64 N.J. Eq. 504 | New York Court of Chancery | 1903
The object of this bill is to establish a resulting trust in lands which were conveyed in fee to William C. H. Waddell, under whom defendants claim title. The complainants claim under the wife of Waddell, and allege that the conveyance to Waddell was made for the purpose of a partition or division between the ■devisees of one Lemuel Cobb, the father of Mrs..Waddell,, of
“Third. I divide all the residue of my real and personal estate into four-equal parts or shares, one share thereof I give and bequeath to Benjamin Howell, of Troy, the husband of 'my daughter Elizabeth; one other share I give and bequeath to Walter Kirkpatrick, nevertheless in trust for Eugene Kirkpatrick, the. only son of my daughter Maria 0. Kirkpatrick, one other share I give and bequeath to my daughter Julia Ann [Mrs. Waddell] and the remaining share X give and bequeath to my son Andrew B. Oobb—to have and to hold to each of them their heirs and assigns forever. I do hereby nominate, constitute' and appoint my son Andrew B. Cobb, Walter Kirkpatrick and Benjamin Howell Executors to this my Testament and Last Will. I do hereby order and direct my executors hereinabove named or a majority or the survivor or survivors of them, to-*507 grant, bargain and sell all or any part of the residue of my estate called the third item & divide the moneys arising therefrom among the legatees therein mentioned.”
It is claimed that this direction amounted to an equitable conversion of the residuary real estate, and that the partition of lands in question (which was the third partition between the devisees) should be considered in equity as a division of the proceeds of sale, and that the husband being, at the time of the partition (1838), absolutely entitled to the wife’s personal estate, he should bo considered as holding the lands as proceeds of sale and as the proceeds of his own money.
The doctrine of equitable conversion is a branch of the general equitable doctrine of trusts, and has been adopted solely for the purpose of executing trusts, and it is essential to the application of the doctrine of conversion that the property should be subject to a trust or imperative direction for conversion. Where, as in this case, there is no devise of the legal estate to the executors, and their control over the legal estate, which is vested in others, is solely that of a power of sale, the question is, whether it is a mere naked power of sale, the exercise of which must be discretionary, or whether it is a power in trust, the exercise of which is imperative. The execution of powers in trust may be required in equity for the benefit of the beneficiaries entitled, but when the trustee of the power is clothed with a discretion as to its execution, the court will not control the discretion. Brown v. Higgs, 8 Ves. 561, 569 (1803); 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1002, and cases cited; 2 Story Eq. Jur. § 1601. And, in order to give rise to an equitable or constructive conversion, the direction to convert must be imperative and the conversion must not be left to. the option of the donee or trustee. Cook’s Executor v. Cook’s Administrator, 5 C. E. Gr. 375, 379 (Chancellor Zabriskie, 1869). In this 'will there is, first, an absolute devise in fee of the legal estate to the devisees, then an appointment of executors, with a direction to sell following this appointment. The direction is not a direction to sell all his residuary estate, but all or any, and these words “or any” necessarily imply, as it seems to me, the power or option of selling or not selling some of the land, in their discretion. If the power be construed to be imperative,
Another reason why the doctrine of constructive conversion •cannot be held effective in this ease to convert the land into money is that, by the partition, an equitable reconversion, as it is called, took place. “By such reconversion the prior constructive conversion is annulled, and the converted property is restored in equity to its original actual quality.” 3 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1175. Mrs. Waddell and the legatees of the proceeds of sale joined in the series of releases and conveyances which released from the power of sale the shares of the lands devised to the trustees and to Mrs. Waddell. There is no question that her deed, in which her husband joined, had this effect, and that thereafter the lands conveyed to the trustees were freed from the operation •of the power or trust. In consideration of the release to each of the other devisees Mrs. Waddell, was entitled to a release to herself of the remaining lands, and it must be presumed that the conveyance to the husband was intended to be for her benefit. The transaction cannot be considered as in any sense a sale to
The contention of complainant that the deed to Waddell from the other devisees, for the interest in the lands to which his wife was entitled on a partition, is to be treated in equity as a payment to the husband of money to which he was entitled as his own under this will depends, it will be observed, upon the establishment (1) of an equitable constructive conversion of the lands into money by the will; (2) a constructive sale by the executors, and (3) a constructive reduction to possession of the purchase-money by the husband, all accomplished by a transaction which, on the face of it, was plainly intended to be a simple partition of lands, removing them from the operation of the power of sale. The doctrine of equitable conversion as between husband and wife, in relation to the proceeds of sale of her lands, is never held to be applicable unless a valid sale has in fact taken place. Franks v. Bollans, L. R. 3 Ch. App. 717 (1868). It does not, in my-judgment, extend to a case like this. So far, therefore, as Waddell,,the husband, is concerned, and those claiming under him with notice, the land conveyed must, be impressed with a resulting trust in favor of the wife and those claiming under her.
