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A58990 The second part of Reports of cases taken and adjudged in the court of Chancery, from the 20th year of King Charles II. to the first year of Their present Majesties, King William and Queen Mary Being special cases, and most of them decreed with the assistance of the judges, and all of them referring to the register books, wherein are setled several points of equity, law and practice. To which is added, the late great case between the Dutchess of Albemarle and the Earle of Bathe.; Reports of cases taken and adjudged in the court of Chancery, from the 20th year of King Charles II. to the first year of Their present Majesties, King William and Queen Mary. Part 2. England and Wales. Court of Chancery. 1694 (1694) Wing S2297; ESTC R217071 188,405 430

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Dower claimable by the Plaintiff and also devised the said Farms unto the Defendant Mary his Grandchild To have and to hold immediately after the death of the Plaintiff his Wife and by a subsequent Clause in the Will he devised all the Lands not therein before disposed of to the Defendant Thomas Kemp the Father for life Remainder to Thomas his Son for life with remainder over and also gave the Plaintiff his Coach Horses Plate and Jewels c. and one Third part of his clear Personal Estate And the Plaintiff conceived that she ought by the Will to have both the Rent-charge and the Farms for her life by the aforesaid devise 200 l. Rent-charge devised in lieu of Joynture and by the same Will an implicit Devise of the Lands to her Decreed she shall have only the 200 l. per Annum viz. where the same are devised to the Defendant Mary To have and to hold after the Plaintiffs death so to have the same by the said implicit Devise without Extinguishment of the said Rent charge is the Plaintiffs suit This Court declared they saw no Cause to decree both the Rent charge of 200 l. per Annum and the Farms aforesaid to the Plaintiff but the Rent charge of 200 l. per Annum to the Plaintiff only Boucher contra Antram 23 Car. 2. fo 97. THe Bill is Will. That Alice Lowman the Plaintiff Katherines late Mother did in Decemb. 1669. by Will give and dispose unto the Plaintiff Katherine a Legacy of 160 l. and made the Plaintiff who married another of the Daughters Executor The Defendant insists That the Testatrix made her Will in these words viz. Item I give unto my Daughter Katherine Boucher the sum of 160 l. for her to have the use of it during her life and her Child or Children to have it after her decease but if she happens to dye leaving no Child surviving her I Will that the said 160 l. shall be to and for the sole benefit and use of my Daughter Elizabeth Antram and her Children which Elizabeth is the Defendants Wife and the Defendant is willing to pay the said 160 l. to the Plaintiffs or either of them he being secured against the title and claim of the surviving Child or Children of the Plaintiff Katherine and if she should die leaving no Child or Children behind her then against the Title of said Elizabeth and her Children This Court decreed the Defendant to pay unto the Plaintiff 160 l. with full Interest Personal Estate devised to one for life and after to her Children and if they have no Issue the Remainder over is a void Devise as to the Remainder but as to the Clause on the Will which directs That for want of Issue by the Plaintiff Katherine the said 160 l. after her decease shall be to and for the benefit and behoof of the Defendants Wife and her Children His Lordship declared it being a Personalty is in the nature of a Perpetuity and so a void devise and therefore the Defendant nor his Wife and Children ought to have any benefit thereby but be debarred from the same and that the said 160 l. ought to be absolutely vested in and come unto the Child or Children of the Plaintiff Katherine and decreed the same accordingly Chambers contra Greenhill 24 Car. 2. fo 288. A Bill of Review brought by the Plaintiff Bill of Review because the Plaintiff can now prove a Tender and Refusal which he could not prove before dismist to Reverse the Decree in this Cause the Plaintiff would now Examine to a matter of Tender and Refusal which he could not prove before the Hearing but since the Decree signed and inrolled he can prove it The Court ordered Presidents to be searched which being produced by the Plaintiff his Lordship declared the said Presidents seemed of no weight to the Plaintiffs purpose and dismissed the Bill of Review Croster contra Wister 24 Car. 2. fo 688. THe Defendant insists Bill of Reviver The Plaintiff ought not to have brought a Bill of Reviver in this Case but to have taken out a Subpoena in the nature of a Scire facias to revive the Decree the same being signed and inrolled in the life time of the Plaintiffs Testator therefore the Defendant demurs to the said Bill The Plaintiff insists It is at the Plaintiffs election to revive the said Decree inrolled and to have Execution thereof by Bill or Subpoena in the nature of a Scire fac ' And as this Case is the whole Proceedings could not be revived by Subpaena Revivor by Bill or by Scire fac ' when proper in regard several Proceedings have been relating to Costs since the Decree which proceedings can be only revived by Bill and therefore the most proper course was to revive all things by Bill This