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2. The force and effect of common re

coveries.

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2. The force and effect of common recoveries may appear, from what has been said, to be an absolute bar, not only of all estates-tail, but of remainders and reversions expectant on the determination of such estates. So that a tenant in tail may, by this method of assurance, convey the lands held in tail to the recoveror, his heirs and assigns, absolutely free and discharged of all conditions" and limitations in tail, and of all remainders and reversions. But, by statute 34 & 35 Hen. VIII., c. 20, no recovery had against tenant in tail, of the king's gift, whereof the remainder or reversion is in the king, shall bar [362] such estate-tail, or the remainder or reversion of the crown.' And by the statute 11 Hen. VII., c. 20, no woman, after her husband's death, shall suffer a recovery of lands settled on her by her husband, or settled on her husband and her by any of his ancestors.25 And by statute 14 Eliz., c. 8, no tenant for life, of any sort, can suffer a recovery, so as to bind them in remainder or reversion." For which reason, if there be tenant for life, with remainder in tail, and other remainders over, and the tenant for life is desirous to suffer a valid recovery; either he, or the tenant to the præcipe by him made, must vouch the remainder-man in tail, otherwise the recovery is void; but if he does vouch such remainder-man, and he appears and Vouches the common vouchee, it is then good; for, if a man be vouched and appears, and suffers the recovery to be had against the tenant to the præcipe, it is as effectual to bar the estate-tail as if he himself were the recoveree.k27

Recoveree must be

In all recoveries it is necessary that the recoveree, or tenant seized of the to the præcipe, as he is usually called, be actually seized of the freehold, else the recovery is void. For all actions, to re

freehold.

Salk., 571.

(23) Except, perhaps, a condition for re-entry on non-payment of a rent reserved by the donor of the estate-tail. (2 Salk., 570.)

1 Pigot, 28.

suffer a recovery, and declare the uses to himself in fee, the estate will descend to an heir on the part of the mother, even if he had the reversion in fee from his father, and vice versa; but if he took

(24) See Co. Litt., 372; 1 W. Bl., the estate-tail by purchase, the new fee 654; 6 Scott, 719.

(25) But the act did not prevent her levying a fine jointly with her husband, or after his death with the consent of the remainder-man, such consent appearing on record, or by deed enrolled. (Cro. Jac., 474; Cruise on Recov., 160.) See note (30), infra.

(26) But a recovery suffered by a tenant for life still amounts to a forfeiture, and, in that way, to a bar of any contingent remainders immediately expectant on the life estate. (7 Scott, 815.)

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will descend to the heirs general. (5 T. R., 104.) If, then, a person, who has inherited an estate-tail from his mother, wish to cut off the entail, and to make the estate descendible to his heirs on the part of the father, after the recovery he ought to make a common conveyance to trustees, and to have the estate reconveyed back by them, by which means he will take the estate by purchase, which will then descend to his heirs general. [CHRISTIAN.] But the law is now different; vide ante, p. 240, n. 43.

(28) See Burr., 60; 3 B. & Cr., 388. But the parties to the recovery and privies are estopped by the record, as in the case of a fine, from taking advantage of

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cover the seizin of lands, must be brought against the actual tenant of the freehold, else the suit will lose its effect; since the freehold can not be recovered of him who has it not. And though these recoveries are, in themselves, fabulous and fictitious, yet it is necessary that there be actores fabulæ properly qualified. But the nicety thought by some modern practitioners to be requisite in conveying the legal freehold, in order to make a good tenant to the præcipe, is removed by the provisions of the statute 14 Geo. II., c. 20, which enacts, with a retrospect and conformity to the ancient rule of law, that, though the legal freehold be vested in lessees, yet those who are entitled to the next freehold estate in remainder or reversion may make a good tenant to the præcipe; that, though the deed or fine which creates such tenant be subsequent to the judgment of recovery, yet, if it be in the same term, the recovery shall be valid in law; and that, though the recovery itself do not appear to be entered, or be not regularly entered, on record, [363] yet the deed to make a tenant to the præcipe, and declare the uses of the recovery, shall, after a possession of twenty years, be sufficient evidence, on behalf of a purchaser for valuable consideration, that such recovery was duly suffered. And this may suffice to give the student a general idea of common recoveries, the last species of assurances by matter of record.

