126 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO the husband and wife, and the survivor of them, to receive the profits for so many years as they, or the survivor of them, should hap- pen to live, and after their deaths, to the use of the heirs of the body of the wife by the husband to be begotten ; Lord Chancellor Jefferies decreed that the whole vested in the wife ; but afterwards the Lords Commission- ers decreed that the heir of the body took by purchase, and that it did not vest abso- lutely in the mother who survived, so as to go to her administrator. This decree was after- wards affirmed in the House of Lords, though the judges were six to two against it. And Daffbrne v. Goodman (c), (1698), a si- milar case, in which the same point was after- wards decreed ; there a term was assigned, in trust to permit J. to receive the profits for so many years of the term as he should live, and after his death to permit A., his intended wife, to receive the profits for so many years of the term as she should live, and after both their deaths, to permit the heirs of the body of A. to be begotten by the said J., to enjoy the lands for the residue of the term. This lat- ter decree was grounded on the authority of the preceding. (c) 2 Vern. 362. 2 Freem. 228. 231. SPRINGING USES, &c. 127 It is true, Mr. Fearne observes, no parti- cular expression in either of these cases de- termined the intent to be, that the heir of the body should take as a purchaser ; but these being cases of marriage-settlements, it was reasonably enough inferred, that the issue of the marriage were intended objects of the set- tlement, and the term not designed to vest wholly in the mother. But afterwards, he says, in a subsequent case of a marriage-set- tlement, a decree at the Rolls, grounded upon the case of Peacock v. Spooner, was reversed, and the limitation to the heir male decreed to be void. This was the before-mentioned case of Webb v. Webb (d), which, Mr. Fearne says, appears to have been the ruling authority ever since in cases of the like nature; and that of Peacock v. Spooner, it seems, is only attended to in cases exactly the same in specie with itself, as was that of-Daffbrne v. Goodman, as reported by Freeman, (e) But he observes, there have been other cases which have proceeded entirely upon circum- stances of evidence of the intention. As Hodgson v. Bussey (g), (1740), where a term (d) Atite, p. 88. 1 Eden's mous Works, p. 388. Ch. Ca. p. 8. (g) 2 Atk. 89. (e) See Fearne's Posthu- 128 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO was settled in trust for one, if she should so long live, and after her decease, in trust for her husband, if he should so long live, and after his decease, in trust for the heirs of the body of the wife, begotten by the husband, and their executors, administrators, and assigns ; Lord Hardwicke decreed, that the limitation to the heirs of the body, &c., were words of purchase, as he held the addition of the words executors, administrators, and as- signs, strong evidence of the intent to give only an usufructuary interest for life, and to vest the property in the heirs of the body. And so indeed, Mr. Fearne observes, in the above cited case of Theebridge v. Kilburne (h), though Lord Hardwicke was rather of opi- nion, that the whole term vested in S., and that there was no ground for any other con- struction, unless from the word ' immediate- ly,' which he thought was too precarious ; yet he seemed not to be very confident that the limitation to the heirs of the body might not, even in that case, operate as words of purchase, and held that the limitation then would have vested in the son of S., who died an infant in her life-time, though he did not live to answer the description of heir ; for (k) Ante, p. 88. SPRINGING USES, &c. that it would then amount to the same thing as if it had been to the issue o her body ; and that where the words heirs of the body, when taken to be words of purchase in such a limitation, have been construed in the sense of issue, it was never held necessary that the issue should survive the first taker, so as in strictness to be heir ; for that it was not like a limitation to the heir of the body in the singular number, which would be such a de- scription as to shew, that such person as was strictly heir should take. And in Ward v. Bradley (*), (1687). A. possessed for 2000 years of a tenement, in consideration of a marriage to be had and after had, and of 3501. portion, and for provi- sion and stay of living of the husband and wife and their children, demised to trustees for 1700 years, if he and his wife, or any of their issue lived so long, in trust for A. during 99 years (k), remainder to the heirs of the body of A. on that wife. They had issue three daughters, two of whom got an assign- ment of the whole term, and had administra- tion to the father. And the question was, (0 2 Vern. 23. ted in the case, as stated in (k) Words to this effect Vernon. appear to have been omit- 130 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO whether the third daughter was entitled to a third with her sisters. And though it was con- tended that the trust of the whole term vested in