The Period of The Rule
The Period of The Rule
The Period of The Rule
68 Act. Mar. 2, 1821, 1 Terr. Laws 815, Part One, note 82 supra;
superseded by Rev. Stat. 1838, p. 258; superseded by Rev. Stat. 1846,
c. 62, §§3, 4; Comp. Laws (1857) §§2587, 2588; Comp. Laws (1871)
§§4070, 4071; Comp. Laws (1897) "§§8785, 8786; How Stat., §§5519,
5520; Comp. Laws (1915) §§11521, 11522; Comp. Laws
(1929) §§12923, 12924; Mich. Stat. Ann., §§26.3, 26.4; Comp. Laws
(1948) §§554.3, 554.4; Part One, note 84 supra.
69 Part Two, note 67 supra.
7 0PRoPERTY RESTATEMENT, §373. (1944); 2 Simes, LAW OF FUTURE
97 120 Mich. 274, 79 N.W. 182, 77 Am. St. Rep. 597 (1899). In
Cheever v. Washtenaw Circuit Judge, 45 Mich. 6, 7 N.W. 186 (1880),
a bequest to a daughter for life, remainder to her children and grand-
children, was treated as valid, it being construed to be to children
and grandchildren in being at the death of the daughter.
98 303 Mich. 137, 5 N.W. (2d) 695 (1942). Both land and personalty
were involved but, as the will contained a mandatory direction for
conversion of land into personalty, the common-law Rule Against
Perpetuities was alone applicable. Part Two, notes 59, 60 supra.
99 Harr. Ch. 259 (Mich. circa 1840). The limitation was of land, but,
as the testator died in 1825, its validity was governed by the common-
law Rule Against Perpetuities. Similarly, in Toms v. Williams, 41
Mich. 552, 2 N.W. 814 (1879) the vesting of property bequeathed by
a will was validly suspended until "the expiration of the minority of
the youngest of the said children of my deceased brother, Gen. Thomas
Williams." There were three such children, one of whom was of age
when the testatrix died.
THE PERIOD OF THE RULE 295
Estate 100 a bequest to descendants of the testatrix to be
ascertained when two granddaughters, who were named
in the will and alive when it took effect, reached the age
of thirty, was held good. The Rule also permits suspen-
sion of vesting for lives in being at the commencement
of the period plus part or parts of a life or lives not then
in being which cannot exceed twenty-one years. Thus
in Wilson v. Odell~ 101 a bequest to grandchildren of the
testator to be determined after the death of the survivor
of his children and on the majority of his youngest grand-
child was held valid under the Rule.
The Rule Against Perpetuities does not permit sus-
pension of vesting for lives in being plus part or parts of
a life or lives not in being which may exceed twenty-one
years. This is one of the commonest types of violation
of the Rule. In Michigan Trust Co. v. Baker~ u 2 testatrix
devised land to her husband until death or remarriage,
then to a trustee to sell the land and hold the proceeds
in trust to pay half the income to a son, Stuart, for life.
The will, as construed by the Court, gave the remainder
in half the corpus, after the death of Stuart, to those
daughters of Stuart who reached twenty-five and those
sons of Stuart who reached thirty. It was held that this
1oo 319 Mich. 189, 29 N.W. (2d) 108 (1947). The disposition was
in a residuary clause which included both land and personalty and
so was subject to the common-law Rule Against Perpetuities. Part
Two, note 53 supra. In Post v. Grand Rapids Trust Co., 255 Mich.
436, 238 N.W. 206 (1931), a bequest of personalty to issue of a daugh-
ter to be determined when the youngest issue of the daughter in being
at the death of the testatrix reached twenty-five was treated as valid.
101 58 Mich. 533, 25 N.W. 506 (1885).
102 226 Mich. 72, 196 N.W. 976 (1924). This was a devise of land,
but the will contained a mandatory direction to convert into money
upon the death or remarriage of the testatrix's husband. It was held
that this direction worked an equitable conversion to personalty,
effective upon the death of the husband, so that the common-law
Rule Against Perpetuities governed the validity of the subsequent
limitations. See Part Two, notes 59, 60 supra.
