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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Goodright d. Burton Plaintiff in error v. Rigby and Others Defendants in error [1814] UKHL 2_Dow_250 (30 March 1814)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1814/2_Dow_250.html
Cite as: [1814] UKHL 2_Dow_250

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SCOTTISH_HoL_JURY_COURT

Page: 250

(1814) 2 Dow 250

REPORTS OF APPEAL CASES IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS.

During the Session, 1813–14.

53 Geo. III.

ENGLAND.

IN ERROR FROM THE COURT OF KING'S BENCH.

No. 12


Goodright d. Burton     Plaintiff in error

v.

Rigby and Others     Defendants in error

March 30, 1814.

RECOVERY.

By statute 14 Geo. 2, cap. 20, a recovery is good, if the deeds making the tenant to the præcipe appear to have been executed at any time within the term in which the

Page: 251

recovery is suffered, though such execution should appear to be subsequent, not only to the judgment and award of the writ of seisin, but also to the execution of that writ.

Settlement on marriage of Richard and Sarah Williams.

Bankruptcy of Richard Williams, and Act of Parliament.

By settlement on the marriage of Richard and Sarah Williams, an estate for life, in certain lands and premises, was limited to Richard Williams, remainder to Sarah Williams for life, and (after remainders to their first and other sons in tail male, and to their daughters as tenants in common, in tail general) remainder to the heirs of the body of Sarah Williams, remainder to Mary Burton in fee. Richard Williams afterwards became bankrupt, and an Act of Parliament passed for vesting his estates in trustees for the benefit of his creditors. By this act, an estate for life was limited to Sarah Williams, with such remainders over (stating them thus generally) as were limited by the settlement, saving the rights of Mary Burton, &c.

Recovery.

After the death of Richard Williams without issue, Sarah Williams suffered a recovery of the property in question, and sold the same to Rigby. In this recovery, the deed making the tenant to the præcipe was dated 20th November, 1778,—the judgment and award of the writ of seisin were dated 6th November, 1778; and the return was, that seisin had been accordingly delivered on the 10th November, 1778.

Ejectment.

On the death of Sarah Williams without issue, Michael Burton, claiming under Mary Burton the next in remainder, demised the premises to Goodright, the Plaintiff in error, who brought his

Page: 252

ejectment in C. P. against Defendant in error, Rigby. In T. T. 1792, judgment was given for Defendant in error, which was affirmed in K. B. in E. T. 1793; and thereupon Plaintiff in error brought his writ of error, returnable in D. P.

Error in D.P.

In the Courts below it was contended, that the estate for life, limited to S. Williams by the Act of Parliament, was a new estate, and, being Created by a distinct instrument, could not unite to the remainder to the heirs of her body limited by the settlement; and that therefore S. Williams was not tenant in tail when she suffered the recovery. To this it was answered, that the act did not divest S. Williams of any prior interest, but operated merely as a confirmation of her previous estate for life; but suppose it had been a new estate, yet, being less than an estate tail, it could not destroy the estate tail in remainder which she had at the time of passing the act: for even if she had by her own act divested herself of her estate for life, she would still have been capable of being vouched in a recovery, and of barring her estate tail and remainders over. ( Vide Driver v. Hussey, 1 H. B. 269.)

Act of 14 Geo. 2, cap. 20:—

“Every recovery already suffered, or hereafter to be suffered, shall be deemed good and valid, to all intents and purposes, notwithstanding the fine, or deed, or deeds, making the tenant to such writ, should be levied or executed after the time of the judgment given in such recovery, and the award of the writ of seisin, provided the same appear to be levied or executed before the end of the term, great session, session, or assizes, in which such recovery was suffered, and the persons joining in such recovery had a sufficient estate and power to suffer the same as aforesaid.”

But the point chiefly relied upon, and the only one insisted upon in the House of Lords, was, that the recovery was bad, inasmuch as the deed making the tenant to the præcipe was executed, not only after the judgment, and award of the writ of seisin, but after the time of the delivery of seisin by the Sheriff. By the common law, it was necessary that the tenant to the præcipe should be actually seized of the freehold at the time of the judgment.

Page: 253

The act 14 Geo. 2, cap. 20, rendered the recovery good, provided the deed making the tenant to the præcipe appeared to be executed within the term in which the recovery was suffered, notwithstanding the previous judgment and award of the writ of seisin. But this remedy did not extend to cases where the writ of seisin had been executed; for then the conveyance is completed, by which the Recoveror's title must stand or fall. The Recoveree, after seisin delivered, had no estate; and the legislature could never mean to say, that a good tenant to the præcipe could be made by one who had no estate at the time. Though recoveries were now considered as common assurances, the forms of a real action must be observed. ( Swan v. Broome, 3 Burr. 1596.)

To this the answer in Defendant's case was, that the words of the statute were positive, that every recovery should be valid, if the deed creating the tenant to the præcipe appeared to be dated within the term in which the recovery was suffered.

Fonblanque (for Plaintiff in error.)—Counsel on the other side not heard.

Lord Eldon (Chancellor.) The Sheriff returned in 15 days of St. Martin, that he had delivered seisin on the 10th, and the jury might have found the fact. But they had found merely that such was the return made, which was finding the evidence of the fact, rather than the fact itself. These were amendable according to the fact, even before the statute; and if the seisin had been on the 21st, the question would not have arisen. Taking it,

Page: 254

however, that it was delivered on the 10th, and that the deed making the tenant to the præcipe was executed on the 20th, the question was, Whether, if the deed was executed before the end of the term, they were not bound by the statute to consider the tenant to the præcipe as regularly made? He was of opinion that they were; and it ought to be observed, that, besides other distinguished authorities, such had been the opinion in judgment of Lord Kenyon, who was peculiarly well versed in the law of real property. ( Vide 2 H. B. 46.—5 T. R. 177.)

Judgment

Judgment affirmed.

Solicitors: Agent for Plaintiff in error, Flexney.

Agent for Defendants in error, Vines.

1814


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