As to- notice, I conclude upon the whole evidence in the case that John W. Bigalow, to whom Waddell conveyed the premises-
Notice to Bigalow was also given by chancery suit pending at the time of the purchase, brought in 1833 by Waddell and his wife against the executors, to assert their rights in the lands devised by Lemuel Cobb, the bill praying, among other things, that they might be let into- possession of a fair and just share of the testator’s real estate so devised to them by the residuary ■clause of the will, or that the executors or a master might be decreed to make a sale and that a receiver be appointed.
Walter Kirkpatrick was appointed receiver of the lands at the October Term, 1835, by an order in the cause which directed the receiver, among other things, to lease and collect the rents for the lands embraced in the residuary clause, and to divide the lands and personal estate among the persons in interest, according to their rights under the will of .Lemuel Cobb. The receiver was directed to report Iris proceedings under the order to the court. The deed to Waddell made in December, 1838, and now in question, was executed and acknowledged before Walter Kirkpatrick, the receiver, who died subsequently and before the conveyance to Bigalow.
Mrs. Waddell died in 1841, and in February, 1848, the suit was revived in the name of her infant heirs as co-complainants. This revivor was prior to Bigalow’s purchase (May 4th, 1848), and the suit was, in my judgment, notice to Bigalow at the time
Mrs. Waddell died in 1841, within three years after the third partition of the lands made while the suit for accounting and division was pending. The suit was under the control of her husband, and as her children and heirs-at-law were infants, whose interests could not be impaired by a mere delay in the prosecution, I think the delay of the husband in the prosecution of the suit from 1838 to 1848 did not operate to deprive the suit of its effect as notice to persons claiming under the husband and adversely to the infant heirs of the wife.
Taking the entire circumstances of the case as disclosed by the paper-title of Waddell and the chancery suit at the time of the conveyance, there can be no reasonable doubt, I think, that Bigalow was put upon inquiry as to whether the title of Waddell, under this partition, was not held in trust for his wife. It should also be noted that Bigalow’s actual payment of the purchase-money has not been proved. The burden of proving such payment is on the purchaser, and the recital of the payment in the deed is not, as against the cestui que trust, sufficient evidence of the payment. 1 Perry Trusts § 219. Defendants are volunteers claiming under Bigalow as his heirs-at-law, and they stand, therefore, in his position as to the claim of bona fide purchase.
A third question, that 'of alleged estoppel, arises under the following circumstances: Andrew B. Cobb, one.of the executors and devisees under the will of Lemuel Cobb, and one of the tenants in common, joined in' the execution of the deed to Waddell, and in this deed, which, on its face, granted an absolute fee in the land, Andrew B. Cobb covenanted (along with the other grantors) to warrant and defend the lands against himself and all persons claiming under him. Andrew B. Cobb subsequently (and between February 6th, 1855, and September 18th, 1862) purchased the title and interest of the children of Mrs. Waddell in the lands. He died in January, 1873, and. the complainants, as his executors and devisees, are by this bill prosecuting his
In my judgment the doctrine of estoppel does not apply to this case, and for two reasons:
First. In an action at law brought by ■ complainants against defendants to recover possession of the lands, in which action an undivided one-third interest was recovered, the same question as to estoppel under the deed was raised and was decided adversely to* the defendants in reference to the one-third interest. This decision settles, as between the parties, the law of this case in reference to the alleged estoppel in a court of law, and upon a purely legal question, such as estoppel, this court would follow the decision at law made in a suit between the same parties upon the effect- of the deed as an estoppel. And even were not the question thus res adjudicate, the opinion of Mr. Justice Magie, that under this deed there was no estoppel at law, should be followed as an authoritative exposition of the law upon the subject under our decisions.