296 PERPETUITIES AND OTHER RESTRAINTS
disposition violated the Rule because Stuart might have
children who would not reach the stipulated ages within
twenty-one years after his death. In Gettins v. Grand
Rapids Trust Co.,103 property was bequeathed to a trus-
tee to pay the income to the testatrix's daughter Belle for
life and thereafter to her children, and to transfer a share
in the corpus to each child of Belle on reaching twenty-
five, with limitations over in the event of any child dying
under twenty-five. The limitations over on death under
twenty-five were held void because they might postpone
vesting until more than twenty-one years after Belle's
death. Gardner v. City National Bank & Trust Co./ 0 '
which has already been discussed, involved the same type
of violation of the Rule Against Perpetuities.
As the English authorities quoted by our Supreme
Court indicate/05 the period of the Rule Against Per-
petuities may include any period or periods of gestation
involved in the situation to which the limitation applies.
That is, a child en ventre sa mere who is subsequently
born alive is treated as a life in being under the Rule,
1oa 249 Mich. 238, 228 N.W. 703 (1930). The will contained a man-
datory direction to convert land into personalty. The same result
was reached on similar facts in Burke v. Central Trust Co., 258 Mich.
588, 242 N.W. 760 (1932). Because the trust there included both land
and personalty and there was no direction to convert, the Court based
its decision on the statute forbidding suspension of the absolute power
of alienation, saying that it was unnecessary to consider the application
of the common-law Rule Against Perpetuities.
104 267 Mich. 270, 255 N.W. 587 (1934), discussed above at Part Two,
note 88. This aspect of the Rule has been modified in England by
Stat. 15 Geo. V, c. 20, §163 (1925), which provides that any gift
contingent upon a beneficiary or class of beneficiaries attaining or not
attaining an age over twenty-one, and for that reason too remote,
is to take effect by substituting twenty-one for the age stated.
W5 St. Amour v. Rivard, 2. Mich. 294 at 297 (1852), quoting from
Long v. Blackall, 7 T.R. 102, 101 Eng. Rep. 875 at 877 (1797),
quoted in the text at Part Two, note 87 supra; Gardner v. City
National Bank & Trust Co., 267 Mich. 270 at 284, 255 N.W. 587
(1934), quoting from 22 Halsbury, LAws OF ENGLAND, §601 p. 302
(1912), quoted in the text at Part Two, note 89 supra.
THE PERIOD OF THE RULE 297
both for the purpose of receiving interests limited to it
and for that of serving as a measuring life in being as
to interests limited to others. In Chambers v. Shaw/06 a
testator devised his estate to his wife for life with a
provision that if a posthumous child should be born it
would take half the estate, to commence in possession
when it reached twenty-one, and that the wife would
take the other half if she lived until the child was
twenty-one, otherwise the child would take the whole.
The testator died in September, 1860, a son was born
in December, 1860, the son died in April, 1862, and the
wife died in September, 1862. The Court held that the
wife took the entire estate as sole heir of her son, saying
that the first interest to the posthumous son vested on
the testator's death. This case illustrates both the pur-
poses mentioned. The posthumous son was treated as
a life in being for the purpose of the vesting of the half
given him unconditionally and as a measuring life for
the purpose of the vesting of the other half. It is per-
missible under the Rule to suspend vesting for any num·
ber of periods of gestation actually involved in addition
to lives in being and twenty-one years. It is possible to
have as many as three such periods. 107 John Stiles might
1o6 52 Mich. 18, 17 N.W. 223 (1883). The will contained a manda-
tory direction to convert the land into personalty so the common-law
Rule Against Perpetuities applied. Rev. Stat. 1846, c. 62, §§30, 31;
Comp. Laws (1857) §§2614, 2615; Comp. Laws (1871) §§4097, 4098;
Comp Laws (1897) §§8812, 8813; How. Stat., §§5546, 5547; Comp.
Laws (1915) §§11548, 11549; Comp. Laws (1929) §§12950, 12951;
Mich. Stat. Ann., §§26.30, 26.31; Comp. Laws (1948) §§554.30, 554.31,
provide: "When a future estate shall be limited to heirs, or issue, or
children, posthumous children shall be entitled to take, in the same
manner as if born before the death of their parents.
