15 Misc. 2d 785 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1958
In this partition action instituted by four sisters, as co-owners of record of the subject real property, against their brother and sister, the two remaining co-owners, the plaintiffs move for an order pursuant to rule 109 of the Rules of Civil Practice striking out the affirmative defense and counterclaim interposed by the defendants on the ground that it is insufficient in law.
The complaint alleges substantially all the allegations necessary to plead an action in partition. The defendants in the said affirmative defense and counterclaim, in substance allege that the deceased mother of the plaintiffs and defendants purchased the property in 1939; that title was then taken in the name of one of her six children at her request and thereafter, at her
The said defense and counterclaim apparently seeks the relief of a constructive trust and a conveyance of title to her as administratrix. In addition, defendants argue that under section 123 of the Decedent Estate Law she may take possession of the real property of such deceased.
The principle governing the establishment by a court of equity of a constructive trust is to prevent unjust enrichment where a confidential relationship is abused by a repudiation, without redress, of a trust orally declared or created (Foreman v. Foreman, 251 N. Y. 237; Fraw Realty Co. v. Natanson, 261 N. Y. 396, 401). To sustain such a complaint or defense, the party pleading must set forth all the essential elements as indicated. This the defendants have failed to do. Nowhere do they allege a breach of the oral arrangement and an unjust enrichment during the lifetime of the deceased. The conveyance was made subject to further direction on the part of the deceased during her lifetime. Having failed to so exercise such demand, the property rightfully belongs to the parties to the action, not only by the conveyance but also by intestacy, and the administratrix cannot exercise such demand after the death of the mother.
Assuming arguendo that the property belonged to the mother at her death, it is elementary that real property of an intestate devolves at the moment of death directly to the statutory dis
The motion is, therefore, granted, with $10 costs.