Fleming v. . Burnham

100 N.Y. 1 | NY | 1885

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *3

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *4 The most serious objection made by the purchaser relates to the sufficiency of the deed of February 14, 1833, from Thomas McKie and Andrew Stark, two of the four executors named in the will of John McKie, to Gerardus DeForest, to pass title to the premises in question. It is insisted that William McKie, one of the executors named, duly qualified, and should have joined in the execution of the *7 deed. It is conceded that John McKie died seized in 1828. The answer made to the objection is two-fold, first, that the deed was a valid execution of the power of sale vested in the executors of McKie by his will, and second, that the five children of the testator took under the will a title in fee-simple to the land, and that conceding that the conveyance by the two executors was not a valid exercise of the power of sale, nevertheless the title of DeForest as to four-fifths of the premises was ratified and confirmed by the quit-claim of April 29, 1835, executed by all the children of the testator, except his son William, and that the title to the share of William, who died in 1836, is barred by adverse possession. It is further claimed that it must be presumed that William received his proportion of the purchase-money on the sale to DeForest, and that the acceptance by him of his share of the consideration, operated as an estoppel, and precluded him, or those claiming under him, from questioning the validity of DeForest's title.

The sufficiency of the first answer, if true, needs no argument. But if the conveyance by the two executors was not a good execution of the power of sale contained in the will, the sufficiency of the second answer depends upon the correctness of the assumption on which it proceeds, viz.: that under the will the five children of the testator took an absolute fee in the premises. If they took a fee-simple, the quit-claim of April 29, 1835, vested in DeForest a good title to four-fifths of the land, and as to the one-fifth devised to the testator's son William, his title and that of his heirs is apparently barred by adverse possession. On the other hand, if under the will the children of the testator took only a base or qualified fee, determinable upon their death, leaving issue, or upon their death under twenty-one years of age, without issue, and the fee on the happening of the contingent event was given over to their issue, or to the brothers and sisters as the case might be, then manifestly the quit-claim deed did not bar the right of the issue of the children, or cut off the ultimate fee given to them on the death of the parent. The deed might become the foundation *8 for an adverse possession, as it purported to be a conveyance in fee, but in this way only could it affect their rights. But an adverse possession under the deed could not be deemed to commence as against the ultimate devisees, until the determination of the precedent estate and the accruing of their absolute title in possession. For it is well settled that the statute does not commence to run against a person entitled after the determination of a prior estate, during the continuance of that estate. (Jackson v. Schoonmaker, 4 Johns. 390; Jackson v.Sellick, 8 id. 262; Jackson v. Johnson, 5 Cow. 74.) Upon the assumption, therefore, that the issue of the children of the testator took under the will, upon the death of the parents respectively, an estate in fee, as purchasers, in the share of their parents, it is clear, upon the conceded fact that Thomas, one of the sons of the testator lived until 1875, and that he died in that year, leaving issue, one of whom was an infant of the age of ten years, that as against such issue no title by adverse possession had been acquired under the deed of April 29, 1835. There was no right of entry in the children of Thomas until his death. The deed conveyed his title to DeForest, whatever it was, with the right of possession during his life. His children could maintain no action to recover the premises until their right to the possession accrued. The questions, therefore, presented for consideration are, first, as to the validity of the deed from the two acting executors, as an execution of the power of sale, and the further question as to the quality of the estate devised by the will of John McKie to his children, and also the question of adverse possession.

It is material, in the first place, to consider the principle upon which objections to title on a judicial sale are to be treated and adjudicated. The purchaser is entitled to a marketable title, free from reasonable doubt. The purchaser bids on the assumption that there are no undisclosed defects. The purchaser pays and the seller receives a consideration, regulated in view of this implied condition. Objections which are merely captious or mere suggestions of defects which no reasonable man would consider, although within the range of possibility *9 or those which are clearly invalid by the law as settled, whatever doubts may at a former time have existed as to the questions raised, are not available to a purchaser, and will be disregarded. But the question presented to the court on an application to compel a purchaser on a judicial sale who raises objections to the title tendered to complete the purchase, is not the same, as if it was raised in a direct proceeding between the very parties to the right. Where all the parties in interest are before the court and the court has jurisdiction to decide, they are concluded by the judgment pronounced, so long as it stands unreversed, however imperfectly the evidence or facts were presented upon which the adjudication was made, or however doubtful the adjudication may have been in point of law. If the controversy involves a disputed question of fact, or the evidence authorizes inferences or presumptions of fact, the finding of the tribunal makes the fact what it is found to be for the purposes of the particular case, although the evidence of the fact may be weak and inconclusive, or although it is apparent that there are sources of information which have not been explored, which if followed might have removed the obscurity. The parties are nevertheless concluded in such a case, because they were parties to a judicial controversy before a tribunal constituted for the very purpose of deciding rights of persons and property and before which they had an opportunity to be heard. But the court stands in quite a different attitude, where it is called upon to compel a purchaser to take title under a judicial sale, who asserts that there are outstanding rights and interests not cut off or concluded by the judgment under which the sale was made. The objection may involve a mere question of fact or it may involve a pure question of law upon undisputed facts. In either case it may very well happen that the question is so doubtful that, although the court would decide it upon the facts disclosed, in a proceeding where all the parties interested were before the court, nevertheless it would decline to pass upon it in a proceeding to compel a purchaser *10 to take title and would relieve him from his purchase. The reason is obvious. The purchaser is entitled to a marketable title. A title open to a reasonable doubt is not a marketable title. The court cannot make it such by passing upon an objection depending on a disputed question of fact, or a doubtful question of law, in the absence of the party in whom the outstanding right was vested. He would not be bound by the adjudication and could raise the same question in a new proceeding. The cloud upon the purchaser's title would remain, although the court undertook to decide the fact or the law, whatever moral weight the decision might have. It would especially be unjust to compel a purchaser to take a title, the validity of which depended upon a question of fact, where the facts presented upon the application might be changed on a new inquiry or are open to opposing inferences. There must doubtless be a real question and a real doubt. But this situation existing, the purchaser should be discharged. (Shriver v. Shriver, 86 N.Y. 575, and cases cited;Hellreigel v. Manning, 97 id. 56.)

