184 N.Y. 601 | NY | 1906
Alexander T. Stewart, a naturalized citizen of the United States, after acquiring the premises in question by purchase, died in 1876 seized and possessed of the same. They are situated in the city of New York where he had resided for a long time and the action was brought on the theory that he died intestate. He left no descendant, but some evidence was given tending to show that he left him surviving one William Stewart, a cousin, who died in 1888 at the age of about sixty years, having always been a non-resident alien, leaving the plaintiff, his grandson, also a non-resident alien during his entire life, as one of the persons entitled to inherit from him, provided he died intestate, and provided also that the right to inherit was not defeated by alienage. No declaration of an intention to become a citizen was ever made by the plaintiff or by any of his ancestors, nor has any attempt to convey said premises been made either by him or by any ancestor.
When the plaintiff rested the trial court dismissed his complaint solely for the reason "that the plaintiff, being an alien, bases his right to recovery upon his immediate ancestor, who was an alien also at the time of his death as well as at the time that he took under A.T. Stewart, if he took at all." No other question was considered either by the trial court or by the Appellate Division, which unanimously affirmed the judgment rendered by the trial court and for substantially the same reason.
The only question presented for decision is whether lands in this state inherited in 1876 by a non-resident alien from a naturalized citizen, who took by purchase, could be inherited in 1888 from such non-resident alien by his nearest descendant, who was also a non-resident alien? *603
This question is answered by our recent decision in McCormack
v. Coddington (
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.