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lead or de

or recover

Before I conclude this head, I must add a word concerning Deeds to deeds to lead, or to declare, the uses of fines, and of recoveries. ad or de For if they be levied or suffered without any good considera- uses of fines tion, and without any uses declared, they, like other convey-ies. ances, enure only to the use of him who levies or suffers them." And if a consideration appears, yet, as the most usual fine, sur cognizance de droit come ceo," &c., conveys an absolute estate, without any limitations, to the cognizee; and as common recoveries do the same to the recoveror, these assurances could not be made to answer the purpose of family settlements (wherein a variety of uses and designations is very often expedient), unless their force and effect were subjected to the direction of other more complicated deeds, wherein particular uses can be more particularly expressed. The fine or recovery itself, like a power once gained in mechanics, may be applied and directed to give efficacy to an infinite variety of movements in the vast and intricate machine of a voluminous family settlement. And if these deeds are made previous to the fine or recovery, they are called deeds to lead the uses; if subsequent, deeds to declare them. As, if A., tenant in tail, with re

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Stat. 4 & 5
Ann., c. 16.

version to himself in fee, would settle his estate on B. for life, remainder to C. in tail, remainder to D. in fee; this is what, by law, he has no power of doing effectually, while his own estate-tail is in being. He therefore usually, after making the settlement proposed, covenants to levy a fine (or, if there be any intermediate remainders, to suffer a recovery) to E., and directs that the same shall enure to the uses in such settlement mentioned. This is now a deed to lead the uses of the fine or recovery; and the fine when levied, or recovery when suffered, shall enure to the uses so specified, and no other. For though E., the cognizee or recoveror, hath a fee-simple vested [364] in himself by the fine or recovery; yet, by the operation of this deed, he becomes a mere instrument or conduit-pipe, seized only to the use of B., C., and D., in successive order; which use is executed immediately, by force of the Statute of Uses.k Or, if a fine or recovery be had without any previous settlement, and a deed be afterward made between the parties declaring the uses to which the same shall be applied, this will be equally good as if it had been expressly levied or suffered in consequence of a deed directing its operation to those particular uses. For, by statute 4 & 5 Ann., c. 16, indentures to declare the uses of fines and recoveries, made after the fines and recoveries had and suffered, shall be good and effectual in law, and the fine and recovery shall enure to such uses, and be esteemed to be only in trust, notwithstanding any doubts* that This doctrine may perhaps be more bar the estate-tail of John Barker, and clearly illustrated by example. In the the remainders expectant thereon, that deed or marriage settlement in the Ap- a recovery be suffered of the premises; pendix, No. II., § 2, we may suppose and it is thought proper (for, though the lands to have been originally settled usual, it is by no means necessary, see on Abraham and Cecilia Barker for life, Forrester, 167) that, in order to make remainder to John Barker in tail, with a good tenant to the freehold or tenant divers other remainders over, reversion to the præcipe, during the coverture, a to Cecilia Barker in fee; and now in- fine should be levied by Abraham, Cetended to be settled to the several uses cilia, and John Barker; and that the therein expressed, viz., to Abraham recovery itself be suffered against this and Cecilia Barker till the marriage of tenant to the præcipe, who shall vouch John Barker with Catharine Edwards, John Barker, and thereby bar his esand then to John Barker for life; re- tate-tail, and become tenant of the feemainder to trustees, to preserve the simple by virtue of such recovery; the contingent remainders; remainder to uses of which estate so acquired are to his wife Catharine for life, for her joint- be those expressed in this deed. Acure; remainder to other trustees, for a cordingly, the parties covenant to do term of five hundred years; remainder these several acts (see page viii.); and to the first and other sons of the mar- in consequence thereof, the fine and riage in tail; remainder to the daugh- recovery are had and suffered (No. IV. ters in tail; remainder to John Barker and No. V.), of which this conveyance in tail; remainder to Cecilia Barker in is a deed to lead the uses. fee. Now it is necessary, in order to

