104 Misc. 260 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
By the 2d paragraph of the last will and testament of Sarah Fraser the entire use, rents, interest and income from her entire estate was given to her husband during his natural life, or so long as he should remain unmarried. By the codicil it was provided that the husband should have so much of the use, rents, interest and income as should be required for his personal support, etc., during the same period, instead of the entire use, etc. The codicil also declares the intention of the testatrix to be that from such use, income or rents his comfortable support and maintenance shall be paid during such period. The 4th paragraph of the will reads: “ I will and direct that and after the death of my said husband or upon his remarriage and after his sickness and funeral expenses are paid (if he shall die single and unmarried), that any and all real estate and all personal property that may be left at that time belonging to the estate be sold by my executors hereinafter named and after paying all bills and debts as hereinbefore provided, that the avails and proceeds and income
By the 5th paragraph of the will executors are appointed, “ with full power to rent real estate when necessary and to collect rents * * * and full power to sell and convey any real estate at and after the death or remarriage of my said husband using their own judgment as. to the time and times of such sale as shall be for the best interest of said estate not exceeding five years from and after my said husband’s death or remarriage and as much sooner as may be for the best interest of my estate * *
The testatrix died August 27,1891, seized of the real estate described in the complaint, leaving her surviving the husband, John Fraser, and seven children, Sarah J., William A., Washington A., Robert S., John J., George H., and Isaac D. Isaac D. died in 1896, leaving a widow, the defendant Maria L. Fraser, the defendant Olive L. McDowell, and the plaintiff J. Stuart Fraser, as his only heirs at law. John Fraser, the husband of the testatrix, died in 1897, never having remarried.
On the 18th day of January, 1895, the executors of the last will and testament of the 'testatrix and the husband, John Fraser, executed and delivered a deed purporting to convey the real estate described in the complaint to the defendant Sarah J. Fraser, and concurrently therewith the husband, John Fraser, and all of the above named children of the testatrix, excepting
The defendant Sarah J. Fraser went into possession of said real estate under said deed and agreement, paid off the two mortgages in 1897, and in 1899 executed and delivered to one Elliott a warranty deed of the real estate, and by several mesne conveyances the defendant William H. Bowerman now asserts that he is possessed of the entire fee of the real estate, claiming title thereto through said executors’ deed and said agreement, asserting that under the last will and testament of Sarah Fraser, deceased, the title to the real estate vested in the executors of her will, as trus
To entitle plaintiff to maintain partition he must be the owner of an interest in the real estate; he must have title to a part thereof. It does seem that under the will the executors were vested with rights, power and authority which created them trustees of an express trust under the Beal Property Law as defined by section 96 thereof. The will provides for a sale of the real estate within five years after the death of the husband, John Fraser, the sale to be made by the executors for the benefit of the children of the testatrix; the executors are empowered to rent the real estate, collect the rents and pay therefrom to the husband sufficient moneys to provide him comfortable support and maintenance; a sale of the real estate is imperative.
Within all the authorities to which attention has been called such provisions create and constitute an express trust, and by the terms "of section 100 of the Beal Property Law the legal estate vested in the executors, They are trustees of an express trust. The
Within the foregoing authorities it is seen that the executors took title to the real estate as trustees of an express trust. The trust ivas to collect the rents and pay to John Fraser such a portion thereof as would be sufficient to support him during his lifetime, and then to sell the real estate and from the proceeds pay the debts of the testatrix and those debts incurred by the illness, etc., of John Fraser, pay $2,000 to one child and divide the balance equally among the seven children- of the testatrix. Such being the terms of the trust created, it would appear that a sale of the real estate during the lifetime of John Fraser would be in contravention thereof. While it is true that the joining in a conveyance of all beneficiaries with the holder of a power in trust has often been held to pass a good title before the arrival of the time fixed for a conveyance, yet all authorities agree that such a conveyance, to be valid, must not be in contravention of the trust. Kilpatrick v. Barrow, 125 N. Y. 751; Garvey v. McDevitt, 72 id. 562.
The trust was to collect rents and to support John Fraser during his lifetime. The testatrix made that definite and certain. The trustees alone could not convey a good title before the death of John Fraser; John Fraser could not destroy the trust. He was not a life tenant. The conveyance in January, 1895, was a destruction of the trust created by testatrix, in contravention thereof, and was void. The trustees have not
In those cases where the power of sale was to be exercised in the discretion of the trustee-executors it has been held that title did not vest in the trustee, and that failure to exercise the power might well be asserted to constitute an abandonment and termination of the power. Scholle v. Scholle, 113 N. Y. 261; Matter of Tatum, 169 id. 514; Matter of Wanger, 74 Hun, 352.
In those cases where the execution of the power of sale is not necessary to the carrying out of the scheme of the will, and there is no trust, the power will terminate and title revest in the beneficiaries, even though a sale be imperative, where all beneficiaries join in electing to take the land rather than the proceeds of a sale under the power. Trask v. Sturges, 170 N. Y. 482; Prentice v. Janssen, 79 id. 478; Greenland v. Waddell, 116 id. 234.
In McDonald v. O’Hara, 144 N. Y. 566, five of seven beneficiaries elected to take the land rather- than the proceeds of a sale under a power, and it was held that, the two beneficiaries not joining in the election, an injunction would not be continued to restrain a sale under the power.
In the case at bar the sale was imperative in order to provide funds with which to pay the legacy to one
In Waldron v. Schlang, 47 Hun, 252, the will authorized and empowered the executors at any time within five years after the death of testatrix to sell, dispose of and convert into money all real estate, and to divide the proceeds into ten shares and distribute, etc. Nine years after the death of testatrix this power was executed by a conveyance, which was held to be a valid execution of the power.
The holding, therefore, must be that the trust as to Isaac D. Fraser and his heirs has not been terminated by inactivity or by the lapse of time. The trust not having been terminated, the trustees still have title, and the plaintiff, therefore, has not such a title to the real estate as will permit him to maintain partition, and his complaint must be dismissed, with costs.
' Judgment accordingly.