Attorneys, estate planners, and others who seek to unravel the mysterious and
ongoing underpinnings of this Rule will find satisfactory answers in this
detailed study.
This extensive treatise elaborates on the legal doctrine governing the
creation of future interests in property, especially real property. Doctrines
derived from feudal law have all but disappeared through actions of the courts
and legislatures, and the law of future interests has been simplified and
reduced to the Rule Against Perpetuities. Nevertheless, it is one of the most
complicated parts of estate planning, as it can limit the amount of time that
property can be controlled after death by a person's instructions in a will.
The Rule against Perpetuities is aimed at the control of future interests in property, especially real property. The author asserts that it would be better to call it the Rule against Remoteness. Even today, it is one of the most complicated parts of estate planning, as it can limit the amount of time that property can be controlled after death by a person's instructions in a will. This extensive treatise deals with the entirety of the subject, including its history as a doctrine which derived from feudal law, its relations to other parts of the law, and the general principles as they evolved. Attorneys, estate planners, and others who seek to unravel the mysterious and ongoing underpinnings of this Rule will find satisfactory answers in this extensive work.
CHAPTER I |
|
section |
Introduction |
1-4 |
CHAPTER II |
Future Interests |
5-98 |
I. Real Estate |
6-70 |
A. Lands of Freehold
Tenure |
6-69 |
|
1. Common Law |
6-17.1 |
|
Remainders and Reversions |
8-11 |
Rights of Entry |
12 |
Possibilities of Reverter |
13, 14 |
Curtesy and Dower |
15 |
Interests in Land of Others |
16, 17 |
Escheat |
17.1 |
2. Statute De Donis |
18,19 |
3. Statute Quia Emptores |
20-51.1 |
Tenure and the Statute Quia
Emptores in the United States |
22-28 |
|
Remainders and Reversions |
29.1 |
Rights of Entry |
30 |
Possibilities of Reverter |
31-42 |
Curtesy and Dower |
42.1 |
Rights in Land of Others |
43 |
Escheat and Dissolution of Corporations |
44-51.1 |
4. Statutes of Uses and wills |
52-66 |
|
(1) Bargain and Sale of Freehold in futuro |
56, 57 |
(2) Contingent Use after Estate for Years |
58-60 |
(3) Bargain and Sale to Person not in esse |
61-65 |
5. Later Legislation |
67-68.1 |
6. Equitable Estates |
69 |
B. Lands of Copyhold
Tenure |
70 |
II. Personal Property |
71-97 |
|
A. Chattels Real |
71-76 |
B. Chattels Personal |
77-97 |
|
English Law |
77-87.1 |
American Law |
88-97 |
Wills |
88-90.1 |
Deeds |
91-97 |
III. Summary |
98 |
CHAPTER III |
Vested and Contingent Interests |
99-118 |
I. Real Estate |
100-116 |
|
Remainders |
100-112.1 |
Reversions |
113-113.3 |
Other Future Interests |
114 |
Escheat |
115 |
Curtesy and Dower |
115.1 |
Equitable Interests |
116 |
II. Personal Property |
117-117.3 |
|
Secondary meanings of the term
"vested" |
118 |
CHAPTER IV |
Postponement of Enjoyment |
119-121.8 |
CHAPTER V |
Origin and History of the Rule
against Perpetuities |
123-200.1 |
|
1. No Question of Remoteness in
Early Times -- Possibility on a Possibility |
123-134 |
2. Introduction of Conditional
Limitations |
135-139 |
3. Meaning of "Perpetuity" |
140-141.6 |
4. Conditional Limitations at first
held Destructible |
142-147 |
5. Executory Devises of Terms
Introduced |
148-152 |
6. First Suggestions at the Bar of
the Rule against Perpetuities |
153-158 |
7. Slow Judicial Recognition
of the Doctrine of Remoteness |
159-168 |
8. The Rule against Perpetuities
Established |
169, 170 |
9. Extension of the Rule to cover
the Minority of a Grantee or Devisee |
171-175 |
10. Extension of the Rule to cover
Terms in Gross |
176-185 |
11. Extensions of the Rule no to be
