7 How. Pr. 305 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1852
The propriety of these objections will be best understood by considering the rights of the plaintiff and of the widow. The plaintiff is the owner in common with the other heirs of the lands described in the complaint: that is, one single cause of action set forth in the complaint. Having that cause of action she is entitled to a partition of those lands, or to a sale of them if a partition can not be made; and to have the sale made free from all liens so that the purchaser can obtain a perfect title to the property. If a sale is to be made, it has been usual to make defendants all persons having any lien on the whole property, or on any undivided share, by mortgage or other specific lien, or by judgment or decree, and to state the amount due to each; and the Court of Chancery was authorized expressly to award one or more issues to try any fact contested by the parties (2 R. S. 330, § 85 [81]). If the deceased left debts unpaid and not secured by mortgage, it was usual for the court to inquire whether the personal estate was adequate to pay them, that the purchaser might be protected. All taxes and assessments and mortgages were paid out of the proceeds of the sales; they formed a lien on the estate, whether the unsecured debts did or not. If the plaintiff stated the amount due on any of those incumbrances, and the incumbrancer or any of the other defendants chose to dispute the accuracy of the statement, they did so, and the question could be determined by a reference or on issues ordered by the court to be tried; and now the court can still order such a reference under its power to order one when the taking of an account shall be necessary for the information of the court before judgment (Code, § 271). It is no more an objection now than it was formerly, that the different defendants do not serve their answers on each other; if they have adverse claims, the court may give judgment for or against one or more of several plaintiffs, and for or against one or more of several defendants, and it may determine the ultimate rights of the parties on each side, as between themselves (Code. § 274). All this it is admitted by the defendants may be done, where a defendant has a specific or a general lien, by judgment or decree; his claim may be disputed by any of his codefendants or by the plaintiff, and if the investigation of that claim involves an inquiry into
It is unnecessary to say whether the creditors at large would have any lien on the proceeds of sale, or whether this court would allow the proceeds to be distributed without protecting their rights and so protecting the purchasers from them (see 1 Edward’s Ch. R., Mathews vs. Mathews), for here the widow-claims not as a creditor at large, but as having a right to stand in the place of those whom she paid and who hold liens by-mortgages and for taxes and assessments; all specific liens on the estate.
She claims the right to be subrogated in the place of those who once held these liens, and that she is now entitled to the same liens: she is a necessary party as a dowress, and when she comes to set forth the full grounds of her claims, as she will be entitled to do and as the plaintiff is not bound to do, she may show not only that the debt is justly due to her, but that she is to be subrogated to the rights of the former lien holders. That can Be done on the reference as to title and liens by special instructions to the referee.
The plaintiff has an interest in having all liens on the estate discharged; she or her estate is liable for a proportional part
The demurrer is to the whole complaint; in that it is clearly too broad; it must be overruled with costs to abide the event.