109 N.Y.S. 349 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
Lead Opinion
This action is in ejectment to recover possession of an undivided interest in real property in .the city ■ of New York. The property was owned,by one John Tonnele, who died on the 26th of November, 1852, leaving a last will and testament that was duly admitted to probate. The testator' left a widow and eight children, his heirs at law. By this will the testator devised to his wife the real property in question during her natural life or as long as she remained his widow, and devised and bequeathed all the rest and residue of .his property,, both real and personal, “ including, after the death or remarriage of my. said wife, whatever I have herein given or devised to her for life or widowhood, respectively,” to his eight children to be equally divided between-tliem share and share alike, “ in such manner that each child shall receive only the net rents, income and profits of his or her share during her life, and at the death of each, child his' or her share - shall go to and vest in his or her lawful issue,” with a remainder over in default of issue. The will further provides.: “Seventh.- And in order inore fully to carry out the objects of this my will, .! do hereby appoint and . declare my executors hereinafter ■ named to be trustees of all property, estate or interests herein "given ..or devised to any one of my children, or that any of my children may be entitled to by virtue of any provision in this my last will, and during the life of such child (excepting the life estate in the mansion house devised to my son) with full power. to retain all such property in their hands .unsold and undivided until after the year-eighteen: hundred and sixty-seven. And 1 do authorize my said
And the will appointed the testator’s wife, Bobert Gilchrist and Abraham 0. Zabriskie executors. The plaintiff, being the sole issue of Laurent John Tonnele, one of the sons of the testator, would under this disposition of' the testator’s property, if valid, be entitled on his father’s death to one undivided eighth part of the testator’s real and personal estate. The testator’s widow died in January, 1868, the plaintiff was born on the 2d of May, 1879, and the plaintiff’s father died on the 8th day of June, 1901. •
The referee found that on the 22d of October, 1874, after the death of the testator’s widow but before the birth of the plaintiff, an action was brought in the Supreme Court of the State of Yew York for a construction of the will of the said John Tonnele, deceased, the plaintiff in which action was Eloise Gedney, a daughter of the testator, and Gilbert Gedney, her husband; that the defendants in that action were the other surviving children of the testator and his grandchildren then living; that the plaintiff herein was then unborn, but that his father, Laurent John Tonnele, was a party defendant; that the grandchildren of said John Tonnele living 'at the commencement of that action were all minors and were represented by guardians ad litem, • that the complaint in that action claimed that the will of the testator was void as violating the statute against perpetuities ; that that action was tried before a justice of the Supreme Court without a jury and resulted in' a decision dated March 5,1877, that tiie provisions of the said will creating and declaring trusts of the estate of the testator suspended the power of alienation beyond the period the statute
The learned referee did not,pass upon the question of the validity of the trust created by the will determining the question solely upon the binding force of the judgment of 1877. There are, therefore, two questions',presented : First, whether the, judgment entered in-the'action in 1877 is an adjudication as to the Validity of this will'that, is binding upon the plaintiff; and, second, if not such an adjudication, wh'ether this will is void- as a violation of the. statute. I will first discuss the question as to the binding force of the adjudication of the action in the .Supreme Court brought in the ■ year 1874. The judginent. roll in that action was introduced in ' evidence. The complaint therein alleges the death of John.Tonnele on the 26th of.'November, 1852, seized and possessed of the real property in question and other real property in, the:-State of New York; that he left a last will and testament which was duly admitted to probate; that the testator’s widow qualified ás executrix and subsequently died; that the other executors failed to qualify and that they subsequently died; that since the death of the testator
The plaintiff has never had his day in court. .Before he was born, by a judgment in ari- action to' which" riéither he nor any one representing' him was a' party, where the ititerests Of his father and Mmself wefe antagonistic; where to get an estate in the property the father, in effect, consented that plaintiff should be despoiled, without attempting to protect his rights, and in which no relief was asked for except an adjudication that a will which devised real property to him be declared void, his property has been taken from him, and
In the first place, it is quite pertinent to, inquire as to the jurisdiction of the, court to entertain such an action. Under the will of John Tonnele, if valid, the fee of this real property vested in his trustees therein appointed, (1B. S. 729, § 60.) Upon the death of the trustees under the statute the trust vested in. the Supreme Court
It is clear, I think, that no cause. of action was alleged, in the complaint in the action in which this judgment was entered, and the
The referee below relied upon Kent v. Church of St. Michael (136 N. Y. 10) and the respondents rely on that case to sustain his judgment. The decision in that case presented a different question and is rather an authority for the appellants. The action there commenced was to compel persons in whose name stood the record title of certain property to execute a deed of the property which had been conveyed to their testator, the deed of which had been lost. The grantor of that deed had died, leaving a will by which she devised
It seems to me that that case is an authority for the plaintiff. Here the court .had no jurisdiction'to deliver~any judgment, merely determining a will was void, and the sole object of the action was to procure such a determination. The father of this unborn plaintiff would secure under such a judgment absolute title to the property, cutting off his children for his own. benefit. The other grandchildren of the testator would have no possible interest in protecting the claim of the plaintiff, while the trustees of the estate, in whom was vested the title to the property, were not parties to thé action, and no one was there to protect their interest, or the interest of those for whom they held the estate in trust. The action was not brought to enforce the right of the plaintiff as against the trustees of the estate, and the persons whom they represented; there was no provision in the judgment protecting either the estate or the
If the court had jurisdiction to determine this .question in a proper áction, with the proper parties before it, it seems to me that there coúld be no judgment binding upon unborn children without the presence of a representative of the trust. By the will a trust was created during the lifetime of the testator’s children, and upon the death of his widow, title to all the testator’s property vested in the trustees, such trustees became the owners of the property, and held it for the children of the beneficiary for life, in whom a remainder had vested or would vest upon the birth of-those born after the trust became established. These trustees died, and under 1 Revised Statutes, 730, section 68, the trust vested in the Supreme Court,
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Patterson, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., concurred; Laughlin .and Houghton, JJ., dissented.
See 1 R. S. 723, §§ 14-16.— [Rep.
Invested with the power and jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery. (See Const. 1846, art. 6; Laws of 1847, chap. 280, § 16; Gardner v. Ogden, 22 N. Y. 327, 332.)—[Rep.
See Code Civ. Proc. .§ 3634.— [Rep,
See 1 R. S. 723, §§ 14-16; Id. 773, §§ 1, 3.- [Rep.
See foot note ante, p. 693.— [Rep.
See Fowler’s Real Property Law (2d ed.), 1016.— [Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
I think the judgment in Gedney v. Tonnele, whether it properly or improperly construed the will of John Tonnele, deceased, is binding on this plaintiff although he was unborn at the time it was rendered. While both the complaint and the judgment in that action are somewhat inartistic it is fair to say that the complaint asked construction and the judgment in fact, construed the trust provisions' of the will. The estoppel of a former judgment extends to those matters which are comprehended and involved in the thing decided as well as to those which were expressly ■ litigated and determined. (Pray v. Hegeman, 98 N. Y. 351.) A construction o.f the will was necessarily involved in reaching any conclusion and it is of no importance whether the conclusion reached was right or wrong.
That judgment was not collusive and the guardian ad litem representing the infants occupying the same relation to the will and trust estate which plaintiff when born occupied, and thus having a common interest with him, raised practically the same questions in behalf of the validity of the will and trust thereunder which plaintiff now raises in the present action.
The guardian ad litem by his brief then urged upon the court that the will should'be construed as “ a devise of each share to one of the testator’s children for life, with a remainder to his issue,” and that the provision as to not selling before 1867. was permissive and not mandatory. These are the only grounds upon which plaintiff now stands or upon which he can stand to uphold the will.