Court held the said Bill to be well brought and held the Demurrer insufficient Stoell contra Botelar 24 Car. 2. fo 390. THat a Writ of Supplicavit of the Peace Supplicavit of the Peace on Petition and not on Motion nor any Indorsement on the back thereof yet good issued against Sir Oliver Botelar upon a Petition and Articles exhibited by the said Stoell The Defendant insists The said Writ issuing on Petition and not on a Motion in Court nor any Indorsement made on the back of the Writ as by the form of the Statute is required and but three of the said Articles are sworn to by the Articulate so it is irregular This Court on reading Presidents notwithstanding the Objections aforesaid of Botelar was fully satisfied that the Supplicavit was well granted and warranted Monnins contra Dom ' Monnins 24 Car. 2. fo 85. 178. BILL is to have the Defendant to discover Demurrer to a Bill for discovery whether the Defendant be married or not good for that if she be married it would be a forfeiture of her Estate and the Bill dismist whether she be married since the death of Sir Edmond Monnins her late Husband The Defendant demurred for that in case she was married since the death of her said Husband the same amounts to a forfeiture of her Estate and Interest in several goods and things devised to her by the Will of her said Husband to be held and enjoyed by her during such time as she should continue her Widowhood and so ought not to discover as aforesaid This Court held the Demurrer good unless the Plaintiff produced Presidents which the Plaintiff could not so the Bill was dismissed with Costs Warren contra Johnson 24 Car. 2. fo 543. THat Mary Warren Mony in Trust for the Children of I. S. it shall be for the benefit only of the Children that he then had and not born afterward the Plaintiffs Grandmother put 60 l. into the Defendants hands in trust for the benefit of the Children of Mark Warren her Son who at that time had but three Children whereof the Plaintiff was one but now hath six
dying of Thomas without Issue whereby the Earldom shall descend this shall go over to Charles that cannot be for it hath no Freehold to support it and so it s a Term in gross further there cannot by the Rules of Law or Equity be a Remainder for years of a Term limited after an Estate Tail neither directly nor upon Contingency as in Burges's Case but the Law will allow a remainder directly upon an Estate for life so likewise upon a Contingency if that were to happen during the Continuance of the particular Estate But this case is a step further and not to be allowed they relied chiefly upon Child and Bayles Case which was put thus by Chief Baron Mountague a Devise by A. of a Term to William his Eldest Son and his Assigns and if he die without Issue then to Thomas his youngest Son It was Judged in the Exchequer Chamber to be a void remainder because thereby a perpetuity would ensue though it was argued in that case that it was given upon a Contingency to the younger Son which would soon be Determined and end in a short time Chief Baron Mountague put this for Law a Term may be limited to one and the Heirs Males of his Body upon a Contingency to happen first with Limitation over if that Contingency do not happen it is a good Limitation as if a Term be limited to the Wife for Life and then to the Eldest Son if he over-live his Mother and the Heirs Males of his Body the remainder over to a younger Son if the Eldest Son dye in the life of the Mother the Limitation to the second Son may be good but if there be an Instant Estate Tail created of a Term tho there be a Contingency as to the expectation of him in remainder yet this is such a Total Disposition of a Term as after which no Limitation of a Term can be and so the Judges were of Opinion that the Plaintiff had no Right to the Term but the decree ought to be for the Defendant The Lord Chancellor Nottingham differed from the Judges and Decreed for the Plaintiff He put some steps or Preliminaries which he agreed with them and which were clear 1. That the Term in question though it were attendant on the Inheritance at first yet upon the hapning of the Contingency it s become a Term in gross 2. That the Trust of a Term in gross can be limited no otherwise in Equity than the Estate of a Term in gross can be limited in Law 3. The legal Estate of a Term for years whether it be a long or a short Term cannot be limited to any Man in Tail with the remainder over to another after his death without Issue this is a direct perpetuity 4. If a Term be limited to a Man and his Issue and if that Issue die without Issue the remainder over the Issue of that Issue takes no Estate and yet because the remainder over cannot take place till the Issue of that Issue fail that remainder is void too Reeves Case 5. If a Term be limited to a Man for his life and after to his First Second and Third Son in Tail Successively and for default of such Issue the remainder over though the Contingency never happen yet the remainder is void though there were never a Son born to him that looks like a perpetuity Sir William Buckhursts Case 6. One Case more and that is Burgesss Case A Term is limited to one for life with Contingent remainders to his Sons in Tail with remainder over to his Daughter though he had no Son yet because it was foreign and distant to expect a remainder after the death of a Son to be born without