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personal benefit to the widow and children. The statute speaks of the widow and children in a restrictive sense as a descriptio personarum; and it says that they shall be entitled to the renewal of the copyright, on complying with certain terms. (b)

The justice and policy of securing to ingenious and learned men the profit of their discoveries and intellectual labor, were very ably stated by the court of K. B. in the great case of Miller v. Taylor. The constitution and laws of the United States contain the declared sense of this country in favor of some reasonable provision for the security of their productions. The former law of Congress afforded only a scanty and inadequate protection, and did not rise to a level with the liberal spirit of the age. But the recent statute has made liberal amends, and redeemed the government of our country from the reproach to which it had been exposed. Lord Camden once declaimed against literary property. "Glory," said he, "is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. It was not for gain that Bacon, Newton, Milton, and Locke instructed and delighted the world." In answer to this it may be said, that the most illustrious writers in every branch of science, within the last half century, have reaped a comfortable support, as well as immortal fame, from the fruits of their pen. The experiment in Great Britain has proved the utility, as well as the justice, of securing a liberal recompense to intellectual labor; and the prospect of gain has not been found, in the case of such men as Robertson, or Gibbon, or Sir Walter Scott, either to extinguish the ardor of genius or abate the love of true glory.

(b) In the case of Pierpoint v. Fowle, 2 Wood. & M. 23, the plaintiff having assigned his copyright to his book, The Reader, renewed the copyright at the expiration of the fourteen years, and the assignee continuing to publish the book as his own, the court (Judge Woodbury) held, that the author, by selling the copyright, sold only the right then existing, and that the subsequent copyright so renewed, belonged to the original author, and the assignee was decreed to account for his subsequent sales.

LECTURE XXXVII.

OF TITLE TO PERSONAL PROPERTY BY TRANSFER BY ACT OF LAW.

GOODS and chattels may change owners by act of law in the cases of forfeiture, succession, marriage, judgment, insolvency, and intestacy. Those of succession and marriage have already been considered, and I shall now confine myself to the other means of acquiring title to chattels by act of law.

I. By forfeiture.

The title of government to goods by forfeiture, as a punishment for crimes, is confined, in New York, to the case of treason. The right, so far as it exists in this country, depends, probably, upon local statute law; and the tendency of public opinion has been to condemn forfeiture of property, at least in cases of felony, as being an unnecessary and hard punishment of the felon's posterity. Every person convicted of any manner of treason, under the laws of New York, forfeits his goods and chattels, and also his lands and tenements, during his lifetime; but the rights of all third persons, existing at the time of the commission of the treason, are saved. (a) Forfeiture of property for crimes.

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in any other case is expressly abolished. (a)1 And even *386 the attainder of treason does not extend to corrupt the blood of the offender, or to forfeit the dower of his wife. (b) The

(a) N. Y. Revised Statutes, vol. i. p. 284, secs. 1, 2; vol. ii. p. 656, sec. 3. It is made the duty of the attorney-general to recover, by ejectment, real estates escheated to the people of the state of New York, or forfeited upon any conviction or outlawry for treason. Ibid. vol. i. pp. 283, 284. There is a similar statute provision in some of the other states.

(a) N. Y. Revised Statutes, vol. ii. p. 701, sec. 22.

(b) Ibid. vol. i. p. 742, sec. 16. Ibid. vol. i. p. 282. Ibid. vol. ii. p. 701, sec. 22. Ibid. vol. ii. p. 98, sec. 81.

1 A suspension of civil rights is a consequence of imprisonment in the state prison for any period. If the sentence be for life, the prisoner is civilly dead. 2 R. S. 701.

forfeiture in treason as to real estate related at common law back to the time of the treason committed; and, therefore, all alienations and incumbrances by the traitor, between the time of the offence and the conviction, were avoided; but the forfeiture of his goods and chattels related only to the time of the conviction, and all sales made in good faith and without fraud, before conviction, were good. (c)

Forfeiture of estate and corruption of blood, under the laws of the United States, and including cases of treason, are abolished.(d) Forfeiture of property, in cases of treason and felony, was a part of the common law, and must exist at this day in the jurisprudence of those states where it has not been abolished by their constitutions or by statute. (e) Several of the state constitutions have provided that no attainder of treason or felony shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture of estate, except during the life of the offender, (f) and some of them have taken away the power of forfeiture absolutely, without any such exception. (g) There are other state constitutions which impliedly admit the existence or propriety of the power of forfeiture, by taking away the right of forfeiture expressly in cases of suicide, and in the case of deodand, and preserving silence as to other cases; and in one instance (h) forfeiture of property is limited to the cases of treason and murder.

