Leonard v. Burr
CASES IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
ALBANY, SEPTEMBER, 1858
18 N.Y. 96
It was prima facie evidence (and sufficient, no suspicious circumstances appearing), that the defendant is the person against whom the judgment was rendered, that he has the same name; and the judge at the trial properly assumed that fact. There was nothing to submit to the jury. (Jackson v. Cody, 9 Cow., 140, and cases cited; 2 Cow. & Hill‘s Notes, 1301.)
No error was committed in respect to the evidence.
My conclusion is, that the judgment should be affirmed
PRATT, J., dissented; COMSTOCK and SELDEN, Js., did not take part in the decision.
Judgment affirmed.
LEONARD v. BURR.
By a will made in 1842, the testator devised to B the use of certain land “until Gloversville shall be incorporated as a village, and then to the trustees of said village to be by them disposed of for the purpose of establishing a village library:” Held, that irrespective of the validity of the devise over to the trustees, the estate of B terminates upon the incorporation of Gloversville.
The devise of an estate, determinable upon the happening of a collateral event, is not enlarged by the failure of a devise over for remoteness or other invalidity. Otherwise, when the prior estate is subject to a conditional limitation which cannot take effect.
It seems that the devise to the trustees of Gloversville, though for charitable uses, is void for remoteness. A suspension of the absolute power of alienation, without any devotion of the income of the property to charitable purposes, for an indefinite period, is not within any principle by which perpetuities for such objects can be excepted from the general rule of law.
“3. I give, devise and bequeath, unto Benjamin Bailey, my one-horse pleasure wagon, harness and horse; also, the use of three and a half acres, lying east of the road opposite the homestead, and being a part of the same, until Gloversville shall be incorporated as a village, and then to the trustees of said village, to be by them disposed of for the purpose of establishing a village library, provided an amount of money equal in value shall be raised and invested by said trustees in the purchase of books for said library.”
The premises in the complaint are part of the three and a half acres. On the death of Mills, Bailey took possession of the lands devised, and remained in possession until the 30th of March, 1848, when he and his wife, by a quit-claim deed, conveyed the premises to the defendant, who took possession, and remained in possession thereof until the commencement of this action. On the trial, the plaintiffs offered to prove that Gloversville was, previous to and at the commencement of the action, to wit, on the 27th of January, 1853, incorporated as a village; but the defendant objected to such testimony, insisting that it was immaterial and irrelevant, and the court, on that ground, refused to receive the same. The plaintiffs excepted to the decision.
The answer of the defendant contained, among others, this allegation: “And the defendant further says, that the
Upon the facts found, the court adjudged, as matter of law, that the premises described in the complaint were, by the third clause of the will, devised to Bailey absolutely and in fee simple; that he had good right to convey the same to the defendant, and that the defendant obtained a good and valid title thereto in fee simple, by virtue of said devise and conveyance, and was entitled to judgment. Exception was taken by the plaintiffs to this decision.
Judgment having been entered for the defendant, according to the decision, an appeal was taken by the plaintiffs. The judgment was affirmed at general term, and the plaintiffs appealed to this court.
John Wells and Nicholas Hill, for the appellants.
William Wait and John H. Reynolds, for the respondent.
STRONG, J. The devise to Bailey is, by the terms of it, “until Gloversville shall be incorporated as a village.” These words are part of the devise itself. The use of the land, which imports the land, is given to him until the happening of that event. The event was contingent when the will was made, and at the death of the testator. Had the will stopped here, in respect to a disposition of this land, no one would doubt that the estate of Bailey would have been limited in duration to the contingency mentioned. He would have taken a base or qualified fee; an estate which might have continued forever, but which would have been liable to determination by the occurring of the contingency. The qualification to the devise would have created what is termed in the books a collateral limitation, making the estate determinable upon an event “collateral to the time of its
I am unable to see how the devise to Bailey, by the words of the will giving him the use of the land until the event above specified, is affected, as to the duration of the estate, by any other part of the will. The devise over, in the same clause of the will—when Gloversville shall be incorporated—to the trustees of said village, to be disposed of for the purpose and with the proviso therein stated, is a further disposition of the land, to take effect upon the termination of the estate of Bailey. It was not intended thereby to abridge Bailey‘s interest, but to give the land to others when his interest had ceased. The language of the devise over is, “and then,” obviously upon the incorporation of the village, “to the trustees.” The incorporation is fixed as the limit of the prior estate and the period of commencement of the subsequent one. Whether, therefore, the latter can be upheld, or is invalid for any cause, can make no difference with the former estate, which had come to its appointed end by an event wholly independent of the operation or failure of that attempted to be created by the will to succeed it.