the father, and was executed in him ; and that the daughters, though the heirs of his body, could not take by purchase in this case, yet the Master of the Rolls conceived that, inasmuch as there was a particular term of 99 years taken out of the 1700, and the father had a particular estate limited unto him during 99 years, the trust of the whole term during the 1700 years was not executed to the father. And his Honor said, that con- struction of trusts must be governed by inten- tion ; and this being the case of a marriage settlement, and the intention plain, it ought to be supported ; and his Honor conceived in this case, that though the word heirs was not properly a word of purchase, yet there being a particular estate for life during a par- ticular term limited to the father, that the limitation to the heirs of his body, afterwards on that marriage, would carry it to all the children equally ; and he was the more of that opinion, because it was declared in the deed, that after the death of the father, the trustees should execute estates to the person and persons respectively that should be inter- ested, according to their respective shares SPRINGING USES,&c. therein ; which showed that the children should all take their several shares. II. It seems formerly to have been held in some cases, that a trust of a term for a person not in esse was void (/) ; but that point has been long since settled to the contrary, as ap- pears by the cases of Exel v. Wallace (m) 9 and Hodgson v. Bussey (n) ; and it is certain that any trust, whether to a person in esse or not is good, if confined to take effect within the limits before expressed. III. Certain limitations of subsisting leases for lives, neither have the effect of regular limitations of estates of inheritance, nor yet operate as springing or future uses. Thus it is if a person, seised of an estate pur autre vie, limit itjtto one, and the heirs of his body, or, in geaezal, to one in such manner as would give him anjiestate tail in lands of inheritance, remainder over ; the limitation, in these in- stances, makes no estate tail properly so called ; for all estaSjs tail must be of inheritance, nor are these limitations springing or future uses : but it appears, that the limitation to the heirs of the body may carry the estate to them, and a remainder over may take effect, if the per- (l) Poll. 28.82. (n) Ante, 127. (m) Ante, 106. K 2 132 OF Of HER MATTERS RELATING TO son entitled by virtue of the limitation in tail make no disposition of the estate. But the person entitled under the limitation in tail, it seems, may, if he think fit, dispose of the whole, and bar as well the remainder over, as his own issue. Thus in the case of Norton v. Frecker (o), where N., holding lands to him and his heirs for three lives, upon his second marriage, settled the same to the use of himself for life, remainder as to part to the use of his first and every other son in tail male, remainder to his own right heirs ; and as to other part, to the use of such child or children of the mar- riage, and for such estates as he should by deed or will appoint, and for want of such ap- pointment to the first and every other son in tail male, remainder to his own right heirs. There were several children of the marriage, and afterwards upon the marriage of R., the eldest son, N., by deed which was also exe- cuted by R., settled the lands in trust for him- self for life, remainder to R. for life, and if he should die without issue male of his body, remainder over. Upon a claim after the decease of R. with- out issue, by a son of a younger son of N's. (o) 1 Atk, 524, SPRINGING USES, &c. second marriage, Lord Hardwicke was of opi- nion, that by virtue of the remainder limited to the first and other sons in the first settle- ment, the plaintiff would be entitled, if no- thing had been done subsequent to bar his right. He said that in the case of Wasteneys and Chappie, in. the House of Lords in 1712(p), it was determined, that in respect to estates thus granted in fee determinable on lives, a person may take by way of remainder as a special occupant > but that as such an estate tail is not within the statute de donis, nor bar- rable properly by a recovery as an estate tail, any limitations depending thereon are entirely in the power of the first taker in tail, and may be destroyed by any conveyance or even ar- ticles in equity, and that it was so determined in the case of the Duke of Grafton v. Lord Euston in 1722 (q), in which his Lordship was counsel himself. That the latter settlement, in the principal case, amounted to a good disposition by R., of all the interest claimable by him, or any other in remainder after him; clearly so with regard to the first part of the lands, tenant for life and remainder man in tail of an interest vested having joined in the (p) 1 Bro. Parl. Ca. 457. note. (q) 3 P. W. 266 in the K 3 134 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO conveyance, and limited the estate to other uses ; and as to other parts of the lands, though no remainder was vested in R., yet the father and son both joining amounted to a good disposition of it. And in the case of Forster v. Forster (r), C., the