"A future estate depending on the contingency of the death of any
person without heirs or issue, or children, shall be defeated by the
birth of a posthumous child of such person, capable of taking by
descent."
101 Gray, RuLE AGAINST PERPETUITIES, 3rd ed., §222 (1915); 2 Simes,
LAw oF FuTuRE INTEREsTs, §492 (1936); PROPERTY REsTATEMENT, §374,
Comment p. (1944).
298 PERPETUITIES AND OTHER RESTRAINTS
devise property to James Thorpe and his heirs "until
my youngest grandchild is of age and then to my young-
est descendant in being." If John has a posthumous
child which has a posthumous son who is the father
of a child en ventre sa mere when he comes of age, the
unborn child could take the executory interest limited
to the youngest descendant of John in being. Periods of
gestation are allowed under the Rule Against Perpe-
tuities only if gestation in fact exists; it is not permissible
to suspend vesting for lives in being plus twenty-one
years and nine months in gross. 108 If John Stiles devises
property to James Thorpe and his heirs "until twenty-
one years and nine months after the death of my young-
est child and then to my youngest descendant in being,"
the executory limitation is void although it must neces-
sarily vest within a period which might well be shorter
than that involved in the preceding illustration.
As the passage quoted by our Supreme Court from
Halsbury's Laws of England 109 indicates, the period of
the Rule Against Perpetuities is the life of a person or
the survivor of a group of persons in being and ascer-
tained for that purpose by the instrument creating the
future interest in question and twenty-one years, but if
no such person or persons are ascertained by the in-
strument, the period is twenty-one years. Whether the
term of years follpws lives in being or is itself the sole
measure of the period, it may be in terms of a mi-
nority or minorities, as was the case in Wilson• v.
1os Cadell v. Palmer, 1 Cl. & F. 372, 6 Eng. Rep. 956 (1833), cited
with approval in St. Amour v. Rivard, 2 Mich. 294 at 297 (1852).
See: Gardner v. City National Bank & Trust Co., 267 Mich. 270 at 284,
255 N.W. 587 (1934) and authorities cited in the preceding note.
1o9 Gardner v. City National Bank & Trust Co., 267 Mich. 270 at
284, 255 N.W. 587 (1934), quoting from 22 Halsbury, LAws OF ENG-
LAND, §601, p. 302 (1912), quoted in the text at Part Two, note 89
supra.
THE PERIOD OF THE RULE 299
110
Odell, or a gross period of twenty-one years or less
unrelated to minorities. 111 Toms v. Williams 112 was a
suit to construe the will of a testatrix who died in 1876
owning the reversion under a forty-year lease given in
1854 which required the lessor, at the expiration of the
term in 1894, to pay for the lessee's improvements (a
building costing some $50,000) or renew the lease for
another forty years. The will gave the entire estate, in-
cluding personalty, to trustees who were to accumulate
$5,000 per year of the income, use it to pay for the
lessee's improvements in 1894, and then to transfer the
corpus of the trust to three named persons "or the sur-
vivor of them, and to their heirs and assigns forever, as
tenants in common." The Court held that the provision
for accumulation for eighteen years did not exceed the
period of the common-law Rule Against Perpetuities,
which the Court said was "any number of lives in being
and twenty-one years, and of course for twenty-one years
as a distinct period, independent of lives." 113 In Mark-
ham v. Hufford, 114 testatrix bequeathed $500 to the pe-
titioner "to be paid to him at the expiration of two
years from the date of my demise: Provided that he shall
be deemed a reformed man, in the judgment of the
executors of this will," otherwise to the Women's Chris-
110 58 Mich. 533, 25 N.W. 506 (1885), Part Two, note 101 supra.
111 Cadell v. Palmer, 1 Cl. & F. 372, 6 Eng. Rep. 956 (1833), cited
with approval in St. Amour v. Rivard, 2 Mich. 294 at 297 (1852) and
Toms v. Williams, 41 Mich. 552 at 571, 2 N.W. 814 (1879); Gray,
RuLE AGAINST PERPETUITIES, 3rd ed., §223 (1915); 2 Simes, LAw OF
FUTURE INTERESTS, §493 (1936); PROPERTY RESTATEMENT, §374, Com.
ment m. (1944). .