If the devise of the first estate had been in fee, with a proviso, that, upon the contingency expressed in the will, the trustees should have the land, the case would be very different. The first estate would then be determined only by the second taking effect. That would be according to
It was doubtless the intention of the testator to dispose absolutely of the entire interest in the land, but he intended to give the land to Bailey until a particular event, and then to the trustees. Assuming the devise to the trustees to be void, his intent, as to that, must fail; but there is no ground for claiming that, in that case, he intended Bailey‘s estate should continue beyond the limit prescribed in the devise to him. The event was not foreseen, and consequently no provision was made for it. The court cannot supply, what probably the testator would have done, if he had known the law when he framed the will. (Pickering v. Langdon, 22 Maine, 428, 429; Chapman v. Brown, 3 Burr, 1634; Doo v. Brabant, 4 Durn. & East, 706.)
Several cases arising upon the Eden will are referred to and relied upon in favor of the defendant. (Anderson v. Jackson, 16 John., 382; Lion v. Burtiss, 20 John., 483; Wilkes v. Lion, 2 Cow., 333; Waldron v. Gianini, 6 Hill, 601.) By that will certain lands were devised to each of two sons of the testator in fee. It was then directed that if either should die without issue, his share should go to the survivor; and in case of both their deaths without issue, the testator‘s brother and sister should have all the property. It was held that the limitation over to the surviving son was valid as an executory devise, and, having taken effect in his favor, the Supreme Court held that he became seized, of the land devised to the deceased son, in fee tail with a remainder expectant in favor of the brother and sister, which estate
Some other cases are cited by the defendant‘s counsel. In Jackson v. Brown (13 Wend., 437), the testator devised lands to his son, S. B., for life, with remainder to the first son of S. B. for life, with remainder to the first and every other son and sons of the eldest son of his son, S. B., successively, to hold the same in tail male. The court decided that the limitation over to the great-grandson was too remote, and that the particular intent of the testator, to give life estates to the sons, must therefore fail; but, to effect the general intent, to keep the estate in his family as long as possible, construed the devise to give a life estate to the son and an estate tail to the grandson. The point of the case is, that the general intent of a testator, apparent upon a will, will be carried into effect, if practicable, although his particular intent cannot prevail. In the present case no intention of the testator, as to the disposition of the land after the termination of the first estate, appears upon the will, except that which, assuming the devise over to be void, the law will not execute.
In Doe ex dem. Cannon v. Rucastle (8 Man., Grang. & Scott, 876), the testator devised land to his son for life, and from and after his death gave the same to the issue of his son, and if he should not have any, to the testator‘s heirs at law. The court decided that the son took an estate tail. In Ibbetson v. Ibbetson (10 Simons, 495), the only point adjudged was that a trust of personal estate was void for remoteness.
The foregoing are the principal cases cited on the part of the defendant; the remaining ones are to rules about which there is no dispute.
I am satisfied, for the reasons stated, that if Gloversville has been incorporated, and the devise to the trustees cannot have effect, the defendant, as the grantor of Bailey, has no estate in the premises in question, and therefore that the court below, at the trial, erred in deciding the contrary, and in the rejection of the evidence offered to prove that the incorporation had taken place.
If the village of Gloversville has been incorporated, and the trustees have an estate in the land under the devise to them, the plaintiffs, of course, cannot recover, as they must have title in themselves to maintain the action. The defendant may avail himself of the title of the trustees, although not connected with it, as a bar to the action. But if the trustees cannot take the estate designed to be given them, which appears to have been assumed by the counsel and the court at the trial, and Bailey‘s title has ceased by its own limitation, the testator, as to this land, after the determination of Bailey‘s interest, died intestate, and it belongs to the plaintiff, in right of the wife as heir at law.
