118 Misc. 852 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1922
The plaintiff is the wife of the incompetent defendant Edwin E. Everhart and under a decree of separation is entitled to receive from her husband alimony at the rate of $50 per week. No alimony has been paid under that decree and the plaintiff has secured judgment for over $30,000 for. such unpaid alimony. The complaint shows that the incompetent is not the legal owner of any property out of which the plaintiff could secure payment of this judgment or of future alimony but he is beneficiary of a trust created for his benefit under the will of his father. The will was probated in the state of Pennsylvania and the Provident Life and Trust Company of Philadelphia, a Pennsylvania corporation, and John J. Gheen, a resident of Pennsylvania, were duly appointed and have qualified as executors and trustees of this will by the courts of the state of Pennsylvania. The plaintiff now seeks the aid of the court of equity to obtain part of the income of the said trust estate for her support. There can be no doubt but that if the trust estate were created by the will of a resident of New York state which was probated here, the plaintiff would be entitled under the allegations of the complaint to a decree in her favor and that under the allegations of the complaint concerning the law of Pennsylvania in regard to spendthrift trusts, she could in the present case obtain similar relief in a suit brought in that state. The Provident Life and Trust Company has, however, moved for judgment dismissing the complaint and now contends that this court has not jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action. The Provident Life and Trust Company of Philadelphia and John J. Gheen are sued “ as executors and trustees of the last will and testament of Isaiah F. Everhart ” and undoubtedly the action cannot be maintained against them in their capacity of executors. Helme v. Buckelew, 229 N. Y. 363. In fact, however, the complaint shows that they have been sued as trustees rather than as executors and in my opinion the erroneous description of the capacity in which they are being sued may be disregarded upon this motion. The real question presented is whether the courts of this state can and should assume jurisdiction in an action of this kind against trustees of a testamentary trust. Prior to the enactment of section 1836a of the Code of Civil Procedure a foreign executor or administrator could not sue in the courts of this state but a testamentary trustee named in a will probated in a foreign jurisdiction could bring such action not “in a representative capacity but in his
I have not overlooked the request of the plaintiff for a declaratory judgment if this court has no jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for in the complaint but in my opinion the provisions of the Civil Practice Act for a declaratory judgment have no application to the circumstances under consideration and the same objections would apply in even greater degree to the granting of such a judgment.
Defendants’ motion granted.
Ordered accordingly.