father of J. and F., upon the marriage of his eldest son J., settled a freehold church lease, held for three lives, in trust to permit J. to enjoy it for his life, and then his wife to enjoy it for her life, and, subject to a charge for younger children's portions, in trust for the heirs males of the body of J., and in de- fault of such issue, in trust for the heirs males of the body of the said C., and in default of such issue to the right heirs of C. The wife of J., and the only son of J. by his wife being dead, and there being daughters of the mar- riage, J. made a settlement of the church lease, and levied a fine sur concessit, and died without issue male. Upon the death of J. without issue male, F. claimed title to the leasehold premises, insisting that by this set- tlement his eldest brother was only tenant for life, and that the limitations to the heirs males of his body were words of purchase, and created a contingent remainder to his heirs (r) 2 Atk. 259. SPRINGING USES, &c. 135 males ; and that the limitation to the heirs males of the body of his father C., was a con- tingent remainder, to take effect in the person who should be the heir male of the body of the father, at the time of the death of J,, and that J. could not be the heir male of the body of his deceased father, within the meaning and operation of the deed, because a life estate was expressly limited to him, and in the case of a descendible freehold it vests in the heir, not as heir, but as special occupant ; and that J. could never take as occupant under the description of heir male, because the oc- cupancy could not arise till after his own death ; and therefore that the heir male, who was to take the contingent remainder, must be F., viz. the heir male of C. at the death of J., the tenant for life ; and that if J. was but tenant for life, his settlement and fine sur concessit could not bar the contingent remain- der, which ought to take place in F. But on the other side it was insisted, that the limitation to the heirs of the body of the father was not a contingent remainder, but operated as words of limitation, and must mean the heirs male at the death of C. ; that J. was the heir male, and that his wife and son being dead, his life estate and the limit- ation to him as heir male, were united ; and K 4 136 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO in the case of an inheritance he would be tenant in tail in possession ; and in case of a descendible freehold, he had. the whole in- terest in him, and might dispose of it as he pleased. And Lord Hardwicke was of this opinion, and said, that as tenant for life and the person in remainder, in nature of a tenant in tail, of a freehold lease, could certainly join and bar the settlement, so the same person who had both these interests in himself, as J. certainly had, might also bar the intail of the freehold lease. And though it seemed absurd, that the person who had an express estate for his life should also be the occupant, which occupancy in strictness did not arise till the death of the tenant for life, yet in reality the limitation, which in the case of an estate of inheritance would create an estate tail, did in the case of a freehold, give the party the whole interest, so as to empower him to dispose of it ; and his Lordship put this case ; suppose a second son tenant for life of such a freehold lease, remainder to the heirs of the body of the father, the tenant for life, and the eldest bro- ther, the heir of the father, might certainly bar the intail ; and therefore where the same right is in one and the same person he could certainly do it. SPRINGING USES, &c. 137 It appears, therefore, that where a lease pur autre vie is limited to one in tail, he may by lease and release, or any other conveyance proper for passing estates of freehold, bar his own issue and all remainders over, and make a complete disposition of the whole. The following case, and Mr. Fearne's opi- nion, are inserted in Mr. Power's edition of the Essay (s). The first tenant in tail of a free- hold lease, which he took subject to a mort- gage, joined with the mortgagee afterwards in an assignment by lease and release to another person, who paid off the first mortgage, and the assignment was expressed to be made subject to the old equity of redemption, then subsisting under the first mortgage ; and a doubt arose whether this was such a disposi- tion as would bar the entail. And Mr. Fearne admitted, that a question might have been made, whether the tenant in tail's concurrence in such an assignment, barely to pay off the mortgage money, would have amounted to such a disposition as would bar the entail ; but he was clearly of opinion, that if the con- sideration, for securing of which the assign- ment was made, did not consist wholly of principal money, then due upon the old mortgage made by the testator, but included (s) V. 2. p. 322. 