The question of the validity of the devise to the trustees does not arise on this appeal, as it does not appear that Gloversville has been incorporated. Until that fact is proved, it will not appear that the estate of Bailey has terminated, and the question upon the devise will not be reached. It was considered, at the trial, that the point was involved in the question of evidence, in reference to materiality; that if the devise to the trustees was void, the estate of Bailey was an absolute fee; if valid, the title would be
My conclusion is, that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
DENIO, J. The defendant maintains that if the devise to the trustees of the village of Gloversville shall be held invalid on account of remoteness, the prior devise in favor of Benjamin Bailey is to be construed as conveying a fee simple; but if wrong in that position, he then insists that the devise to the trustees is effectual and that title out of the plaintiff is thus established. If successful in either position, he will be entitled to prevail in the action.
First. Assuming the devise to the village trustees to be void, it is, for the purpose of determining the effect of the prior disposition, to be considered to be stricken out of the will; and if it could be established that such prior devise would have carried a fee simple if nothing further had been said, it is clear that the ineffectual attempt to make a further disposition of the property, by way of a conditional limitation, will not prejudice the prior estate. But the devise to Bailey is not of a fee simple, but only of the use of the premises “until Gloversville shall be incorporated as a village.” The testator then attempts to give a fee simple to the trustees of the contemplated village. If this is effectually done, the estate of the village corporation commences at the time Bailey‘s estate expires, not by way of substitution or in derogation of the estate before given, but as a disposition of the remainder of the
The cases relied on by the defendant‘s counsel are plainly distinguishable from the present. In all of them the first devise was of a fee simple or fee tail by the terms of the limitation, subject to be defeated by an executory devise, which, if it took effect, displaced the estate of the first devisee. In such cases, if the executory or conditional limitation fails on account of remoteness or other cause, or if the fact upon which it is limited to arise never takes place, or if it becomes impossible, the estate of the first devisee remains unimpaired. Such were the cases arising under the will of Medcef Eden. He had two sons, Medcef and Joseph, to each of whom he devised separate pieces of land in fee, making use of the usual words of inheritance. In a subsequent clause he declared that if either of his said two sons should depart this life without lawful issue, his share or part should go to the survivor; and in case of both their deaths without lawful issue, to his brother and sister living in England. It was held that the failure of issue mentioned was not indefinite, but referred to the period of the death of the sons, and that consequently they did not respectively take estates tail but estates in fee, subject to be defeated by the executory limitations in favor of each other. Both the brothers died successively without issue, and then a further question arose whether the ulterior limitation in favor of the testator‘s brother and sister, which was in somewhat different
We concur in this explanation of the doctrine, and think it decisive of the present question. This conclusion is as consistent with all we can know of the intentions of the testator as it is possible to make it. It is true, as is argued, that he did not design to die intestate as to any portion of his estate in this land: He intended to give a certain interest to Bailey and the residue of the estate for public purposes. Bailey has enjoyed the interest provided for him; but we see that as to the rest, assuming the further limitation to be void, the rules of law do not permit his intentions to be carried into effect. We are asked to conjecture that if he had been aware of the rule of law he would have given the entire estate to Bailey. This we do not know. We have no means of determining what, in that event, he would have done with the remaining interest in the land. We, therefore, hold it to be undevised. The law then steps in and appoints the succession to the testator‘s heir, precisely as it would have done with the whole interest if he had made no will at all.
There are two methods by which the absolute ownership and power of alienation may be suspended: one is by creating a future estate by way of executory devise or contingent remainder. In such cases, as it cannot be known in whom the future estate will ultimately vest, and as the person in whom it will so vest may not be in existence, no person can convey an absolute fee. The present case belongs to this class of dispositions tending to perpetuity. The village corporation, if it should be created, would be the recipient of the remainder in fee, but until it should come into existence the ultimate fee would be in abeyance. The other manner is by annexing to a present absolute estate in fee a trust, which by the general provisions of law would render it inalienable (
There is no devise of the residue of the testator‘s estate, but only a power in the executors to sell, and this does not give an estate by implication. (
The judgment of the Supreme Court must therefore be reversed and a new trial awarded, with costs to abide the event.
The decision was put upon the ground stated in the opinion of STRONG, J., and first discussed in that of DENIO, J.; JOHNSON, Ch. J., COMSTOCK, HARRIS, PRATT and ROOSEVELT, Js., concurring. JOHNSON, Ch. J., COMSTOCK and ROOSEVELT, Js., concurred with DENIO, J., as to the point secondly considered in his opinion, but the court did not pass upon it.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.
