58 N.Y.S. 470 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The controversy submitted to the court for determination relates to the title to a tract of land in Westchester county, fór the sale of which the plaintiff has entered into a contract with the defendant.
Jane A. Fuller died December 13, 1894, seized in fee simple of a tract of land which includes the premises in controversy, leaving a will by which she disposed of her property as follows:
“ Ninth. I direct my said executors to divide all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate into three equal parts and to dispose of them as follows: I direct my said executors to pay over one of said equal one-third parts to my daughter Caroline A. Rhodes, or to her children, share and share alike, if she should then be dead leaving issue surviving. I direct my said executors to pay over one other of said equal one-third parts to my daughter Kate Helena Belcher, or to her children, share and share alike, if she should at the time of my death be dead, but leaving issue surviving her. I direct my executors to dispose of the remaining one of the aforesaid equal one-third parts as follows: To pay over the same to the aforesaid Hew York Life Insurance and Trust Company after deducting therefrom and retaining iu their hands two-thirds of the amount due to me at the time of my death upon all notes held by me at the time of my death, made to me by my daughter Mary S. Rushmore for money loaned or hereafter loaned by me to her, and I direct said Hew York Life Insurance and Trust Company to hold the amount so paid over to them by my executors in trust for the following uses and purposes: To invest the same upon bond and mortgage on real estate or in first mortgage bonds of railroad companies which have not prior to said investment and within five years thereof, defaulted in the payment of interest on their first mortgage bonds ; or to invest the same in such securities as said Trust Company is authorized by law to invest trust funds ; and to pay the income therefrom semiannually to my daughter Mary S. Rushmore during the ¡period of her natural life, and upon her death, to pay over said principal sum so held in trust to her children, share and share alike, the issue of any deceased child of hers to receive the share which would have gone to its parent, if living at the time of the death of my said daughter Mary S. Rushmore, and I further direct my said executors*231 to pay over to my daughters Caroline A. Rhodes and Kate Helena Belcher, one-half to each, the two-thirds of the amount of the notes due to me from my said daughter Mary S. Rushmore and held by me at the time of my death, and deducted and retained by my executors as I have above directed, and to cancel said notes.
“ Tenth. I hereby authorize and empower my executors hereinafter named to sell and dispose of any part or all of my estate, either real or personal, at public or private sale.”
She appointed her two sons-in-law, Bradford Rhodes and Zachariah Belcher, and her cousin, George R. Howe, executors of her will. Under the power of sale the executors, on March 18,1896, conveyed the tract to the plaintiff, who is the wife of the executor Bradford Rhodes, for the sum of $67,000. On July 6, 1896, the executors filed their account in the Surrogate’s Court, wherein they charged themselves with the amount received on said sale, and instituted proceedings for its judicial settlement. There were made parties to this proceeding all the legatees and next of kin or heirs at law of the deceased, including the four infant children of Mrs. Rushmore. Objections were made to tire account, but on October 24, 1896, a decree was made by the surrogate which adjudged that the price obtained on the sale of the land was its full and fair value, which settled the accounts of the executors, and directed a distribution of the fund in court. Mrs. Rhodes, Mrs. Belcher and the Hew York Life Insurance and Trust Company each received the distributive share as determined by the decree of the surrogate. In April, 1899, Mrs. Belcher and Mrs. Rushmore executed a confirmatory deed to the plaintiff.
It is claimed by the defendant, and not strenuously controverted by the plaintiff, that the sale by the executors to the plaintiff was voidable at the election of any of the parties in interest, because she was the wife of one of the executors. We shall, therefore, without any discussion, assume /the correctness of this proposition. But it is insisted on the part of the plaintiff that the decree of the surrogate and the acceptance by the parties of their shares of the proceeds of sale, with knowledge of the original infirmity of the sale, have ratified the sale, so that its validity is not subject to be hereafter impeached. As to the estoppel of the decree of the Surrogate’s Court, counsel for the plaintiff relies on the authority of Mutual
We are also of the opinion that apart from the question of the effect of the decree of the surrogate, the receipt by the trust company of the proceeds of sale ratified the conveyance to the plaintiff and concluded all the beneficiaries under the trust which the company represented. The doctrine “ that an acceptance by the beneficiary of the proceeds of a sale made by a trustee or donee of a power indirectly to himself "x" * * with full'knowledge, and by persons free from disability, would be such an affirmance ” (Boerum v. Schenck, 41 N. Y. 182, 190), is not denied. But it iscoutended that an acceptance by the trustee does not conclude the remainder-men who are entitled to receive the principal upon the termination of the trust. The question of how far the action of a trustee can bind persons interested in the trust estate, in our judgment depends on the estate of the trustee. Ordinarily, in a trust in lands, where the trust is to receive and apply the profits to the use of the beneficiary during life, and the remainder is given to others, the trustee takes only an estate for the life of the beneficiary, and he can no more conclude the remaindermen than if the estate had been a legal. instead of an equitable one. But where the trustee is to convert the land into money, and the remaindermen are not to receive land, but only the proceeds of it, the estate of the trustee is a fee, and his conduct as to the land may conclude all the beneficiaries of the trust.. On this ground it was held in Bennett v. Garlock (79 N. Y. 302) that the Statute of Limitations having run against the trustee, barred the title of the remaindermen who were to share in the proceeds of sale. So, also, it was held in Delafield v. Barlow (107 N. Y. 535) that remaindermen whose interests were of the character hitherto described were not necessary parties to a partition action. We think it plain that the testator, by her will, directed an equitable conversion of her realty. The case is much stronger than that of Delafield v. Barlow. While the power of sale given to the executors is in its terms only discretionary, the language of the gifts to the two daughters directly and to the trustee in favor of the third, clearly evidences the intent that such gifts should be made only in
There should be judgment for the plaintiff on the agreed statement of facts, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment for plaintiff on agreed statement of facts, with costs.