4 N.Y.S. 422 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The action was brought to recover the proceeds of 15 bonds of $1,000 each, payable with interest at the rate of 8 per cent., which were made by Simeon B. Buckner of the city of Chicago, and secured by a mortgage upon real estate situated there. The bonds in controversy were the property of Mary R. Burnside during her life. She died on the 9th of March, 1876, and left a last will and testament, by which she devised and bequeathed to her husband, Ambrose E. Burnside, for and during the term of his natural life, the free use and improvement, rents, profits, and income, of all her estate, real, personal, and mixed. By her will she further declared and provided that he should during his natural life have “full power and authority at his pleasure to change the investment of any of my personal property and estate, and also with power and authority at his pleasure to sell, transfer, and convey any portion of my personal property and estate, execute the requisite conveyance and conveyances thereof, receive the proceeds of any such sale or sales, and apply and appropriate the net proceeds thereof to and for his own use, benefit, and behoof forever. ” She also appointed him executor under her will, and, after his decease, provided for the payment of certain legacies, and then gave and devised all the rest, residue, and remainder of her estate, real, personal, and mixed, then remaining, in equal shares to certain charities existing in the city of Providence in the state of Rhode Island. 'The will was executed and proven in that state, and letters testamentary issued to the surviving husband of the testatrix. At that time the bonds now in suit were registered in her name in the office of the defendant, and the mortgage given to secure them was executed and delivered to the defendant in trust for that object. The bonds, upon their face, were made payable to bearer, and under the authority of the executor, Ambrose E. Burnside, their registration was canceled, and they were restored in that manner to their former condition of bonds payable to bearer. After that, and in January, 1879, Gen. Burnside applied to the defendant for a loan to him of the sum of $15,000 on the security of the 15 bonds now in controversy. The loan was made, and the bonds were delivered to the defendant, in whose possession they remained until they were paid out of the proceeds of the mortgaged property. This disposition of the bonds was assailed by the plaintiff as ancillary administrator of the estate, appointed by the surrogate of the county of New York, on the ground that Gen. Burnside had no power or authority to borrow money upon the bonds as he did from the defendant in this manner. And this position was sustained at the trial, and by the judgment from which the appeal has been taken. It was placed upon the ground that the only authority given him over the bonds was to sell, transfer, or convey them, and that this disposition was neither a sale, transfer, nor a conveyance of these bonds.
The construction which was given by authorities at common law to a devise or bequest for life, although empowering the devisee or legatee to dispose of the property by sale, was that it was no more than a power of sale, without enlarging and' extending the life-estate otherwise given and declared by the will. In Jackson v. Robins, 16 Johns. 538, the distinction was drawn between a devise of the property itself, with the addition of a power of sale, in which case the devisee would take the entire title, and a disposition of the same property for life, to which the devisee was given a power of disposal, for his or her own use or benefit. In the latter class of cases it was held by this as well as
But further evidence was given concerning the business transacted between
But if any doubt can remain as to the legality of these transactions, and the effect to be deduced from them by way of protecting the defendant from liability, it seems to be removed by the statute of this state declaratory of and defining the law concerning the creation and execution of powers. This statute was considered in Hutton v. Benkard, 92 N. Y. 295, to be applicable both to personal and real property, and that under its provisions “the creation, construction, and execution of powers concerning personal property are to be governed by the same rules, so far as they can be applied, which govern the creation, construction, and execution of powers as to real estate.” Id. 305. By the first section of the article containing these statutory provisions
By the force and effect of these sections, which are applicable to this case, for the transaction affected by it wholly arose and occurred in this state, Gen. Burnside was clothed with the absolute power of disposing of these bonds so-far as the rights of creditors or purchasers might intervene. In dealing with him they were entitled to the full benefit and effect of the directions contained in the will of the testatrix construed in this manner. The rights were the same as though the will itself had been presented for the inspection of the defendant’s president at the time when the application was made for the loan upon the security of the bonds. And one object of the statute was to enable persons dealing under the authority of a testamentary disposition of this description to act upon the fair effect and import to be attributed to the language itself, as the exponent of the intention of the person employing it. And the conclusion would be justified on the perusal of such a document that the person entitled to the proceeds of the property for his own benefit, use, and behoof forever, was authorized to deal with it as its absolute owner, and as such to hypothecate it for the payment of a debt contracted in his behalf, and for his benefit and use. This statute has given, and was intended to secure, to purchasers or creditors under such an instrument this degree of protection, and to abolish or materially abridge in their favor the distinction created by the preceding authorities between a general devise, or bequest, with a superadded power of sale, and the creation of a life-estate, with the
It is not essential to the right of the defendant to the protection of these statutory provisions that direct reference should have been made to them in any instrument made to execute the power; for as long as the donee was restricted in his right of disposition for his own use and benefit to the power, it is to be presumed that in the transaction the power itself was employed as the source of the authority, for without it the donee would be incapable of making the disposition of the property purposed to be and in fact made by him. The phrase “creditors and purchasers” employed in the enactment of section 102 of the article, is sufficiently broad to include all persons dealing with the donee of the power in the property of the estate for his use and benefit. It is certainly broad enough to include the case presented by this appeal; for by what took place the defendant did become a creditor as well as a purchaser of the bonds, even though' it acquired no more than a defeasible interest. To that extent it was brought within the significance of these terms, as they have been employed in the statute, although that degree of significance might not be accorded to them by the preceding authorities, which it was in part the object of this statute to change and abridge. Under the statutes of the state when the rights of purchasers have been protected, persons dealing with property by way of security, mortgage, or pledge, have been considered to be within the protection of the law. Hall v. Arnold, 15 Barb. 599; Reynolds v. Park, 5 Lans. 149; Stone v. Bartlett, 46 Me. 438; Williams v. Tilt, 36 N. Y. 319. There would clearly be no justice in holding, as Gen. Burnside had the authority under the will to receive the proceeds of the sale or sales of any part of the property of the testatrix, and apply and appropriate them to and for his own use, benefit, and behalf, forever, that the defendant should be liable to pay over to the plaintiff, as ancillary administrator of this estate, the mdneys it had previously paid to, and which had been used by, the donee of this, power, under this authority. It was, on the other hand, the intention of the testatrix that he should have and enjoy such proceeds to his own use, and to that extent certainly the defendant was entitled to protection, even under the cases already referred to of Stuart v. Walker, Downey v. Bissell, Bloomer v. Waldron, supra.
The right of the defendant to protection as a bona fide holder of these bonds as negotiable instruments need not be considered. If the case should be disposed of on that ground, it probably could not result in protection to the defendant; for it had become aware of the fact, by the registration of the bonds, that they were the property of the testatrix, and continued to be so until the period of her own decease. And the subsequent dealings of the defendant in
Not reported.