9 N.Y.S. 671 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The plaintiffs, as executors, made a contract with the defendant for the sale to him of a piece of land of which their testatrix died seised. The defendant raised various objections to the title, only one of
It is admitted by the submission that the testatrix died possessed of personal property sufficient in value to pay all her debts, funeral expenses, all expenses of administration, and all the pecuniary legacies given by her will, and that her executors received from her sufficient personal property to pay and discharge all the above obligations. In other words, it is admitted that the-plaintiffs received from the property of the testatrix sufficient personal property to discharge all their obligations as executors. It is urged by the plaintiffs that the testatrix made her executors the sole judges of the expediency of a sale of the whole or a part of the real estate, and that, even if that were not so, and it was open to the defendant to show that because of some extrinsic-fact the power of sale had become inoperative, yet the burden of proof would be upon the defendant to show such fact, and the bare fact that the testatrix, at her death, was possessed of personal property that was then sufficient in value to discharge all pecuniary legacies, funeral expenses, debts, and expenses of administration, does not show that four months thereafter it could not. be expedient and for the best interest of the legatees to sell a part of the real estate, and the execution of the contract of sale is evidence that the executors deemed it expedient to make the sale.
In the foregoing proposition the learned counsel for the plaintiffs has-strongly overlooked the terms of the will, by which the power of sale is conferred, and the conceded facts contained in the submission. No power of sale seems to be conferred by the terms of the will upon the executors if' they shall deem it for the best interest of the legatees to sell. It is only incase they deem it “most expedient, and for the best interest of all my legatees hereinbefore referred to,” that a power of sale is conferred, and, if the executors have on hand sufficient funds to meet all the legacies referred.