(29) These doubts might have been trust, and was satisfied by a subsequent safely left to the judges. The Statute declaration. (3 Ves., 707.) But it is of Frauds merely required that declara- very doubtful whether this section of tions of trusts or confidences should be the statute extended to uses. (1 P. manifested and proved by writing signed Wms., 112.) However this may be, it by the party enabled to declare such is clear that resulting uses may be re

had arisen on the Statute of Frauds, 29 Car. II., c. 3, to the contrary.30

butted by parol (Gilb., Eq. Rep., 16; efficacy was attributed to them by the Dougl., 25); and until the use of a fine old law; or that the operation of a fine or recovery is otherwise limited, it re- or a recovery, as a tortious or wrongful sults to the cognizor or recoveree. All alienation, or of a fine with proclamathat is required is, evidence of what was tions, as a bar by non-claim, under the the agreement at the time of making the old statutes, will not belong to the subassurance. If the uses were declared by stituted assurance." (1 Hayes's Introdeed precedent, that was binding, and duction to Conveyancing, p. 193; in could not be contradicted except by which valuable work an elaborate and another deed, also prior to the fine or instructive commentary on this importrecovery; but a deed subsequent to the ant statute, and a statement of the refine or recovery was mere evidence of semblances and differences between the the agreement, and might be rebutted new and old modes of assurances, will even by parol evidence of a contrary be found.)

agreement at the time. (Holt, 733.) The act (which, by-the-way, may be The statute of Anne has, at all events, set recommended to the student's attention up the uses by relation from the date of as a model of legislative draughtsmanthe fine or recovery, so as to give effect ship) commences in the modern fashion, to an intermediate devise of the lands, with a definition of some terms employed and to exclude the cognizor or recover- in it. The word estate is to include any or's wife from her dower; although even interest, charge, lien, or encumbrance, this has strangely been doubted. (See either at law or in equity, in, upon, or Park on Dower, 198.)

affecting lands, or money subject to be invested in the purchase of lands. A base fee is declared to mean exclusively the estate in fee-simple, into which an estate-tail is converted, when the issue in tail are barred; but subsequent remainder-men, &c., are not. Estate-tail, in addition to its usual meaning, is to include a base fee. Actual tenant in tail, one whose estate has not been barred, although it may have been divested or turned to a right. Tenant in tail is either an actual tenant in tail, or one who would have been such if the estate had not been converted into a base fee.

(30) The student will now be prepared to understand the provisions of the "Act for the Abolition of Fines and Recoveries, and for the Substitution of more simple Modes of Assurance," of which only a very brief summary can be attempted here: "In order to obtain a clear and correct understanding of that important portion of the act which relates to entailed estates, we should note, first, that, after the statute De Donis, tenants in tail were incompetent to aliene effectually as against the issue, remainder-man, and reversioner, until enabled by the common-law stratagem of a recovery, or, as against the issue only, until enabled by the statutory force of a fine, with proclamations; secondly, that the act in question abolishes both these devices, without repealing the statute De Donis; thirdly, that it expressly enables tenants in tail to aliene in fee; fourthly, that in the case of a tenancy in tail in remainder, expectant on a particular estate or estates of a given description, it institutes a functionary, styled protector of the settlement; fifthly, that it restrains the tenant in tail, there being a protect- By sect. 14, every actual tenant in tail, or of the settlement, from aliening as whether in possession, remainder, continagainst posterior takers, without the con- gency, or otherwise, shall have full powsent of the protector; and, sixthly, that er to dispose of, for an estate in fee-simit prescribes the observance of certain ple in possession, or for any less estate, formalities, as well in regard to the the lands entailed, as against all persons alienation of the tenant in tail as in re- claiming the lands entailed by force of gard to the consent of the protector. It any estate-tail which shall be vested in is hardly necessary to state, that the or might be claimed by, or which, but contracts as well as the ordinary convey- for some previous act, would have been ances of a tenant in tail, retain whatever vested in or might have been claimed

The act abolishes fines and recoveries from the end of the year 1833, and makes a special provision for the fulfillment of covenants and agreements to make such assurances previously entered into (s. 2 & 3). It then provides a remedy for defects and errors of various descriptions in fines and recoveries already levied and suffered (s. 4 to 13); and after providing for the custody of the records, and declaring warranties by tenants in tail to be void against the issue in tail and ulterior takers, proceeds to the substituted mode of assurance.