138 F OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO some arrears of interest, due upon the princi- pal money owing upon the old mortgage when the account was stated, the turning of this interest into^ principal, and thereby increasing the sum charged upon the lands, by making such lands a security for a greater sum after the assignment, than they stood subject to before, under the old mortgage, was in fact the creation of a new equity of redemption, and consequently amounted to a disposition of, or act of absolute ownership exercised over the whole estate which was the subject of the devise, and therefore effected a bar. And in Baker v. Bayley (/), where A. hav- ing settled an estate, which he held for three lives, to the use of himself in tail, remainder to D., surrendered the old lease, and took a new one to himself; D. brought a bill to have the benefit of the remainder preserved to him : the court held the remainder void, and dis- missed the bill, saying, that if it were good it might be barred by deed or surrender, or other conveyance without a common recovery. So it seems by Blake v. Blake (u), that a 'quasi tenant in tail, of the trust estate of a (0 2 Vern. 225. R. 289." Coop. 178. ()3P. W. 10. n. 1. 6 T. SPRINGING USES, &c. 139 lease for lives, may bar the limitations over, by the mere renewal of the lease, even with- out the concurrence of the trustees, and not- withstanding prior existing trusts. And, in that case, Lord Kenyan (x] appeared inclined to think, that a quasi tenant in tail of such an estate, might defeat the remainders by his will alone ; but that opinion was strongly controverted by Lord Redesdale, C. of I., in Campbell v. Sandys (y) ; his Lordship said, " I think the point ought to be very well consider- ed, before any person ventures to make a deci- sion according to that dictum. The whole law on the subject is founded on the principles, applied to the case of a fee simple conditional at common law ; that the party had a power of alienation, the effect of which would be to devest the estate, under which the person claiming as heir of the body, or by virtue of a limitation over, was to take. If that estate was devested, the right of the issue, and of the remainder-man in default of issue, was destroyed, because the estate on which it was to depend was also destroyed. I can find no decision that at all warrants Lord Kenyan s dictum ; I find that he only stated it as some- thing that Lord Northington threw out in (*) 6 T. II. 293. (y] 1 Sch. and Lef. 294. 140 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO Grey v. Mannock ; I have not found any note of that case. On the other hand, in Blake v. Blake, it was never considered that a will could have such operation ; for I find from my note of that case, that though the estate was devised, the argument did not turn on the will ; nobody conceiving that the estate would pass by it, if the quasi estate tail sub- sisted at the death of the testator. The whole argument turned on the fact of the surrender o of the lease, and the grant of a new lease to the quasi tenant in tail ; and this was held to bar, because the estate was altered. The quasi tenant in tail had gained the absolute interest at law, and there was no equity to constitute him a trustee for his own issue, or for the re- mainder-man. I was of counsel myself in that cause : Baron Eyre was senior Baron, and gave the judgment in the absence of the Chief Baron ; Mr. Madocks and Lord Eldon were also of counsel in the same cause ; and I am persuaded that no such idea was enter- tained, either by the court of ^Exchequer, or by any of the counsel concerned, as that the will would have operated to bar the plaintiff. Few persons were better acquainted with de- cided cases, and especially those decided in his own time, than Mr. Madocks; and if that point had ever been decided by Lord North- SPRINGING USES, &c. ington, we should probably have heard of it from him. On principle I think it impossi- ble that a will can have that effect. A will, so far as it is a disposition of property, is a designation of a special heir, against the right of the person to whom the property would otherwise come, by what may be called devo- lution of law; but that cannot, from the na- ture of the instrument, have the effect of depriving of a right, a person who does not claim by devolution of law, but by virtue of a preceding gift or instrument. That must have been the ground on which it was esta- blished, that the will of a joint tenant cannot sever the jointure. It is an instrument by which the maker is enabled only to bar his heir at law or representative, but which can- not be allowed to alter the rights of third persons." And in Blake v. Blake before cited, the Master of the Rolls acquiesced in the opinion of Lord Redesdale upon this point (z). In Dillon v. Dillon (a), a quasi tenant in tail of a share in leaseholds for lives, died un- married, and without issue, having by will disposed of her share ; Lord Manners, C. of I., said, by her will she could not dispose of it, (z) Coop. 185. (a) 1 Ball and Beat 95. 