135 N.Y.S. 1056 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
This is an appeal from a judgment foredlosing a mortgage on certain real estate in the village of Tarrytown and directing a sale of the property. The mortgaged premises consist of four parcels, designated respectively as (1) the stone yard, (2) the point dock, (3) the lumber and coal yard, and (4) the, Tripp lot. The mortgagors’ interest, if any, in this real estate was acquired from one Simon Shindler, who died seized in fee in 1883, leaving a last will and testament which was duly admitted to probate the same year: By the 4th article of the will the testator devised the lumber and coal yard and the Tripp lot to his. executors, to. hold in trust during the lives of his daughter, Cornelia Caroline Shindler (now Eobinson), and his son, Samuel W. Shindler, and to pay the income to said Caroline C. Eobinson during her life. The provision for Samuel W. Shindler is immaterial, as he predeceased his sister. The will makes the following provision for the disposition of the trust estate after the- death of Cornelia CL Eobinson, who is .still living: “And upon the further trust oh the death of my said daughter Cornelia Caroline * * * to convey the property in this article of my will mentioned to ¡Simon W. Sencer
By the 6th article of the will the point dock property was devised in trust to the executors to pay the income to the testator’s daughter, Cornelia 0. Robinson, during her lifetime and upon her death the corpus of the trust estate was to be disposed of in the same manner as the corpus of the trust estate created by the 4th article.
By the 5 th article the testator directed the executor to sell the stone yard property, and to apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment of any mortgage on the property devised in trust by the 4th article of the will. There was a mortgage of $5,000 on that trust property. The stone yard property has never been sold, and the mortgage on the trust estate has never been satisfied.
By the 7th article of the will the testator gave another son, James Shindler, “ all the rest and residue ” of his estate, “real and personal and effects whatever of whatever description and wherever situated not hereinabove otherwise devised, bequeathed or appropriated. ”
On the 27th day of March, 1893, Cornelia 0. Robinson, the fife beneficiary of said trust estates, and the remaindermen executed the mortgage in question upon the trust real estate and the stone yard property to James Shindler.
On the 5th day of April, 1893, James Shindler and his wife, the plaintiff herein, executed a deed to Cornelia 0. Robinson and the remaindermen. By this deed James Shindler granted and released unto them so much of the real estate heretofore referred to as vested in him under and by virtue of the residuary clause of the will. The habendum clause provided that Cornelia 0. Robinson was to have and to hold the premises for and during her natural life, and that upon her death the same were to go to the remaindermen absolutely, subject, however,
On May 24, 1898, James Shindler duly assigned the mortgage to his wife, Juliette Shindler, who thereafter instituted this action to foreclose the same. From the judgment of foreclosure directing a sale of the mortgaged premises, said Cornelia 0. Eobinson, life beneficiary of the trust estates, and the living remaindermen and the representatives of all the deceased remaindermen have appealed, claiming that the mortgagors had no mortgageable interest in the premises covered by the mortgage.
The learned trial court in its first conclusion of law held that the stone yard property had been equitably converted to personalty by the peremptory direction for its sale, contained in the 5th article of the will. All the parties to this appeal concede the correctness of that conclusion. Nevertheless, the counsel for the plaintiff respondent claims that the appellants had a mortgageable interest in that property and that the property could be sold upon the foreclosure of the' mortgage, subject to the power of sale in the executors. Neither the property directed to be sold by the will nor the proceeds thereof is specifically given to any of the mortgagors by the terms of the will. The executors are directed to sell the property and apply the proceeds to the payment of a mortgage on the trust estate. None of the appellants has sufficient interest in such property to create a mortgage lien upon it enforcible by foreclosure and sale. (Stake v. Mobley, 102 Md. 408; Walker v. Killian, 62 S. C. 482; Chick v. Ives, 90 N. W. Rep. 751.) In Stake v. Mobley (supra) the facts were much more favorable to the validity of the mortgage than they are in the case at bar. There the mortgage had been executed by one to whom the proceeds of the equitably converted real estate had been given by the will. Nevertheless, the court held that such beneficiary could not create a mortgage lien upon the realty which had been converted to personalty by a power of sale. Of course, in the case at bar it may be that the mortgage would operate in equity as an assignment of any interest that any of the mortgagors may have in a surplus^ if any, left after
The trusts created by the 4th and 6th articles of the will-are express trusts to receive the rents and profits of real estate and to apply the same to the use of Cornelia C. Robinson during her lifetime. She had no interest or estate in the land as such by virtue of the trust (Noyes v. Blakeman, 6 N. Y. 567; Real Prop. Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 50; Laws of 1909, chap. 52], § 100), and she could not convey her beneficiary interest (Laws of 1909, chap. 52, § 103). The property, therefore, if sold under mortgage foreclosure, must be sold subject to the trust estate in the trustees, who are not parties to this action and who hold for the benefit of Cornelia C. Robinson, the cestui que trust, and the judgment appealed from must be modified so as to protect her interests. As she did not possess sufficient interest to create a mortgage lien upon the property, a question might possibly be raised as to the enforcement of her personal liability in this action (see Dudley v. Congregation, etc., of St. Francis, 138 N. Y. 451, 457-459), but no such question was raised upon the trial, nor has it been presented on this appeal.
