67 A.D. 549 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The complaint alleges, and the defendant by his demurrer admits, that by the will of Joseph P. Hale the rest, residue and remainder of the estate of the testator, after the payment of certain legacies, was directed to be divided into three parts, one of such parts to be given to the plaintiff’s testatrix, one to the defendant Lucy Ann Hale, the widow, in lieu of dower, and one to the appellant’s testatrix; that the appellant’s testatrix died in the year 1898, a resident of the State of Massachusetts ; that her last will and testament was on the 14th of June, 1898, admitted to probate by the Probate Court
Joseph P. Hale, at the time of his death, is alleged to have been a resident of this State. His will was admitted to probate in the county of New York, and the defendants, the executors of Joseph P. Hale, are now acting as executors of the said estate. The action is brought, therefore, to reach property held by the executors. The letters testamentary having been issued by the courts of this State, the subject-matter of the action is the property held by the New York executors. The action is not brought to enforce any contract or obligation of the appellant as executor, or of his testatrix, nor to recover property in his possession as executor, or otherwise; but to settle the rights of property held in this State by resident executors of a testator who was a resident of this State and whose will was here admitted to probate; and this appellant is made a party to the action simply as one interested in the estate sought to be settled in this action. The appellant’s title to or interest in the estate of Joseph P. Hale accrued by grant of letters testamentary issued by the Probate Court of the State of Massachusetts. His presence as a party to this action is as a person
It is not disputed but that the executors of the estate of the appellant’s testatrix would be proper parties defendant to this action, but the demurrer is based upon the ground that the court has no jurisdiction over the person of the executors appointed by the courts of a foreign State, We think this objection is conclusively answered by a series of cases in this State, of which Toronto General Trust Co. v. C., B. & Q. R. R. Co. (123 N. Y. 37) is a leading case. The plaintiff there, as a substituted trustee, brought an action in this State to recover certain property to which he was entitled as trustee. The will of the testator creating the trust was admitted to probate in Canada. By that will one Muirheid was appointed trustee of certain personal property and accepted the trust. Subsequently the trustee died, and by a decree of the High Court of Justice, Chancery Division, in Canada, the plaintiff was appointed his successor, whereupon it comnienced an action to recover the possession of personal property belonging to the trust. The complaint was dismissed upon the ground that the plaintiff as trustee, appointed in a foreign country, had no standing in court to maintain an action in this State.. The Court of Appeals held, reversing this judgment, that Muirheid, the-original trustee, could have maintained an action in the courts of this State to recover any of the trust property, or for the conversion of such property, or for damages thereto; that “ such an action would not have been in a representative capacity, but in his own right as the legal owner of the property. It might have been necessary for Mm, upon the trial of such an action, to prove the will and put it in evidence for the purpose of showing his title; but it would not have been necessary for him to have the will admitted to probate in this state; ” that if Muirheid had legal capacity to sue here, any one to whom he lawfully transferred his title had the same capacity; that the plaintiff, having been legally appointed trustee in Canada, was put in the place of Muirheid and took the same title that he had, and it thus took the legal title as trustee to whatever there was of the trust estate; and that having been thus clothed with the title to the trust estate in Canada by proceedings in the Canadian actions, it could, standing upon that title, maintain an action here as trustee. This case is now recognized as settling the
If the plaintiff could maintain such an action as the owner of this estate, which vested in him upon the probate of the will of his' testator, he certainly is a proper party to an action which involves the title to property in which his testator was interested and where such interest passed to the executors upon the grant of letters testamentary. To. a complete determination of the question as to the title of the property held by the executors of the estate of Joseph P. Hale, the appellant is a necessary party, as the person in whom was vested the title to a third of the residuary estate of Joseph P. " Hale; and while to establish the appellant’s title it may be necessary 'to prove the proceeding in the Probate Court of Massachusetts, such proof is the evidence of his title. The action, as before stated, is not brought to enforce an obligation of the appellant’s testatrix where he is sued in a representative capacity. He is made a party to this action as the legal owner of an interest in certain property which is the subject-matter of the action. The method by which he acquired such a title is not material so long as the legal title , is vested in him.
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs, with leave to defendant to withdraw demurrer and answer on payment of costs in this court and in the court below.