The power of sale in the will of John McKie was vested in his executors named in the will, "or such one or more of them as shall take upon him or themselves the burden of the execution of the will." There were four persons named as executors. On the probate of the will in 1828, as a will of personal estate, letters testamentary were issued to three of the executors, viz.: Thomas McKie, William McKie and Andrew Stark. The will was proved as a will of real estate in 1833. William McKie did not join in the deed to De Forest of February 14, 1833. If he qualified as executor, and, with his co-executors Thomas McKie and Andrew Stark, undertook the burden of the execution of the will, and was not subsequently discharged, or did not renounce his executorship, or refuse to act as executor, then it seems to be conceded that the power of sale was not well executed by the conveyance of his two co-executors, in which he did not join. The court below inferred a renunciation or refusal to act on the part of William McKie, from certain facts which appeared, prominent among which are the circumstances; that in 1832 Stark and Thomas McKie took *11 from the city of New York a release of certain quit rents charged on the premises in their names as acting executors; that the deed of February 14, 1833, describes the grantors as acting executors, and recites the authority conferred by the will; the advertisement and sale of the premises at public vendue to De Forest for $16,150; that De Forest in 1833 entered into possession of the premises under the deed from the two executors, and continued in possession until his death in 1873, and that the premises continued to be occupied under his title until the commencement of the present action in partition in 1881, without any question having been raised as to the validity of the executors' deed. On the other hand it may be plausibly urged that the issuing of letters testamentary to William McKie, in connection with Stark and Thomas McKie, creates a presumption that William McKie did take upon himself in 1828 the execution of the will; that there is no evidence of any actual renunciation of his office as executor, or refusal to act; that the explanation of the quit-claim of April 29, 1835, may be, that it was procured to remove a doubt or to remedy some supposed defect in respect to the execution of the power by the deed of February 14, 1833; that it was not until the death of the children of John McKie that any persons were in a position to question the title of De Forest and his grantees, except the testator's son William, and he received, as may be supposed, his share of the consideration of the sale by the executors, and had no interest to question the title. We do not intend to say that a jury might not be justified, upon the facts presented on the application in this case, in finding that William McKie did renounce his executorship or refuse to act as executor prior to February 14, 1833. (See Doyle v. Blake, 2 Schoales L. 229; Wasson v. King, 2 Dev. B. 262.) But such a finding would depend upon inferences and presumptions by no means incontrovertible, and would not bind the issue of the children of the testator, claiming title as against the purchaser in this proceeding, and there is, we think, such a doubt in respect to the fact that the court ought not to compel the purchaser to complete his purchase upon the *12 assumption that Stark and Thomas McKie were the only executors authorized or required to join in the execution of the power. In an action of ejectment by the children of Thomas to recover their interest, would the court be authorized to direct a nonsuit against them on the ground that the facts (as now presented) conclusively established a good execution of the power of sale? We think this question must be answered in the negative.

The question whether the children of the testator, John McKie, took under the will an absolute fee, or only a fee determinable on their death, leaving issue, is one of law purely arising on the construction of the will. It is a question which, under the decision of this court in Chrystie v. Phyfe (19 N.Y. 344), would require grave consideration before pronouncing against the claim of the issue to take as purchasers. The quit-claim of April 29, 1835, does not, therefore, remove the doubt cast upon the title growing out of the execution of the power of sale. The answer to the claim that De Forest and his grantees have acquired a title by adverse possession has been indicated. The possession did not commence to be adverse against the issue of the testator's son Thomas until his death in 1875, and it is the question as to the rights of the issue of the children of John McKie which creates the doubt as to the title tendered to the purchaser in this proceeding.

These views lead to a reversal of the order of the General Term, and the affirmance of the order of the Special Term, discharging the purchaser, etc.

All concur.

Ordered accordingly.