160 N.Y.S. 610 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1916
The Statute of Limitations has run against plaintiff’s claim and, therefore, it will be unnecessary for the court to pass upon the question of the validity of the transfer of the Lake Ontario Wine Company to the Neimans and the validity of the mortgage of the Rochester Trust and Safe Deposit Company so far as they affect the interest which the plaintiff had in the property under the conveyance from Charles Hutte to Joseph P. Fetzner. ■
I find nothing-, in the circumstances connected with the transfers from' Fetzner to the wine company to charge him with actual fraud and it may be mentioned ' that there is nothing in the evidence to charge the Neimans or the Rochester Trust and Safe Deposit Company with any bad faith or fraud in connection with their respective transactions.
If any legal reflection is to be cast upon the trans- ■ actions between Fetzner and the wine company it relates to his authority under the deed to convey the interest of his children to the company. This is not a case in which the investment made by Fetner should be judged by or limited to the investment required by a court of equity in the absence of any directions in the deed. In this instance there was a direction contained in the deed as to the investment of the interest of the children and the question is whether or not its language authorized Fetzner to invest the property of his children in the wine company particularly in view of the fact that he held a majority of the stock of the company.
The language of the deed is that he was “ authorized and directed, where in his discretion he deems it wise and expedient to do so to sell and dispose of the property in fee which under this deed is granted to Minnie, Arthur and Florence Fetzner, and to take in exchange money or other property of at least equal
Fetzner unquestionably believed that he had a legal right to exchange the property of his children for stock in the wine company and therefore his act in so doing, if it was contrary to the terms of the deed, was a constructive fraud only. This fraud dated from the deed given November 9, 1903, if it did not date from the earlier deed of November 30, 1901, which it was intended to correct. The statute allows ten years in which an adult may commence an action of the character of this one on the ground of constructive fraud. Code Civ. Pro. § 388. The ten-year limitation in this instance expired November 9, 1913, but at that time plaintiff was an infant and did not become of age until January 31, 1914. She had one year after attaining
Under any view of the facts it seems to me that the Statute of Limitations has' run against her claim and that the claim should be dismissed.
Ordered accordingly.