Issue that having a prospect of a perpetuity was adjudged void 7. If a Term be Devised or Trust of a Term limited to one for life with twenty remainders for life Successively and all the Persons in Esse at the time of such limitation these are all good remainders 8. A Term is Devised to one for 18. years after to C. his Eldest Son for life and then to the Eldest Issue Male of C. for life though C. had not any Issue Male at the time of the Devise or death of the Devisor but before the death of C. it s good being a Contingency that would speedily be worn out Cotton and Heaths Case for there may be a Possibility upon a Possibility and a Contingency upon a Contingency and in truth every Executory devise is so and therefore the contrary Rule given by Lord Popham in the Rector of Chedingtons Case is not Reason These things were agreed by all But the Point is The Trust of a term for 200 years is limited to Henry in Tail provided if Thomas die without Issue in the life of Henry so that the Earldom shall descend upon Henry then to go to Charles in Tail and whether this be a Limitation to Charles in Tail is the Question My Lord Chancellor conceived it a good Limitation as a springing Trust to arise upon a Contingency and which is not of a remote or long Consideration As for the Legal Reasons of this Opinion they were these 1. Many Men have no Estates but what consist in Leases for years Now it would be absurd to say That he who has no other Estate than what consists in Leases for years should be uncapable to provide for the Contingencies of his own Family though they are directly in his immediate prospect he shall not make provisions for Wife and Children upon Marriage 2. It was the Opinion of the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton That had it been thus Penned it had been good If Thomas die without Issue Male living Henry so that the Earldom descend upon Henry then the 200 years limited to him and his Issue shall cease but then a new Term of 200 years shall arise and be limited to the same Trustees for the benefit of Charles in Tail Now what difference is there why a man may not raise a new springing Trust upon the same Term as well as a new springing Term upon the same Trust It is true in 6 Ed. 6. in the time of Lord Chancellor Rich all the Judges delivered their Opinion If a Term of years be devised to one provided if Devisee die living I. S. then to go to I. S. is absolutely void But in 19 Eliz. Dier fo 277 328. it was held by the Judges to be a good Remainder Executory Remainder and that was the first time that an Executory Remainder of a Term was held to be good As for Child and Bayles Case the Case is truly Reported by Crook A Term of 70 years is devised to Dorothy for life then to William and his Assigns all the rest of the Term provided that if William die without Issue living at the time of his death then to Thomas which is in effect the present Case but there was more in it William had the whole Term to him and his
and then to have the whole Term. And if such second Son die before he comes of Age then the third Son to have and receive as aforesaid and if such Son die before he likewise comes of Age then the fourth Son to have and receive as aforesaid And in Case of no Issue Male between Sir Henry and Elizabeth living at the time of the death of the Survivor of them who shall live to their Age and that there shall be one or more Daughter or Daughters of the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth that then the said Daughter or Daughters their Executors and Administrators to have and take their several equal shares and proportions of the said Rents Issues and Profits for and during the said Terms Unless William Massingberd the new Plaintiff should within six Months after the death of the Survivor of them the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth pay such Daughter or Daughters or secure the several Sums following viz. if but one Daughter 1000 l. and if more then to every one of the rest 500 l. a piece and after the same paid or secured in case there shall be no such Son or Daughter living at the time of the death of the Survivor of the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth or which should live to attain his or her Age then the Residue of the said Terms to go and to be to Sir William Massingberd the now Plaintiff his Executor and Administrators Sir Henry Massingberd dies in Sept. 1680. leaving his Wife Elizabeth Ensient of a Son after born and named Henry who died within six Weeks after Sir Henry and Elizabeth had no other Issue which Elizabeth is now the Defendant Quere Who is eldest Son of Sir Henry Whether the said Devise to William Massingberd the now Plaintiff be good The Case upon both Deed and Will That Sir Henry Massingberd being possed of two several Terms Deed of Trust and Will one for 500 and the other for 99 years by the Indenture 2 Nov. 1679 made an Assignment thereof to Trustees upon Trust To permit and suffer him the said Sir Henry and his Assigns to receive the rent and profits during his life and after his death to permit the Defendant Elizabeth then Elizabeth Rayner his intended Wife to receive the Rents and profits during her life then upon Trust to assign the residue of the said Terms to such person or persons and for such Estates and Terms and in such manner as the said Sir Henry should by Will in