112 41 Mich. 552, 2 N.W. 814 (1879). The surplus income above
$5,000 per annum was to be accumulated until the expiration of the
minority of the youngest of the three named persons and then paid
over to them or the survivor of them. One of them was of age when
the testatrix died.
m 41 Mich. 552 at 571.
n4 123 Mich. 505, 82 N.W. 222, 48 L.R.A. 580 (1900).
300 PERPETUITIES AND OTHER RESTRAINTS
tian Temperance Union. It was held that this was a
condition precedent which suspended vesting for only
two years in gross and so was valid. In re De Rancourt's
Estate 115 involved a bequest to a trustee to pay the
income to the testator's heirs for fifteen years and then
to transfer the corpus to the heirs of the testator deter-
mined according to the statute then in force. It was
treated as valid.
It will be recalled that if lives in being are to be used
as all or part of the measure of the period of the Rule
Against Perpetuities, they must be the lives of persons
ascertained for that purpose by the instrument creating
the future interest; courts will not select lives not desig-
nated by the instrument or connected with its limita-
tions. As to the twenty-one year period, the Rule is
not quite so strict. Thus if Andrew Baker devises prop-
erty to James Thorpe and his heirs "for the lives of
James and all of his descendants living at the time of
my death and for such period thereafter as the law per-
mits suspension of vesting and then to the youngest liv-
ing descendant of John Stiles" the words "such period
thereafter as the law permits" are construed to mean
twenty-one years, and the future interest of the young-
est descendant of John Stiles is, accordingly, valid. 116
11s 279 Mich. 518, 272 N.W. 891, 110 A.L.R. 1346 (1937). Both
land and personalty were involved. In Otis v. Arntz, 198 Mich. 196,
164 N.W. 498 (1917), land and personalty were devised to descendants
of the testator to be ascertained twenty-five years after his death. The
disposition was held void as violating the statute prohibiting suspen-
sion of the absolute power of alienation. Of course, it also violated
the common-law Rule Against Perpetuities.
us Pownall v. Graham, 33 Beav. 242, 55 Eng. Rep. 360 (1863);
Fitchie v. Brown, 211 U.S. 321 (1908); Gray, RuLE AGAINST PERPETUI·
TIES, 3rd ed., §§219, 219b (1915); 2 Simes, LAw OF FuTURE INTERESTS,
§495 (1936); PROPERTY REsTATEMENT, §370, Comment n. and Illustra-
tion 4 (1944). In West Texas Bank & Trust Co. v. Matlock, 212 S.W.
937 (Tex. Com. App. 1919), "a reasonable time" was construed to
mean twenty-one years.
THE PERIOD OF THE RULE 301
The computation of the permissible period under the
Rule Against Perpetuities may involve one, two, or all
of the three elements, lives in being, periods of gesta-
tion, and twenty-one years. When more than one of
these elements is involved in a situation, a period of
gestation may precede or follow either or both of the
others. Thus, as has been seen, if John Stiles devises
property to James Thorpe and his heirs "until my
youngest grandchild is of age and then to my youngest
descendant in being at that time," a period of gestation
may precede the measuring life in being of John's child,
a second period of gestation may follow the life and pre-
cede the minority of the grandchild, and a third period
of gestation may follow that minority. The element of
twenty-one years, however, although it may follow lives
in being, may not precede them, because the only per-
missible lives in being are lives in being at the com-
mencement of the period of the Rule. 111 If John Stiles
devises property to James Thorpe and his heirs "until
the death of all of my descendants living twenty-one
years after my death and then to my youngest descendant
living at that time," the executory interest is void. John
may have descendants in being twenty-one years after
his death who were not in being when he died.
Even though an instrument in terms suspends the
vesting of a future interest until the happening of an
event which may not occur within the period of the
Rule, the interest is not void if it could not vest beyond
the period, because the duration of the estate out of
which it is created is limited. If Andrew Baker, ownirig
an estate in Blackacre for the lives of Thomas Kempe,
Roger White and Edward Willis, conveys his estate "to