justified on Principle |
186-188 |
12. Any Number of Lives in esse allowed |
189, 190 |
13. The Connection of the Rule
against Perpetuities with the Invalidity of Remainders for Life to
Successive Generations |
191-199 |
14. The Rule against Perpetuities in
America |
200 |
CHAPTER VI |
The Rule against Perpetuities and
its Corollaries |
201-267 |
|
1. Nature of Interest |
202-204 |
2. Vested Interests not subject to
the Rule |
205-210 |
3. Nature of Contingency |
211-213 |
4. The Contingency must happen
within Limits |
214-215.1 |
5. Lives in Being |
216-219.2 |
6. Period of Gestation |
220-222 |
7. Term of Twenty-one Years |
223, 224 |
8. Limitations of an Estate for Life
or not exceeding Twenty-one Years |
225-229 |
9. Covenants to renew Leases |
230-230.3 |
10. Time runs from Testator's Death |
231 |
11. Enough if Interest begins within
the Required Limits |
232-246 |
12. Effect of Remote Interests on
Prior Limitations |
247-250 |
13. Effect of Remote Interests on
Subsequent Limitations |
251-258.1 |
14. Conflict of Laws |
259-267 |
CHAPTER VII |
Interests Subject to the Rule
against Perpetuities |
279-330.3 |
Present Rights in Lands
of Others not Subject |
279-282 |
|
I. Legal Interests |
283-321.2 |
A. Real Estate |
283-318 |
|
(1) Reversions and Vested Remainders |
283 |
(2) Contingent Remainders |
284-298.9 |
(3) Rights of Entry |
299-311.1 |
(4) Possibilities of Reverter |
312, 313 |
(5) Curtesy and Dower |
313.1 |
(6) Rights in Land of Others |
314-316 |
(7) Escheat |
316.1 |
(8) Conditional Limitations |
317 |
Copy Holds |
318 |
B. Personal Property |
319-321.2 |
II. Equitable Interests |
322-328 |
III. Contracts |
329-330.3 |
CHAPTER IX |
Separable Limitations |
331-368 |
CHAPTER X |
Limitations to Classes |
369-398.2 |
Independent Gifts |
389-395.1 |
CHAPTER XI |
Limitations to a Series |
399-410.5 |
CHAPTER XII |
Trusts |
411-422.1 |
CHAPTER XIII |
Modifying and Qualifying Clauses |
423-442 |
CHAPTER XIV |
Limitations after Estates Tail |
443-472 |
CHAPTER XV |
Powers |
473-561.7 |
|
1. If a Power can be exercised at a
Time beyond the Limits of the Rule against Perpetuities It Is Bad |
474.1-509.19 |
2. A Power which cannot be exercised
beyond the Limits of the Rule is not rendered bad by the fact that within
its Terms an Appointment could be made which would be too Remote |
510 |
3. The Remoteness of an Appointment
depends on its Distance from the Creation and not from the Exercise of the
Powers |
514-530.4 |
4. Consequences of an Appointment
being too Remote |
531-540.1 |
5. Election |
541-561.7 |
CHAPTER XVI |
Mortgages |
562-571.1 |
|
Rights at Law |
562, 563 |
Rights in Equity |
564-571.1 |
CHAPTER XVII |
Customary Rights |
572-588 |
CHAPTER XVIII |
Charitable Trusts |
589-628 |
CHAPTER XIX |
Construction |
629-670 |
|
Cy pres |
643-670 |
CHAPTER XX |
Accumulations |
671-679.1 |
APPENDIX |
A. Charities for Definite Persons |
680-685.1 |
B. The Thellusson Act |
686-727 |
C. Legislative Changes in the United
States |
728-752.1 |
D. Foreign Law |
753-773 |
|
I. Scotch Law |
753-773 |
II. Roman Law |
761, 762 |
III. French Law |
763, 764 |
IV. Law of Other Countries |
765 |
V. Law of Louisiana |
766-772 |
VI. Law of Texas |
773 |
E. Determinable Fees |
774-788 |
F. Future Interests in Personal
Property |
789-856 |
G. General and Particular Intent |
857-893 |
H. Gifts to Indefinite Persons for
Non-Charitable Purposes |
894-909.2 |
I. Conversion and the Rule against
Perpetuities |
910-917 |
J. Contingent Remainder of Executory
Limitation |
918-930 |
K. Whitby v. Mitchell |
931-947 |
L. General Testamentary Powers and
the Rule against Perpetuities |
948-969 |
M. Vested Remainders and the Rule
against Perpetuities |
970-974 |
N. Effect of the Statute quia
Emptores on Tenure |
175-89 |
|
|
Index |
Page 835 |