6 Paige Ch. 390 | New York Court of Chancery | 1837
The complainant’s objection to the part of the testimony of Mrs. McNelly which relates to the amount of the proceeds of the real and personal estate which she actually received from Seliick, her brother and agent, appears to be well taken. This testimony does not relate to any matter put in issue by the pleadings, and is wholly irrelevant. It is immaterial in this suit whether the property of the infants, which ought to have been appropriated for the payment or extinguishment of the rent of this lot or otherwise invested for their benefit, has been lost by the administratrix herself or by another who has been permitted to act as her agent. The objection, on the part of the defendants, to so much of her testimony as relates to the declaration of Ritchie as to the place of his birth, is also well taken. No question as to his alienage, or as to his right to transmit the premises by descent to his children, was raised or even suggested in the pleadings. Indeed if the complainant had stated in his bill that Ritchie was an alien at the time of his death, he would have shown that he had no pretence for coming into this court for relief, as he would in that case have had a perfect defence to the ejectment suit at law. And he would also have shown that the lot in question belonged to the people of the state, by escheat, and not to him ; so that his bill against these defendants must in that case have been dismissed with costs, on the ground that upon his own showing he had no claim to any decree against them. These parts of the deposition of Mrs. McNelly must therefore be expunged.
The parts of the testimony of other witnesses, which are objected to by the complainant’s counsel, went to the establishment of several allegations which were distinctly made in the defendants’ answer; and for that reason the testimony was properly received by the examiner. If these allegations in the answer were wholly irrelevant to the subject of the suit, the complainant should have excepted to them as impertinent. But having been put in issue by the repli
The evidences of the title, under which the premises in question were held by Ritchie at the time of his death, establish the fact that the mother of the defendants had by the common law a right to claim their guardianship, by reason of the descent to them ex parte paterna of a freehold estate in land, an undivided two thirds of which was held by socage tenure.
I cannot perceive, however, that the decision of this question as to the right of guardianship in favor of the complainant is calculated in any manner to aid him upon the decision of the main question in the cause. It is evident from the testimony in the case, that the administratrix was not aware of the fact that the lands in question were held by socage tenure, or that she had any right to the custody of the children or the care and management of their lands as guardian in socage; or that the complainant himself supposed he was dealing with her in the character of guardian. As she only had the right to enter in her character as guardian when she leased the premises to Sharp from year to year, the law will presume that she was in as such guardian, and that the infants were seized of the premises in consequence of her rightful possession, until she was guilty of an act which was of itself a disseizin of the infants by selling and assigning the premises in fee. (Podger’s case, 9 Coke’s Rep. 106, a. Goodtitle v. Newman, 3 Wils. 516. Bro. Abr. 235, tit. Descent, pl. 19. Byme v. Van Hoesen, 5 John. Rep. 66.) It could not, however, have altered Putnam’s legal rights in this case if she bad actually assumed the guardianship, and had sold and assigned the lease to him in the character of guardian for the children ; as by the common law neither the guardian in socage or any other guardian had any power or authority to surrender a lease in fee, or to lease the freehold estate of the ward for any longer time than during the probable continuance of the trust: that is, in the case of guardianship by will until the age of twenty-one, and of guardianship by socage until the age of fourteen. (Roe v. Hodgson, 2 Wilson, 129. Doe v. Bell, 5 Durn. & East, 471. Litt. § 123. Cary’s Comm, on Litt. 240.) Here the written instrument executed by the mother does not purport to be a surrender of the lease, but an assignment or conveyance from her in her character of administratrix. And as she had no power, either in her character of guardian or as administratrix, to
Ari estate pur auter vie, which by the English law when limited to a man and his heirs' or devised by will went to .the heir or devisee as special occupant, was a descendible freehold. And as it appears from the case of Pierson v. Shore, cited by the complainant’s counsel from Atkyn’s Reports, that a .lease of such an estate was surrendered by the guardian and afterwards approved by Lord Hardwick, it is supposed that case is evidence of an authority on the part of the guardian to make such a surrender of a freehold estate. A much fuller statement both of the facts of that case and of the opinion of the' courtis, however, found in a more recent publication taken from Lord Hardwick’s own note book. (1 West’s Rep. 711, S. C.) And it there appears that the guardians did not consider themselves ’as legally authorized to surrender the lease, even for the purpose of claiming a renewal upon the falling in of one of the lives upon which the continuance of the lease depended, But as the guardians and trustees were invested with very extensive powers in relation to the management of the estate, although the testator probably through mere inadvertence had not authorized them to surrender the lease for the purpose of renewal, they did what Mr. Blake the counsel of Putnam suggested in this case as the only legal mode of revesting the legal title in the heir of the lessor: that is, they permitted the lessors to re-enter and forfeit the lease for the non-payment of rent, but under a verbal under
