sorry guys ...RTF did the job 

[b]Legacy Mount Points[/b]
You can manage ZFS file systems with legacy tools by setting the mountpoint 
property to legacy.
Legacy file systems must be managed through the mount and umount commands and the
/etc/vfstab file. ZFS does not automatically mount legacy file systems on boot, 
and the ZFS mount and umount command do not operate on datasets of this type. 
The following examples show how to
set up and manage a ZFS dataset in legacy mode:
# zfs set mountpoint=legacy tank/home/eschrock
# mount -F zfs tank/home/eschrock /mnt
In particular, if you have set up separate ZFS /usr or /var file systems, you 
must indicate that theyare legacy file systems. In addition, you must mount them 
by creating entries in the /etc/vfstab file.
Otherwise, the system/filesystem/local service enters maintenance mode when the 
system boots.
To automatically mount a legacy file system on boot, you must add an entry to 
the /etc/vfstab file.
The following example shows what the entry in the /etc/vfstab file might look 
like:
#device             device             mount           FS        fsck     mount 
mount
#to mount           to fsck            point           type      pass     at 
boot options
#
tank/home/eschrock -                 /mnt          zfs           -         yes  
       -

Note that the device to fsck and fsck pass entries are set to -. This syntax is 
because the fsck command is not applicable to ZFS file systems. For more 
information regarding data integrity and the lack of need for fsck in ZFS
 
 
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