142 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO for a will can only pass what a party has, and by her death without issue the estate was spent, and there was no interest for the will to operate upon. But an estate pur autre vie may be limited to one for life, so as to confine his interest and power of disposition to his own life estate only. Thus in the case of Williams v. Jekyl (b), where A., having a freehold estate for three lives to her, her executors, administrators, and assigns, assigned it, and all her right, title, and interest in and to the same, to a trustee to the use of her son S., for and during the term of his natural life, and from and after his decease to the use of his issue law- fully begotten, and for want of such issue to the use of A., her executors and administra- tors, during the residue of the term. Lord HardwicJce held, that S. took an interest for his life, and the whole residue of the lease vested absolutely in the issue, for he construed the words, for want of such issue male, to mean not leaving issue ; and that the effect of the limitation was, to the son for life, and if he had any children, that they should have it abso- (b) 2 Ves. 681. SPRINGING USES, &c. 143 lutely, and if he should have no child, then to A., her executors and administrators. And it is the same thing, if the first limi- tation be for twenty lives all spending at the same time, since it amounts to no more than the life of the survivor of them. V. It is observed in the essay, that wher- ever one limitation of a devise is taken to be executory, all subsequent limitations must likewise be so taken. This rule is obviously applicable to the li- mitations of which we are treating; and it seems unnecessary to do more than refer to the explanation, given by Mr. Fearne and Mr. Butler, of the reasons upon which it is grounded. VI. & VII. The same observation may be made, with regard to the two next propositions in the essay, viz. 1, that notwithstanding the rule, that if one limitation be executory, every subsequent one must be so likewise, yet a preceding executory limitation may be un- certain and contingent, when a subsequent limitation, though it be to take effect in fu- ture, may not be uncertain or conditional, (otherwise than in respect of the possibility of its expiration before the former vests or fails) but may be so limited as to take effect, either in default of the preceding limitation 144 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO taking effect at all, or by way of remainder after it, if that should take effect. And 2, that when a devise is made upon a condition annexed to a preceding estate, that is, when it is made after a preceding executory or con- tingent limitation, or is limited to take effect on a condition annexed to any preceding es- tate ; if that preceding limitation or contin- gent estate never should arise or take effect, the remainder over will nevertheless take place, the first estate being considered only as a preceding limitation, and not as a pre- ceding condition, to give effect to the subse- quent limitation. The decision in the above mentioned case of Davies v. Speed (c), appears to be irreconcil- able with the doctrine in these propositions; and the propriety of that decision seems to be questionable. In that case, the limitation to the right heirs of the husband, in its creation appears to have been capable of taking effect, either as a remainder or a substituted springing use ; during the life of the husband it was uncertain in which way it would operate ; but that must of necessitv have been determined ii at his death ; then, if he had left any person (c) Ante, p. 66. SPRINGING USES, &c. 145 answering the description of heir of the bodies of himself and his wife, such person would have taken an estate tail under the springing use to him, with a vested remainder to the right heirs of the husband, which would have been liable to those modes of destruc- tion to which other remainders of the same kind are subject ; as the husband did not leave any person answering that description, there seems to have been no objection to the limitation to the right heirs of the husband immediately taking effect as a substituted springing use. (d) The question, as to the validity of a limit- ation or trust, to take effect on the failure of a previous limitation which was void for its remoteness, was discussed by Mr. Feame, in an opinion contained in his post- humous works. (e)\ On a conveyance to the use of A. for life, and after his decease to the use of trustees and their heirs, in trust to apply the rents in manner therein men- tioned, until some son of D. should attain the age of 25 years, and to convey the estate to (d) This construction Doug. Rep. 487. 4th ed. seems to be conformable to FearneSOS.; and see Saund. the judgment in Doe d. on Uses and Trusts 1. 