Second. The title now prosecuted is one claimed or derived originally under and from the grantee of the deed. The cesiuis que trust claim under the grantee as their trustee in equity, and an equitable title so derived from a resulting trust imposed on the grantee by the circumstances of the conveyance is a title derived from the grantee as clearly as if the grantee had, upon the conveyance to him, executed a declaration of trust or a conveyance to the beneficiaries. As to a title derived from the grantee himself, the doctrine of estoppel is even at law held not to be applicable. 11 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (2d ed.) 412.
This is not a question of applying in equity (and as following the law) the legal doctrine of estoppel by warranty for the purpose of increasing the grantee’s estate conveyed by the deed, but the fundamental question here is whether the conveyance of the legal estate was a conveyance in trust. If so, the controlling feature of the case is the enforcement of the equitable trust, and the general rule is that as against all except bona fide purchasers
That the legal title to the lands should be held by the husband in trust for the wife is the aspect in which a court of equity looks at the transaction as a whole, between all the parties, grantor, grantee and beneficiary. The enforcement of the trust in favor of the beneficiary against the grantee and those holding légal title under him with notice of the trust, is the controlling equitable aspect of the case, and the covenants of the grantor as to title and warranty cannot be made to operate by estoppel or otherwise to convey to the trustee any portion of the equitable interest or estates for which the legal title was, by the very circumstances and presumed intention of the conveyance, held in trust.
The remaining defence raised is that of laches in bringing the suit. It is claimed that the statute of limitations is a bar to the suit, and that even if this statute be not applicable, the delay is
The statutes of limitations do not expressly, or in terms, affect equitable suits, but courts of equity, in enforcing equitable rights or remedies, give effect to the statute. The extent to- which effect is given to the statute depends somewhat on the nature of the equitable jurisdiction invoked. Where the suit is based on a legal right, and the appeal -is to the auxiliary jurisdiction of this court, and equitable aid is sought for the purpose of removing the obstructions to complainant’s legal right, a delay in the application for equitable aid will not, ordinarily, or in the absence of special equities, bar the equitable right, unless the legal right is barred. Burne v. Partridge, 16 Dick. Ch. Rep. 434, and cases cited at pp. 436, 437. Where the substantive right asserted is one as to which the jurisdiction in equity is concurrent with that at law, the statute of limitations is a bar in equity as well as at law. Conover v. Conover, Sax. 403 (1831); Marsh v. Oliver, 1 McCart. 259 (Chancellor Green, 1862).
Where the right asserted or the remedy sought is purely equitable, the applicability of the statute depends to some extent upon the, special character of the equitable right asserted or remedy sought. If the right claimed rests upon an express or direct and subsisting trust, clearly established, the statute of limitations is not held to be a bar, and such trust will be enforced unless there has been an express repudiation of the trust, and a holding adverse to the trust continued for the time-fixed by the statute of limitations. Allen v. Woolley, 1 Gr. Ch. 209 (1839); Starkey v. Fox, 7 Dick. Ch. Rep. 758 (Vice-Chancellor Green, 1894); affirmed on appeal, 8 Dick. Ch. Rep. 239; Stimis v. Stimis, 9 Dick. Ch. Rep. 17 (Chancellor McGill, 1895), and cases cited at p. 21.
In cases of equitable titles to real estate courts of equity will .apply the period of limitation of the legal estates of an analogous character. 2 Story Eq. Jur. § 1520. Where the trust is an implied or constructive trust the statute is applicable (McLane v. Shepard, 6 C. E. Gr. 76), and where, by reason of an implied trust, a court of equity declares equitable estates to exist equity follows the law in applying the bar of the statute to the equitable, estates so created. Hoveden v. Lord Annesley, 2 Sch. & L. 607, at pp. 611, 632, 637 (Lord Redesdale, 1805), is the leading case upon the application of the statute to equitable estates.' Hall v. Otterson, 7 Dick. Ch. Rep. 522, and cases cited at p. 533 (Vice-Chancellor Green, 1894), for the rule that a cestui que trust whose equitable interest is reversionary is not bound to assert his title until it comes.into possession. Thompson v. Simpson, 1 Dr. & War. 489; Life Association, &c., v. Siddal, 3 De G. F. & J. 58; 2 Perry Trusts § 860.
The present ease is one where an implied or constructive trust is alleged and has been sufficiently proved. The trust arises from the payment of the purchase-money of land, and in equity this trust is made effective by holding that equitable interests or estates in the land, proportionate to, or‘dependent on, the pro
I will advise a decree for complainants.