3 Sandf. 531 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1850
The object of this bill is to charge the separate estate of Mrs. Blakeman, a married woman, with the payment of various sums of money, that are alleged to- be due to the plaintiff, for his disbursements and services as her
We are satisfied that all the material allegations in the bill in relation to the employment of the plaintiff, and the nature and value of his services, are sufficiently established by the proofs, and consequently that we have only to consider the question of law, whether he is entitled, in whole or in part, to the relief that has been decreed to him.
The bill avers that all the suits, in which the plaintiff was employed, had a direct relation to the estate held in trust for Mrs. Blakeman, and that when he was employed, it was expressly understood and agreed, that he should be paid for his services, out of this estate, and that it was upon the faith of this agreement that his services were rendered. The bill also avers, that in two of these suits, those which are last mentioned in the bill, the assent of Mrs. Blakeman’s trustee to the employment of the plaintiff, upon the terms that have been stated, was expressly given, but there is no such averment in relation to the remaining suits, nor does it appear from the evidence that such was the fact.
In order to determine whether a proper decree has been made, we must first inquire into the nature of the estate or interest of Mrs. Blakeman, in the property which is sought to be charged, and which the bill and even the decree describes, as her separate estate. If this description is true, the propriety of the decree in its present form, is not to be questioned, for no doctrine is more •fully and clearly established, than that a feme covert in regard to her separate estate is considered, in equity, in all respects, as a feme sole.
The rule was first laid down in these "broad terms, by Lord Hardwicke, in Peacock v. Monk, (2 Ves. Sen. 190,) and for a time, courts of equity seem to have hesitated as to its adoption, and were disposed to qualify and restrict its application. No traces, however, of such hesitation and doubt, are to be found in the more recent decisions. But on the contrary, they have
In some of our sister states, a rule exactly the converse of that which prevails in England, has been adopted, but our own decisions have followed substantially the English doctrine. (Jaques v. Meth. Epis. Church, 17 John. 548; North American Coal Co. v. Dyett, 7 Paige 9; S. C. 20 Wend. 570; Gardner v. Gardner, 7 Paige 112; Cumming v. Williamson, 1 Sand. Ch. R. 17; Curtis v. Engel, 2 Ibid. 287.)
Had the trust deed, which is in evidence in this case, been executed before the revised statutes were in force, this equitable doctrine would have been applicable in its whole extent, and as the terms of the deed impose no restraint on Mrs. Blakeman’s power of disposition, we could not have hesitated to affirm the decree exactly as it stands. Upon this supposition, Mrs. Blake-man would have been an equitable tenant for life with an unlimited power to dispose of and charge her estate, and the facts set forth in the bill and substantiated by the proofs, would have given to the plaintiff an unquestionable title to the relief that he has obtained. But the deed was not executed until 1842, and we agree with the learned counsel for the defendant, that this circumstance has rendered the authorities upon which the plaintiff’s counsel mainly relied, wholly inapplicable. It is in the revised statutes that we must now seek the rules, that in con-
The trust which the deed creates, is to receive the rents and profits of the lands, and pay them over to Mrs. Blakeman, to her separate use during her life, and it is therefore valid, according to a recent decision of the court of appeals, which has fortunately settled a long disputed and very doubtful question, (Leggett v. Perkins 2 Comstock’s R. 297,) as an express trust under the third subdivision of section 55, in the article of uses and trusts. (1 R. S. 728.)
By a subsequent section in the same article, it is declared, that no person interested in such a trust can assign, or in any manner dispose of his interest, and we entirely assent to the opinion of Chancellor Walworth, in L'Amoureux v. Van Rensselaer, (1 Barb. Ch. R. 36,) that the necessary effect of this prohibition, is to prevent the beneficiary from pledging the rents and profits by anticipation, and from creating any lien thereon, in law or in equity, by any contract means or process whatever. The words of the statute operate as an absolute restraint of alienation in any form. A charge upon lands, or upon the rents and profits, is a contingent disposition of them, partial or entire, according to the amount of the charge, and it is obvious that the amount of the charge, or of successive charges, may be such as to absorb, when enforced, the whole value of the lands, or the whole rents and profits during the continuance of the trust.
It follows from these observations, that the claims of the plaintiff, so far as they rest upon the personal agreement of Mrs. B., her promise, that he shoidd be paid out of the rents and profits, cannot be sustained; she had no right to make the promise, nor have we the power to compel its execution. These items, therefore, in his account which embraced the costs and fees for his profes
Although, for the reasons that have been given, the larger portion of the claims of the plaintiff must be disallowed, it by no means follows, that the decree which he has obtained is to be
That such are the general rules of law, was not denied by the learned counsel for the defendant; but he strenuously insisted that where a trust is created under the revised statutes, in relation to the receipt and application of rents and profits, the trustee has no .claim to be reimbursed for any expenses, however necessary, that are not expressly authorized by the terms of the trust, nor can it be denied that there are some expressions in the opinion
The agreement of the trustee, in the present case, that the plaintiff should be compensated for Ms services, out of the rents and profits of the estate, was reasonable and just, and must be carried into effect. The decree, however, must be so far altered, as to limit the recovery of the plaintiff to the sum with interest, that the agreement of the trustee embraced; and thus modified, it is affirmed, but without costs to either party on this appeal.