writing nominate limit and appoint give devise or dispose thereof or any part thereof and in case the said Sir Henry should die Intestate or should not by his Will nominate limit appoint give devise or dispose of the same and every part thereof that then the Trustees should permit the eldest Son of the Body of the said Sir Henry on the Body of the said Elizabeth to receive the Rents Issues and profits of the premisses undisposed of by the Will of the said Sir Henry till he should attain his Age and should then assign to him his Executors and Administrators the residue of the said Terms and in case the eldest Son should die before Age then the Trustees should permit the second Son to receive the Rents and profits with the like Trust to Assign to him at his Age and so to the 3d and 4th Son in like manner And in case of no Issue male between them at the time of the death of the Survivor of them the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth which should live to attain their respective Ages and that there should be one or more Daughter or Daughters between them that then the Trustees should permit the said Daughter and Daughters her and their Executor and Administrators to take their several equal shares and proportions of the said Rents Issues and profits not devised or disposed of the Will of the said Sir Henry for and during the said Terms unless William Massingberd the now Plaintiff the eldest Son and Heir of the said Sir Henry by a former Venter should within six Months after the death of the Survivor of them the said Henry and Elizabeth pay unto such Daughter or Daughters or secure to the good liking of the Trustees the several Portions therein mentioned for the said Daughter or Daughters and after the said Portions paid or secured or in case there should be neither Son nor Daughter living at the time of the death of the Survivor of them the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth or that should live to their respective Age that then the Trustees should assign the residue of the said Terms to the said William Massingberd his Executors and Administrators Then there is a power of Revocation in the said Sir Henry by Deed or Will to revoke and make void this present Deed and the Estate and Estates Trust and Trusts of the premisses or any part thereof After this Sir Henry made his Will in writing and the Defendant Elizabeth his Lady Executrix Residuary Legatee and Residuary Legatee and devised in these words viz. I do hereby give unto her all my Estate which I have by Deed setled upon her according to the true meaning and intent of the said Settlement And also I give her all those other Lands hereby hereafter Setled upon her according to my true intent of my Settlement thereof for her life or on my Issue by her And I do also give her all my Estate concerning my interest in the Colledge Leases from John Rutter of Canterbury and also all my Goods and Chattels not hereby otherwise disposed of I will that all the Coppyholds any ways appertaining to Paston be taken to the use of my Ececutrix and also the Bishops Lease when need is that it be renewed also to her use and also the Lease for 500 years of Paston all at her charge according to the true intent of my Settlements upon her which I hope my Son William will endeavour as before the Almightly to make good unto her and hers and if either I have no Issue by her or that they or their Issue all die so that the succession be expired Then after my Wives decease I hereby give upon my Sons wilful neglect or refusal of his duty herein and not otherwise all my said Lands not setled on him by his Marriage to all the Daughters of my Daughters Sanderson and Stoughton to be divided among them Yet always provided that if my said Son neither neglect nor refuse any reasonable duty herin Then my Will is that after my Wives decease and that all her Issue by me be either dead or have their Portions paid them as is provided That then all my said Lands setled on her for life whether Copy hold Lease hold or Freehold with all the rest unsetled shall discend and be to him and his Heirs for ever Sir Henry Massingberd left no Issue living by that Wife but left his said Wife Ensient of a Son born alive and named Henry but
Cutler 30 Car. 2. fo 285. THe Testator deviseth Lands to be held by his Executors Will. Lands devised to be held by Executors till his Son attain 22 years Son dyes before 22 Executors decreed to hold the Lands till the said 22 years till the Testators Son attained 22 years of Age for maintenance of the Executrix and her Children that the said Testators Son dyed before 22 years of Age. This Court decreed the Executrix to hold the Lands against the next Heir until the said Sons Age of 22 years as if the said Son had lived to 22 years and the Plaintiffs debt on Bond to be paid by the next Heir or the reversion to lye liable and charged therewith Jolly contra Wills 30 Car. 2. fo 523. THat Roger Garland Elder Brother Will. Devise of Goods to J. S. for 11 years the remainder over J.S. decreed to deliver the Goods after the 11 years by Will did give unto John Wills the Defendants late Husband the use of all and singular the Goods Plate c. whatsoever then in his House for Term of 11 years from his death and after the 11 years expired he gave the same to his two Nephews Robert and Roger Garland and to his Niece Elizabeth the Plaintiff to