The children of the life beneficiary are given contingent remainder interests in the trust estate. The language of the will is that upon the death of the life beneficiary the executors are to convey the trust estate to the designated children of the life beneficiary “or such of them and such other children as she may leave her surviving at the time of her death in fee simple absolute in equal portions.” In reaching the conclusion that these remainder interests are contingent rather than vested, no special significance has been accorded to the fact that the direction to the executors is “to convey ” the property to the remaindermen. Such a direction would not necessarily be inconsistent with the vesting of the remainder interests upon the testator’s death. (Campbell v. Stokes, 142 N. Y. 23.) The intention of the testator, as deduced from the entire instrument, is the primary canon of construction in determining ' whether the interests are vested or contingent. It would seem
At common law contingent remainders were interests or possibilities rather than estates (Fowler Eeal Prop. [3d ed.] 209).; and for a time they were not supposed to be the subject of alienation. (2 Washb. Real Prop. [6th ed.] § 1557.) Finally, however, it was held that such interests were inheritable or devisable, could be assigned in equity and released at law to an owner .of the land in possession, or transferred to strangers by resort to the doctrine of estoppel. (Reeves Real Prop. Special Subjects, § 608.) By the Beal Property Law contingent remainders are classified as expectant future estates and are declared to be “ descendible, devisable and alienable, in the same manner as an estate in possession. ” (Laws of 1909, chap. 52, §§ 35, 36, 37, 38, 40, 59.) Thus by the mandate of the statute such contingent interests now, with few exceptions, are descendible, devisable and alienable. (See Moore v. Littel, 41. N. Y. 66; Hennessy v. Patterson, 85 id. 91, and Kenyon v. See, 94 id. 563.) Of course, where the contingency upon which the remainder is to vest is in respect to the person who is to take rather than the event, the remainder interests are not alienable, devisable or descendible. (See Robinson v. N. Y. Life Ins. & Trust Co., 75 Misc. Rep. 361.) So, too, in the case at bar the death of the contingent remaindermen during the lifetime of the life beneficiary will! defeat the vesting of their interests, and, therefore, such interests can be neither descendible nor devisable, terminating as they do with the deaths of their owners during the lifetime of the life beneficiary. It does not follow, however, that the pres
The cases cited by the appellants, holding that a mere possibility not coupled with an interest is not assignable to strangers, are not in point with the facts in the case at bar. The contingent remaindermen had more than a mere possibility of acquiring an estate. They had a fixed vested right, acquired by will at the instant of the testator’s death, to have the estate in possession upon surviving the life beneficiary. That right was a fixed right, rather than a naked possibility, to take as purchasers under the devise in the will and upon the death of the life beneficiary. Such a vested right in a contingent remainder is recognized as an estate by the Revised Statues, and is alienable by the owner. (See Hennessy v. Patterson, supra, 103; Belcher v. Burnett, 126 Mass. 230, and Putnam v. Story, 132 id. 205, 211.)
Considerable space has been devoted in the briefs to a consideration of the effect of the deed given to the mortgagors by James Shindler. It does not appear whether he is now living. He is not a party to this action, and consequently will not be bound by any judgment rendered herein. His deed does not in terms purport to convey any interest in the estate that might come to him as one of the heirs at law of the testator. It purports to convey merely such interest in the mortgaged premises as may have vested in him by virtue of the residuary clause of Simon Shindler’s will. Should all the remaindermen predecease the fife beneficiary, in view of the inclusive nature
It follows that the judgment should he modified by excluding the stone yard "property from the premises to he sold, and by inserting a provision that the sale he made subject to the trusts created by the 4th and 6th articles of the will of Simon Shindler, deceased; and as so modified the judgment should be affirmed, without costs.
Jenks, P. J., Burr, Woodward and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified in accordance with opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs.