11 N.Y.S. 148 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
This is an appeal from a judgment of actual partition, and a judgment in a cross-action adjudging and determining who is entitled to the interest of Eliza McGillis, a life-tenant, after her death, and the death of her husband, John McGillis.' The questions arise out of the provisions of the will of William Caldwell, late of Albany, deceased, upon facts agreed upon by the parties. William Caldwell, a citizen of the United States, residing at Albany, H. Y., made his will and codicil, dated, respectively, March 29 and December 29, 1841, which were admitted to probate as a will of real and personal estate in August, 1884. The will named four executors, none of whom qualified but Theodrick Bomeyn Beck. The testator was a bachelor, and his heirs at law were his three sisters, Jane, Harriet, and Ann Maria, and their three children. Jane married Stephen Sewell, of Montreal, Can., and their children were aliens. But in 1830 the legislature of Hew York passed an act removing their disability to inherit as aliens, and conferring upon them the capacity to inherit William Caldwell’s property. Harriet married Theodrick Bomeyn Beck, of the city of Albany, and Ann Maria married James Low, also of Albany. All of the sisters above named died before the testator, each leaving children surviving. The testator by his will devised to Eliza McGillis certain real estate for life, and after her death to John Mc-Gillis for life, and after his death, or the death of both the life-tenants, the remainder in fee-simple to the lawful issue of Eliza McGillis, then living, in the same proportion as they would inherit from her under the laws of Hew York, if she were an inhabitant, if she and they were native-born citizens of that state, and she had died intestate, lawfully seised of such property in fee-simple. Eliza McGillis was a native-born citizen of Hew York, but on the
It is insisted on the part of the appellants that the judgment in the action of Beck v. McGillis, reported in 9 Barb. 35, construing the will of William Caldwell, is conclusive upon all the parties to that action, and vested the title to the remainder of the lands devised to Mrs. McGillis after her death absolutely in the heirs at law of the testator, and that that vested estate thus fixed by the decree of a court of competent jurisdiction cannot in another action be divested, or the regularity or validity of that decree attacked collaterally in this action. The language of that decree is as follows: “It is now adjudged and decreed, and this court, by virtue of the power and authority in it vested, doth adjudge and decree, that the devises and bequests contained in the first clause of the last will and testament of William Caldwell, late of the city of Albany, deceased, dated the 29th day of March, 1841, and the codicil thereto, dated December 29th, in the same year, [which said will and codicil are set out at length in the complaint herein,] in favor of his daughter, the defendant, Eliza, wife of John McGillis, and whereby an estate for life is given' and bequeathed to the said Eliza McGillis in certain real and personal estate therein mentioned, are valid; and that the provisions in said will and codicil in favor of the said John McGillis, the husband of the said Eliza, and of the said Mrs. Charlotte McGillis, Elizabeth McGillis, and Reginald McGillis, infant children, of the said Eliza McGillis, so far as they relate to the personal estate thereby bequeathed to them after the death of the said Eliza McGillis, are valid; and, so far as they relate to the real estate thereby attempted to be devised to them, the same are void by reason of the alienage of the said John McGillis, and the-said infant children, and of no effect or validity whatever; and that the said) real estate in which an estate for life is devised by the said will and testament,- and the codicil thereto, to the said Eliza McGillis, vested in the heirs at law of the said William Caldwell, deceased, on his death, subject only to the life-estate of the said Eliza therein; and the defendants Catharine Eliza; wife off Peter Van Cortland, Helen Louisa, wife of William Parmelee, being each entitled to an undivided one-sixth part thereof; the defendant James Caldwell Low, lo the undivided one-third part thereof; the plaintiff Edward Quinsey Sewell, and the defendants Charlotte, wife of John Humford, Mary, wife off Charles Jones, Augusta, wife of Philip Duenford, Jane Ann Jameson, and ■Stephen Charles Sewell, each to an undivided one-sixth part of the remaining one-third part thereof, subject to the life-estate of the said Eliza McGillis therein, as aforesaid.” It will be seen from the decree above quoted that Judge Hakkis, the learned justice who was called upon, in an action brought for that purpose, to give a judicial construction to this will, not only declare® the invalidity of the provisions thereof so far as it assumed to devise the remainder in fee of the real estate in controversy in this action, but in the same decision and decree settled (if a decree in that action could settle) the ultimate right of the parties to the remainder in said lands, as to which, by his decision, the testator died intestate, by reason of the alienage of the devisees of such-remainder. The doctrine is quite elementary that the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is conclusive between the parties to it,' who had their day in court; and, as to them, it cannot be attacked collaterally in another action as to matters in issue, or properly tried in the former action. And even where some doubt may exist as to the right to maintain an action in a. given case, yet, when a judgment has been rendered in a court having general jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, they are concluded by the decree pronounced and unreversed upon the issue to which they were parties in the action. Blakely v. Calder, 15 N. Y. 617.
But it must be conceded in this case that, as to after-born children of Mrs, MeG-illis, the decision in the action for the construction of the will can have no application. Their rights must be determined under the will and the law as it is found when they appear upon the scene claiming under the will. If, by the will, they are then the objects of the testator’s bounty, their rights must be protected and enforced by the court. Let us assume, for the purpose of testing the rights of these after-born children, that at the time of the tes»