tate.

by, the person making the disposition ly to the object of the new disposition, at the time of his making the same; and if he is a purchaser for valuable considalso as against all persons (including the eration, without notice of the prior esking's most excellent majesty, his heirs and successors) whose estates are to take effect after the determination, or in defeasance of any such estate-tail; saving always the rights of all persons in respect of estates prior to the estate-tail in respect of which such disposition shall be made, and the rights of all other persons, except those against whom such disposition is by this act authorized to be made."

By sect. 19, after the 31st of Dec., 1833, "in every case in which an estate-tail in any lands shall have been barred and converted into a base fee (either before or on or after that day), the person who, if such estate-tail had not been barred, would have been actual tenant in tail of the same lands, shall have full power to dispose of such lands as against all persons (including the king's most excellent majesty, his heirs and successors) whose estates are to take effect after the determination or in defeasance of the base fee into which the estate-tail shall have been converted, so as to enlarge the base fee into a fee-simple absolute; saving always the rights of all persons in respect of estates prior to the estate-tail which shall have been converted into a base fee, and the rights of all other persons, except those against whom such disposition is by this act authorized to be made."

These enabling clauses appear to go beyond what could have been done under the old law; for formerly, if A., tenant in tail, with remainders over, had levied a fine to the use of B. in tail, with remainders over, thereby creating estates defeasible by the failure of issue under the original entail, a recovery, suffered by B., would have barred the estates created by A.'s fine, but would not have barred the remainders expectant on the failure of issue of A.; and generally a recovery, suffered by a tenant in tail, did not necessarily confer any greater or less defeasible estate than that which the donor of the entail had. His recov ery barred executory limitations annexed to his own estate, but not those annexed to the estate of his donor. (1 Prest. Conv., 2.) But under this act the tenant in tail's disposition is effectual against all persons whose estates are to take effect either after the determination, or in defeasance of the estate-tail.

Sect. 38 gives to the disposition of a tenant in tail under the act the effect of confirming any prior voidable estate created by him in favor of a purchaser for valuable consideration; but not adverse

Sect. 39 enacts, that if a base fee and the remainder or reversion in fee in the same lands shall, at any time before or after the passing of the act, be united in the same person, and at any time after the passing of the act there shall be no intermediate state between them, the base fee shall not merge, but be ipso facto enlarged into as large an estate as the tenant in tail (with the consent of the protector, if any) might have created under the act, if such remainder or reversion had been vested in any other person. The difference between enlargement and merger is, that when the base fee is enlarged, the enlarged estate is subject to any prior charges on the base fee, and not to any on the reversion; but if the base fee had merged, the charges on it would have failed. and those on the reversion would have come into force.

By sect. 21, a disposition under the act by way of mortgage, or for any other limited purpose, shall, to the extent of the estate created, be an absolute bar in equity as well as at law against all persons against whom such disposition may be made under the act, notwithstanding a contrary intention expressed in the deed. Provided that if the estate created be only pour autre vie, or for years absolute or determinable, or only an interest, charge, lien, or encumbrance, without any term or greater estate by way of security, then such disposition shall be a bar only so far as may be necessary to give full effect to such charge, &c., notwithstanding any expression of a contrary intention.

We now come to the restraining and qualifying clauses. No disposition under the act by a woman tenant in tail, ex provisione viri, within the 11 Hen. VII., c. 20, under a settlement made before August 28, 1833, is to be made without the same assent as is required by that statute to her fine and recovery (but, except as to such settlements, that statute is repealed); (s. 16, 17); and the power given by the act is not to extend to expectant heirs in tail, or to tenants in tail after possibility of issue extinct, or to tenants in tail who, by the 34 & 35 Hen. VIII., c. 20, An Act to embar feigned Recovery of Lands wherein the King is Reversioner," or by any other act, are restrained from barring their estates-tail. (Sects. 18, 20.)

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A tenant in tail could not have suffered a recovery if the legal freehold was outstanding in a third person as tenant

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