There is a class of cases, where the fund belonging to the infant was in the legal power and disposition of the guardian, or where the legal estate was in trust so as to place it fully within the power of the court of chancery as the general guardian or protector of the rights of infants, in which the court has sanctioned acts of the guardian or trustee which were not strictly legal, but which were done in good faith for the benefit of the estate of the infant. There are also some cases of marriage settlements, which in England are governed by legal principles somewhat peculiar, where the court of chancery has interfered to compel an infant or his heirs to fulfil a marriage contract, entered into by such infant with the concurrence of his natural or legal guardians, and where the marriage has been consummated upon the faith of such an arrangement. With these exceptions I am not aware of any case in which this court has interfered to deprive an infant of the legal estate, which had been disposed of without authority during his infancy, unless it was upon some new equity arising out of his conduct, or his acquiescence in the contract or the receipt of the profits or proceeds of the contract, after he became of age. In the ease of Smith v. Low, (1 Atk, 489,) which is more fully reported by West, the decision is put mainly upon the ground of acquiescence; the infants having received the rent under the lease, made by the guardian for their benefit,
In the present case there has been nothing in the conduct of any of the defendants, after they became acquainted with their legal right to the property, which can be considered as fraudulent towards the complainant or as an acquiescence in the assignment of the lease. Even if they had known all the facts of the case as he knew them, I have no right to presume these girls were better acquainted with the law than he was; and if both are chargeable with notice of the general law of the state, he knew the legal title was in the defendants notwithstanding the surrender. He should, therefore, have waited till they became of age, and then have ascertained from them whether they intended to sanction the giving of the lease, before he proceeded to erect a valuable house upon the premises. But if he really supposed the assignment gave him a legal title to the premises, as he. probably did, I may well suppose they were equally ignorant of their legal right to the lot, although some of them had heard that their father once owned it. From the evidence in the case I am satisfied they could not probably have known the facts upon which their rights depended until the summer of 1831, after the buildings had been erected. And they promptly asserted their claim immediately after the second sister became of age, in the fall of that year.
From the facts in this case, however, I have reason to believe the complainant has acted under a misapprehension of the legal effect of the assignment of the lease, although he has not been able to prove that he was advised by counsel that it would be valid and sufficient to reinvest him with the title; and that, under such misapprehension, he has made ■improvements which are far more valuable than the lot itself. The question therefore is, whether this court has thé power to prevent the defendants from taking the benefit of these improvements without making any compensation therefor.
Foreseeing the difficulties of doing justice between the parties consistent with the principles upon which this court.
As the lot was situated at the death of Ritchie, it would have been for the interest of the defendants to give up the lot, instead of applying their personal estate for the payment or extinguishment of the rent, if such personal estate instead of being wasted had been securely invested for their benefit; although the income and probable increase of the value of the lot, in the hands of a person who was in a situation to use it to advantage, by erecting a building thereon, would have been greater than the interest of the $300 required to be paid to extinguish the rent. The result proves, however, that it would in fact have been much better for the defendants that their personal estate in the hands of the administratrix should have been applied to the payment or extinction of the rent, instead of being wasted by her or her agent. The arrangement for giving up the lease being wholly unauthorized, the defendants are therefore entitled to the benefit of the natural increase in the value of the property since that time. I am not aware that the law of any civilized country has directly deprived the legal owner of property of the natural accession to the same; although the supreme court of the United States, in the case of Green v. Biddle, (8 Wheat. Rep. 1,) appear to have supposed that the occupying claimants’ law of Kentucky was calculated to produce that effect indirectly. But the rule of natural equity appears to be different in regard to industrial ac
Here the use of the lot, subject to the widow’s right of dower which the complainant is equitably entitled to under her assignment of the lease although it could not be sold so as to pass the legal title before it was set off to her, is probably equal to two thirds of the rent reserved upon the lease. And if I felt myself authorized to introduce this principle of natural equity into the law of this court farther than it has yet been adopted here, I should direct a reference to a master to ascertain the present value of the lot exclusive of the buildings, subject to the widow’s dower and to the future rents exclusive of her share thereof, and . also to ascertain the present value of the buildings subject to the right of dower therein; and should give the defendants the right to elect, upon the coming in of the master’s report, whether they would retain the legal title to the lot subject to the rent and right of dower, and pay to the complainant the value of such improvements, or would release to him their legal estate in the premises upon being paid the value thereof, as thus ascertained, exclusive of the buildings.
This principle of natural equity is constantly acted upon in this court where the legal title is in the person who has
The only relief which I consider myself as authorized by the law of the land and the settled principles of this court to give to the complainant, is to protect him in his equitable right to the use of one third of the premises during the life of the mother of the defendants, he paying one third of the ground rent and taxes during that time; and also to restrain the defendants from taking possession of the other two thirds of the lot, under their recovery in the ejectment suit, until they shall have paid or tendered to him two thirds of the ground rents which have accrued since he took the assignment of the lease, with interest upon the respective payments from the time such rent became payable by the terms of the lease; and also his costs in this suit to be taxed The value of the improvements, or of the two thirds thereof, must very greatly exceed the use of the defendants’ share of the property and the whole costs of this litigation.