87 REAL PROPERTY AND REGISTRATION
151. Determination of estate pur autrie vie. Any
person having any claim in remainder, reversion or expectancy may,
upon affidavit showing that he has cause to believe that the cestui
que is dead, and that his death is concealed, obtain an order of the
High Court for his production by the tenant pur autrie vie or his
assignee1,
and if such an order is not complied with the  cestui que vie is
taken to be dead, and any person claiming any interest in remainder,
or reversion, or otherwise may enter accordingly2.
	A tenant pur autrie vie who holds over after the death
of the cestui que vie, without the express consent of the persons
next entitled, becomes a trespasser and may be proceeded against
accordingly3.
	The burden of proving that the cestui que vie is dead
lies on the person next entitled. In the absence of direct evidence
of death, the proof may be assisted by presumption of death4.
If the cestui que vie remains beyond the seas or elsewhere absents
himself in the realm for the space of seven years, the reversioner is
entitled to recover the land in the absence of proof that he is
alive5.
If the  supposed dead person is subsequently proved to have been
living at the date of eviction, the tenant pur autrie vie who has
been evicted may recover mesne profits with interest in respect of
the period during which he was wrongfully out of possession6.
2See
	the Cestui Qui Vie Act 1707 s 1 (amended by virtue of the
	Constitutional Reform Act 2005 Sch 4 Para 6). Remaindermen may apply
	notwithstanding that, in certain events, they are not immediately
	entitled on the death of the tenant for life: Ex p Grant (1801)
	6 Ves 512. The order states the place at which, the time when, and
	the person before whom the cestui que vie is to be produced: Ex
	p St Aubyn (1793) 2 Cox Eq Cas
	373; Ex p Whalley (1828)
	4 Russ 561; Re Lingen (1841)
	12 Sim 104; Re Lingen (1841)
	12 Sim 104; Re Clossey (1854)
	2 Sm & G 46; Re Pople, ex p Baker (1889)
	40 Ch D 589; 2 Secton's Judgments and Orders (7th
	Edn) 1713. It appears that it is not necessary for the affidavit
	required by the statute to contain a statement that the death is
	concealed from the applicant: Re Dennis' Will (1860)
	7 Jur NS 230. The order for production will be made if the
	remainderman gives notice to the person in possession to produce the
	cestui que vie under the staute, and the notice is not complied
	with: Re Owen (1878)
	10 Ch D 166. In default of production, a further order is made for
	the production before commissioners or to the court (Re
	Lingen; Re Pople, ex p Baker; 2
	Seton's Judgments and Orders (7th
	Edn) 1713); and, if this is not complied with, a final order is made
	that the cestui que vie is deemed to be deemed to be deemed to be
	dead (Re Lingen; Re Pople, ex p Baker;
	2 Seton's Judgments and Orders (7th
	Edn) 1713). As to extending the time for production see Re
	St John's Hospital (1868) 18 LT
	317. The court cannot give the tenant pur autrie vie the costs of
	producing the cestui que vie (Re Issac
	(1838) 4 My & Cr 11); nor will it give the applicant his costs,
	at any rate if the respondent had good reason for requiring him to
	come before the court (Re Pople, ex p Baker at
	593). The statute applies to cases where the title of the
	remaindermen depends on the death of the cestui que vie without
	issue (Ex p Grant; Re Pople, ex p Baker);
	to cases where the estate is for 99 years if the cestui que vie so
	long lives (Ex p Grant);
	and to cases where the person in possession has any interest
	determinable on a life, such is permissive occupation, although not
	an estate pur autrie vie strictly so called (Re Stevens
	(1886) 31 Ch D 320). As to
	procedure see further Daniell's Chancery Practice (8th
	Edn) 1866. The remainderman has, of course, to give up possession to
	the tenant pur autrie vie if, after the order is made, the cestui
	que vie proves to be alive: Re Pople, ex p Baker
	at 592. As to an estate for a term determinable on life see now PARA
	119 note 3.
                                                                                						PARA
	119 note 3   
	
	Fines
	and Recoveries Act 1833 s 22 (as amended see note 2). The estates
	specified as sufficient to confer the office of protector are 'any
	estate for years determinable on the dropping of a life or lives, or
	any greater estate (not being an estate for years)': s 22 (as so
	amended). An estate for years determinable on a life or lives was
	mentioned with reference to a form of settlement which was
	practically obsolete before 1926. The first limitation was
	frequently to A for 99 years if he should so long live, followed by
	a remainder to his first and other sons in tail. A had thus no
	estate of freehold, and his concurrence in a recovery was not
	nessecary. This form of limitation was used in order to keep the
	land in settlement as long as possible: see Bell v Holtby
	(1873) LR 15 Eq 178 at 189. However, in effect, A had an estate for
	life, and the Fines and Recoveries Act 1833 expressly made his
	assent to disentailing necessary. An actual life estate was greater
	than an estate for years determinable on life; consequently, this
	was within s 22 and so a fortiori was a prior estate tail: Re
	Blewitt (1855) 6 De GM & G
	187. Thus, where there is a tenant in tail in possession and a
	tenant in tail in remainder: Re Blewitt;
	Carson's Real Property Statutes (3rd
	Edn) 322.
                                                                                          						note
	2
	See
	the Fines and Recoveries Act 1833 ss 22-31. Of these ss 29-31
	related to dispositions before 1834 and are repealed as obsolete:
	Law of Property (Amendment) Act 1924 s 10, Sch 10 (repealed). The
	Fines and RECOVERIES Act 1833 s 24 is also repealed; and ss 22, 23,
	25-28 are amended by the Statute Law Revision (No 2) Act 1888.
3See
	the Cestui que Vie Act 1707 s 5 (amended by the Statute Law Revision
	Act 1888). 
	
4See
	Prudential Assurance Co v Edmonds (1877)
	2 App Cas 487, HL; Re Owen (1878)
	10 Ch D 166; Re Clossey
	(1854) 2 Sm & G 46. The order has been made on evidence of
	incurable illness of the cestui que vie when last heard of: Re
	Dennis' Will (1860) 7 Jur NS
	230. As to presumption of death see CIVIL PROCEDURE vol 11 (2009)
	PARA 1100. 
	
5See
	the Cestui que Vie Act 1666 s 1.
6See
	the Cestui que Vie Act 1666 s 4 (amended by the Statute Law Revision
	Act 1888).
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Tetractys do you have a pdf of this or better yet a link to the whole book online? Get me back at FB or SF if you can
ReplyDeleteNo. I transcribed this from a hard copy book from the library at the Supreme Court. It contains two sections from elsewhere. It was one book of a collection. I have never seen Halsbury's on-line.
ReplyDelete