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The English law has felt the beneficial influence of the progress of public opinion on this subject. The statute of 7 Anne, ch. 22, abolished, after the death of the Pretender, forfeiture for *387 treason beyond the life of the offender; and though the statute of 17 Geo. II. ch. 29, postponed the operation of that provision, it was only until the death of the Pretender and his sons. And, by a bill introduced into Parliament by Sir Samuel Romilly, in 1814, and afterwards, under the modifications,

(c) Hawk. P. C. b. 2, ch. 49, sec. 30. 4 Blacks. Com. 381, 387. In the case of custom-house seizures for forfeiture of goods, the title of the government relates back to the time of the forfeiture. Ocean Insurance Co. v. Polleys, 13 Peters U. S. 157. (d) Laws of U. S. April 20th, 1790, ch. 9, sec. 24.

(e) In Massachusetts, as lands under their charter were held as of the manor of East Greenwich, the customs of gavel-kind were so far applied to the tenure as not to subject the lands to forfeiture for treason or felony. Hutch. Hist. vol. i. p. 447.

(ƒ) Constitutions of Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Kentucky.

(g) Constitutions of Connecticut, Ohio, Tennessee, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri. (h) Constitution of Maryland.

passed into a law, corruption of blood, in cases of felony, except murder, was abolished. (a) The ingenious and spirited defence of the law of forfeiture, which was made by Sir Charles Yorke in the middle of the last century, (b) and in which he insisted that it stood on "just, social, and comprehensive principles, and was a necessary safeguard to the state, whether built on maxims of monarchy or freedom," has failed to convince the judgment or satisfy the humanity of the present age.

Government succeeds, as of course, to the personal and real estate of the intestate, when he has no heirs or next of kin to appear and claim it; but this is for the sake of order and good policy; and the succession in such cases is usually regulated by statute. (c)

II. By judgment.1

On a recovery by law in an action of trespass or trover of the value of a specific chattel, of which the possession has been acquired by tort, the title of the goods is altered by the recovery, and is transferred to the defendant; and the damages recovered are the price of the chattel so transferred by operation of law — solutio pretii emptionis loco habetur. The books either do not agree, or do not speak with precision on the point, whether the transfer takes place in contemplation of law upon the final judgment merely, or whether the amount of the judgment must first be actually paid or recovered by execution. In Brown

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v. Wootton, (d) * Fenner, J., said that in case of trespass, *388 after the judgment given, the property of the goods is

(a) This was the statute of 54 Geo. III. ch. 145, which declared that no attainder for felony, murder excepted, should extend to disinherit the heirs or affect the right and title to the lands beyond the life of the offender. The statute of 3 & 4 Wm. IV. ch. 106, went further, and declared, that after the death of any person attainted, his descendants may inherit.

(b) Considerations on the Law of Forfeiture for High Treason.

(c) Dane's Abr. vol. iv. p. 538. Statutes of Connecticut, 1821, p. 198. (d) Cro. J. 73.

1 By the common law, a decree of the Court of Chancery did not transfer the legal title to land; but the court compelled the holder to convey the title pursuant to the decree. Such is still the effect of decrees, unless express statute has made the decree a legal transfer. In the matter of Van Wyck, 1 Barb. Ch. 566.

changed, so that the former proprietor may not seize them again : and in Adams v. Broughton, (a) the K. B. declared that the property in the goods was entirely altered by the judgment obtained in trover, and the damages recovered were the price thereof. On the other hand, the rule is stated in Jenkins, (b) to be, that if one person recovers damages in trespass against another for taking his chattel, "by the recovery and execution done thereon," the property of the chattel is vested in the trespasser; and in the Touchstone (c) it is said, that if one recovers damages of a trespasser for taking his goods, the law gives him the property of the goods, "because he hath paid for them." The rule in the civil law was, that when the wrongful possessor of movable property, who was not in a condition to restore it, had been condemned in damages, and had paid the same to the original proprietor, he became possessed of the title. The Roman and the French law speak of the change of rights as depending upon the payment of the estimated value. (d) So, also, in the modern case of Drake v. Mitchell, (e) Lord Ellenborough observed, that he always understood the principle of transit in rem judicatam to relate only to the particular cause of action in which the judgment was recovered, operating as a change of remedy, from its being of a higher nature than before; and that a judgment recovered in any form of action was still but a security for the original cause of action, until it was made productive in satisfaction to the party; and

until then it would not operate to change any other collat*389 eral concurrent remedy which the party might

have.

This is the more reasonable, if not the most authoritative conclusion on the question. (a)

(a) Andrew, 18. S. C. Str. 1078.

(b) Jenk. Cent., Case 88, p. 189.

(c) Shep. Touch. tit. Gift.

(d) Dig. 6, 1, 35, 63. Pothier, Traité Droit de Propriété, No. 364. Merlin, Répertoire, vol. xiii. p. 34. Verbo. Pret.

(e) 3 East, 251.

(a) It remains a vexed question, by reason of loose or contradictory decisions in the books, whether a recovery by judgment in trespass or trover of the value of a chattel, does, by implication of law, per se, amount to a transfer of title to the defendant, or those who held under him, without payment or satisfaction of the judgment. In Smith v. Gibson, Cas. temp. Hard. 319, Lord Hardwicke said, that if the plaintiff recover damages for a thing, it is as a sale of a thing to the defendant which vests the property in him, and it is a bar to another action for the same thing. The plea in that case, to

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