be equally divided amongst them and after the 11 years the said Wills was to deliver them to the Plaintiff The Defendant Wills insists that by the bequest of the said Goods for the 11 years she and her Husband to whom she is Executrix are well intituled to the property of them and that the Devisour is void in Law and Equity This Court decreed the Defendants Will to deliver the goods to the Plaintiffs to be divided according to the Will the said 11 years being expired German contra Dom Colston 30 Car. 2. fo 741. THis Court decreed Legatees to refund to make up Assets that in case hereafter any Debt of Sir Joseph Colston should be discovered and recovered against his Executors the Legatees of Sir Joseph Colston are to refund in proportion what they have received for or towards their Legacies to make up Assets for satisfaction thereof Cotton contra Cotton 30 Car. 2. fo 71. 282. THat Nicholas Cotton being seized in Fee of Copyhold Devise and Free hold Lands in Middlesex and Surry of 500 l. per Annum in 1676. dyed without Issue wherebythe same descended to the Plaintiff as Couzen and Heir to the said Nicholas but the Defendant Katherine Cotton pretends that the said Nicholas Cotton made his Will in Writing 25 years since viz. in 1650. having first surrendred the said Copyhold Land to the use of his Will and bequeathed the same to the said Defendant Mrs. Katherine Cotton his Relict and her Heirs but if such Will were the said Nicholas purchased some Lands since which descended to the Plaintiff and that the said Nicholas a little before his death contracted with Sir Thomas Lee and his Trustees for certain Copyhold and other Lands in Sunbury and was to pay 1110 for the same and paid most of the Mony in his Life-time and had possession The Defendant Mrs. Cotton insists that Nicholas Cotton her late Husband deposited in the Hands of the said Sir Thomas Lee or his Trustees 600 l. designing to purchase the said Land in Sunbury but her said Husband Cotton was to have interest for the said Mony and he only rented the said Sunbury Lands and not purchased them because a good Title could not appear but insist that after the death of her Husband she purchased the premisses and paid 320 l more then the 600 l. paid into the said Sir Thomas Lee's Hands and that her Husband by the said Will devised to her all his Real and Personal Estate and made her Executrix This Cause being now heard by Mr. Articles for a purchase and 600 l. paid but interest was paid for it till the Conveyance executed contractor dyes before any conveyance the 600 l. was part of his personal Estate Justice Windham who on reading the Articles between the said Nicholas Cotton and the said Sir Thomas Lee whereby the said Nicholas Contracted with him for the purchase of his Free and Copyhold Lands in Sunbury in Fee simple for 920 l. is of Opinion that the said Nicholas dyed before any Conveyance made by the said Sir Thomas Lee of the said premisses to the said Nicholas and the said Sir Thomas paying Interest for the said 600 l. and the said Nicholas paying Rent for the said premises the said 600 l. at the death of the said Nicholas was part of his personal Estate and as to that 600 l. could not relieve the Plaintiff but difmist the Bill And as to the Morgage made to Perkins by the said Nicholas and the Defendant his Relict it appearing that part of the Morgaged Lands was before that Morgage made Equity of redemption to whom belongeth setled on the said Nicholas and Katherine in Joynture or otherwise so as the same came to her as Survivor this Court is of Opinion that the Equity of Redemption belongs to her as survivor and not to the Plaintiff But as for the other part of the Mortgaged premisses and other matters in the Plaintiffs Bill for which he seeks relief as Heir The question being whether any republication were of the said Nicholas his Will Republication of a Will and whether the same Lands do belong to the Plaintiff as Heir or to the Defendant Katherine as Devisee by force of the said Will. This Court referred that point to a Tryal at Law upon this Issue whether the said Nichelas Cotton did by his said Will devise the said Lands in Shepperton in the Defendants answer mentioned to be purchased by the said Nicholas Cotton of one Rowsell in Fee in 1659. to the said Katherine or not A Tryal at Law having been had upon the point aforesaid a Special Verdict was by the Lord Chief Justice North's direction sound Lands decreed to the Devisee and on a Solemn Argument before all the Judges of the Common Pleas they unanimously gave Judgment for the Defendant that the Lands in question did belong to the Defendant Katherine as Devisee by the said Will. This Court confirmed the Judges Opinion Civil contra Rich 30 Car. 2. fo 338. THat Sir Edwin Rich made his Will whereby he after some Legacies gives and Bequeaths all the residue of his Estate both real and personal to Sir Charles Rich his Heirs and Assigns for ever and maks him Executor of his Will and in his Will says he left his Estate as aforesaid in Trust with him wherewith to reward his Children and Grand-children according to their demerit This Court declared A general Trust in a Will for Children and not a fixed Trust to create a certainty of right That as to Sir Edwins Estate taking the words of the Will of the said Sir Edwin as they were they could amount to no more than a general Trust in Sir