I do not understand that the principle upon which after-born cliil
In Monarque v. Monarque (80 N. Y. 320) the judgment invoked as a bar was entered upon, consent, and in McArthur v. Scott (113 U. S. 340) it was. obtained without'any Iona fide defense on the part of those with like interest. In both cases the judgments were virtual frauds, on after-born children. In ,the l&ter case of Miller v. Texas & Pacific Railway (132 U. S. 662), where it was. held that contingent remaindermen were barred by a decree made before their birth, the court took pains to. .point out that the controlling feature in McArthur v. Scott was the fact that there had been no real defense to the prior decree, relied upon as a bar:
If the action of Gedney v. Tonnele was sufficiently defended by those having an interest in common with'the plaintiff,,it-only remains-to- be considered whether the court had jurisdiction to, render the judgment. The plaintiff, Mrs. Gedney, was a cestui que trust under the apparent trust contained in the will. The only qualifying- trustee had died and the trust was without a trastee. The testator left real property apparently affected by the trust. In the absence of any trustee the execution of the trust devolved upon- the Supreme Court. That court had' inherent power to execute the trust, and might take its execution upon itself and whatever, directions it might make in the course of such execution would be binding on all parties, Kirk v. Kirk, 137 N. Y. 510; Rogers v. Rogers, 111 id. 228.) It could appoint a new trustee, but it need not if it did not choose. It made no appointment, and the cestui, que trust found real property in which she bad a qualified interest and. in which she conceived she had a greater'interest, in legal possession of the court and withheld from her by virtue of an. apparent trust.
Under such-circumstances she came into court, by action, making all living persons having any possible interest parties, and asked the court, to construe, the pretended trust by. which it held in legal cus
If there had been a trustee and he had brought an action as such trustee for the construction of the will, and all parties in being had been made defendants, concededly the judgment rendered would have bound after-born children, for the trustee would have been their representative. The same result would follow if the action had been brought by a cestui que trust, and the trustee had been ihade a party defendant and had joined in the request for a construction of the trust and direction as to his duties thereunder. (Pray v. Hegeman, supra)
I do not subscribe to the doctrine that prior to the enactment of section 1866 of the Code of Civil Procedure (which went into effect in 1880,
Section 1866 of the Code is derived from section 1 of chapter 238 of the Laws of 1853.
The settling by statute of the right to bring an action to construe a will and determiné the validity of a devise of real property could only be in behalf of devisees and heirs who could take title except ■for the provisions of the will. Trustees already had the undisputed right to bring an action for the construction of the will under which they were acting, and to ask direction as to their conduct. (Hawley v. James, 5 Paige, 318, 488.) . There was no occasion, therefore, to-' enact a law in behalf of trustees, and- the law of 1853 must have related to heirs at law and devisees who would take if the trust . were swept aside. The dictum construing the act of 1853 in Bailey v. Briggs (56 N. Y. 415) as giving a right of action only for the. establishment of disputed wills, and not such a-right to the devisee or heir to construe the provisions of- a will, was expressly repudiated by the -decision in Anderson v. Anderson (112 N. Y. 104).
Kalish v. Kalish [45 App. Div. 528) held that an heir.at law claiming in hostility to the will and not included in its trust provi- - sions could not maintain an action to declare the trust void. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment (166 N. Y. 368), but upon other grounds, and expressly held that an heir at law could maintain such an action (page 371).
Wager v. Wager (89 N. Y. 161) and Holland v. Alcock (108 id. 312) and Horton v. Cantwell (supra) and Anderson v. Anderson (supra) and kindred cases are not to the contrary. "Each of these ■ decisions will- be found to turn on points other than the broad principle that an heir or devisee who would take if the alleged trust were void had no right to bring an action in equity to decláre the trust void. In most of them the action was by a .grantee of some devisee under the will who wanted his title confirmed because Of possible future claims. Surely in the absence of objection an heir or devisee whose title was cut off by an alleged trust and who would •take if ;the. trust were swept aside could bring such an action, and if the court entertained it the judgment which it rendered would be
. Mrs. Giedney could not induce the'trustee to bring the action nor make him a party defendant to one brought by herself because no trustee existed except the court itself in which she must bring her action if she brought any at all. She was a cestui que trust, and being an heir at law also did not disqualify her, and she had tire right to bring the action which she did and the court had jurisdiction to entertain it and plaintiff’s rights were sufficiently presented to the court by parties having a common interest with him and were properly defended, and the judgment rendered construed the will and is binding upop him, and, therefore,.conclusive, of his claims in the present action.
I, therefore, vote to affirm the judgment.
Laughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered before another referee, costs to appellant to abide event. Settle order on notice.
See Code Civ. Proc. § 3356.— [Rep.
Amd. by Laws of 1879, chap. 316; rep. by Laws of 1880, chap. 345, § 1, subd. 30; Id. § 5.— [Rep.