133. Fonnereau v. Fonnereau, (e] p. 283. L 146 O p OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO the use of the first son attaining that age, and the heirs male of his body, and for default of such issue to the uses therein mentioned, Mr. Feame was of opinion, that the trust for the first son of D. attaining the age of 25 years, he having then no son born, exceeded the limits allowed for executory limitations or trusts ; and he at first inclined to think, that, as the estate intended for the first son did not extend to the whole fee simple, the subsequent limitations were not dependent on the con- tingency of the first son's attaining the age of 25 years, but took immediate effect in interest out of the legal estate in the trustees, subject to the preceding charges, and to the contin- gent estate to the first son of D. attaining the c? O age of 25 years ; and that the subsequent li- mitations might be supported on this ground ; but on reconsidering the case (,/), he found it difficult to retain that opinion ; and thought it might be solidly contended, that none of the subsequent limitations could be construed to vest, before the time limited for the preceding limitations, to the eldest son of D. ; the con- sequence of which was, that if the former failed, as too remote, the latter did so like- wise. (/) P- 291. SPRINGING USES, &c. 147 The point in question has, in cases on wills, been determined agreeably to the last opi- nion, (g) VIII. Whatever number of limitations there may be, after the first executory limitation of the whole interest, any one of them, which is so limited, that it must take effect (if at all) within 21 years after the period of a life then in being, may be good in event, if no one of the preceding executory limitations, which would carry the whole interest, and is abso- lute and indefeasible, happens to vest. But, when once any preceding absolute and inde- feasible executory limitation, which carries the whole interest, happens to take place, that instant all the subsequent limitations become void, and the whole interest is then become vested. The above cited cases of Higgins v. Dow- ler (h), Massenburgh v. Ash (i), the Duke of Newcastle v. the Countess of Lincoln (k], and Heywood v. Maunder (/), are authorities on this point, with regard to personal estate : and the application of the principles, on which the doctrine is founded, to limitations of real (g) Essay on Executory (z) Ante, p. 75. Devises 508. n. (1). () Ante, p. 90. (h) Ante, p. 29. (/) Ante, p. 104. L 2 148 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO estate, as Well as personalty, is explained by Mr. Butler, (jn) IX. If the event upon which a future use is limited be of too remote a nature, the limitation is void in its creation, and no sub- sequent accident can make it good. Thus if A. covenant to stand seised to the use of B., a stranger, and the heirs of his body, . and in default of such issue to the use of C., a son of A. in tail, which appears to corre- spond with the case intended to be put by Mr. Fearne in this section (w), here the first li- mitation is void, and the subsequent one is an absolute future limitation to take effect after a dying without issue ; and, therefore, though no heirs of the body of B. should ever exist, that event will not make good the li- mitation to C., which was too remote in its creation. X. The distinctions arising under a will, as to the effect on a subsequent limitation, of the failure of a prior estate, by an event which happens between the time of execution, and the period of operation, viz. the death of the testator, do not apply to limitations by deed, where no such interval occurs. (m) Essay on Executory De- (n) See the Essay, 7th vises, p. 514. n. (1). ed. n. (n). SPRINGING USES, &c. 149 When a future use has once vested, a su"b>- sequent limitation, which thereby becomes a contingent remainder, cannot by any accident afterwards enure as a conditional limitation or springing use ; this is a direct consequence of the rule before discussed (o). XI, XII, XIII. It is sufficiently established by the authorities cited in the essay, that estates in land cannot be determined in part only, and continue as to the residue, or vest and then cease, and again re-vest ; but that a newly created rent may be granted, on a con- dition to cease during the nonage of any heir of the grantee ; and that if a rent be granted to a man and his heirs, a power of entry for recovery of any arrears of the rent may be limited to him and his heirs, which future use may be transferred with the rent ; and that as well offices and dignities, as a rent de novo, may be granted to commence in futuro, but the period for the commencement of the rent must not exceed the boundaries for the limit- ation of future uses. , XIV. It has frequently been alleged, that where a devisee is mentioned as a person in present existence, and the commencement of the estate devised is not expressly deferred (o) Ante, p. 2. L 3 150 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO to a future period, if the devisee be not a per- son capable at the death of the devisor, the executory devise will be void. If such a rule were established, the principle of it would apply to future uses; and accordingly in Lamb v. Archer (p) 9 where it was contended, that if one make a feoffment to the right heirs of B., this is a good springing use, it seems this was denied by the whole court, because it is by way of present limitation ; and they held that it would be different where it is future, as to the right heirs of B. after his death, a distinction which plainly shows a feoffment to uses to have been under consideration (q) ; but it appears by Mr. Fearne's examination of the cases, that no such rule has been established by any deci- sion, and that it has no other foundation than the dicta of judges, propounded in the infancy of executory devises. XV. Where a future use of inheritance is limited in contingency, the freehold and in- heritance, in the mean time, if not otherwise disposed of, result to the grantor. Thus in the before-mentioned case of Woodliff v. Drury (r), the judges held, that until the marriage, A. was seised in fee. (p) 1 Salk. 225. (?) 2 Mer. 267. (r) Ante, p. 8. SPRINGING USES, &c. 151 And in the Earl of Ormondes case (s), where A., tenant in tail, suffered a recovery to the use of his last will, it was held, by all the judges, that the use resulted to A. and his heirs, until he should express his will and in- tention concerning the same. So, in Sir Edward Clerks case (t), where one made a feoffment to the use of such per- son and persons, and for such estate and es- tates as he should limit and appoint by his last will in writing ; one of the resolutions in the case was, that where a man makes a feoff- ment to the use of his last will, he has the use in the mean time. But where there is no contingency in the limitation of the future use, except as to the time of taking effect in possession, there seems to be ground for contending, that so much only of the use as is undisposed of results to the grantor. Indeed, Lord//ia/e,C.J., in Wealev. Lower (u) said, if a feoffment be made to the use of C. and his heirs after the death of A. and B., this is no remainder, but a future use, and the feoffee is seised in fee-simple, and not of a freehold descendible, determinable upon the deaths of A. and B. So if the limitation of a (s) Hob, 348. (t) 6 Co. Rep. 17. b. (u) Poll. 65. L 4 152 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO use be that after two years, or after the death of John Stiles, it shall be to the use of J. N. in fee ; the feoffor hath the fee simple re- maining in him until this future use come in esse. But these propositions appear to be in opposition to the doctrine in Co. Litt. 23 a., that when a man makes a feoffment in fee, without valuable consideration, to divers par- ticular uses, so much of the use as he dis- poseth not is in him as his ancient use in point of reverter. And in the case of Penhay v. Hurrett(x) 9 which was a conveyance by A. to the use of trustees for 70 years, if A. should so long live* remainder to trustees for 3000 years, and from and after the death of A., and the determination of the term of 3000 years to B,, his son, for life, with divers remainders over, it is said by Mr. Fearne (y), that, after solemn argument and a case stated to the judges, it was decreed that an estate for life resulted to A., and this appears to be con- sistent with the decree, as stated in the note in Mr. Raithby's edition of Vernorfs reports. So in Pybus v. Mifford (z) 9 where A. seised in fee, covenanted to stand seised to the use (#) 2 Vern. 370. (y) p. 26. (z) 1 Ventr. 372. SPRINGING USES, &o? 153 of his heirs male, begotten or to be begotten on the body of his second wife ; upon the above-mentioned doctrine of Lord Coke, it was held by Hale C. J., and two other judges, that A. took an estate for his own life by im- plication, the use during his life being undis- posed of. And it is said by Lord Bacon (a), " If I bargain and sell my land after seven years, the inheritance of the use only passeth, and there remains an estate for years by a kind of subtraction of the inheritance." Mr. Fearne. it is true, states the rule to be, that wherever there is an executory devise of the real estate, and the freehold is not in the mean time disposed of, the freehold and in- heritance descend to the testator's heir-at- law; but the authorities cited by him will not, on examination, be found to establish so un- qualified a rule ; and although his statement of some of the cases may lead to a different conclusion, there seems to be reason to appre- hend, that the observation, with regard to the inheritance, was intended to be applied to executory devises in contingency only ; for in a former part of the essay (&), after an examin- ation of the cases which have just been cited, (a) Bacon's Reading on the Statute of Uses, 63. (f>) p. 48. 154 OF OTHER MATTERS RELATING TO / and Wills and others v.Palmer (c), and other cases on the same point, he infers from the cases, that when the use is not limited away during the whole life of the grantor, and there is a use limited which cannot commence till after his decease, whether that use be limited in the first instance, or be preceded by limitations for terms of years, or by uses of the freehold or inheritance that may determine in the grantor's life-time, the use results to the grantor for life, immediately in the first case, and in remainder expectant on the preceding uses in the other, where there is no express use limited to the grantor himself, inconsist- ent with such an implication, (d) But he contends (e) 9 that the circumstance of a term being expressly limited to the grantor, as in the above-mentioned cases of Adams v. Savage, and Rawley v. Holland, (f) is incon- sistent with such an implication. Mr. Butler, in a note to tke essay (g), expresses a doubt upon this point ; it is a rule of law, he ob- serves, which admits of no exception, that the freehold cannot be in abeyance ; it may there- (c) 5 Burr. 2615. (