14 N.Y. 426 | NY | 1875
This is an action for the partition- of lands in the city of Bochester of which Oharles Mulford died seized. The plaintiff, a daughter of the deceased owner, claims to be entitled as an heir at law. The defendants are Mrs. Mulford the widow, Mrs. Wright another daughter of the deceased owner, and the executor and executrix named in his will, and certain tenants in possession of parts of the premises sought to be partitioned. The title of the plaintiff is controverted by the defendants, who set up the will of the former owner and insist that the premises and the whole estate therein are effectually devised in and by such will to persons other than the plaintiff, and that she has no estate therein as heir at lawT, and no estate" or interest in the premises except a contingent beneficial interest in the rents and profits for her life, after -the death of her mother, Mrs. Mulford. The plaintiff claims in hostility to the will, and alleges the invalidity of the disposi-. tion attempted to be made of his property by the testator. Although in form an action of partition it is really a suit to determine and settle the title to the realty mentioned in the pleadings. This form of action is at least a doubtful procedure for the trial of adverse or hostile claims to real property. The title of the parties should be first established by the proper action before proceedings taken for a partition. There should be a tenancy in common, and an actual or constructive possession by the plaintiffs. (2 R. S., 317; Brownell v. Brownell, 19 Wend., 367 ; O' Dougherty v. Aldrich, 5 Den., 385 ; Striker v. Mott, 2 Paige, 387; Bradstreet v. Schuyler, 3 Barb. Ch., 608.) An action for partition cannot be made a
If the provision made for Mrs. Mulford is inseparably connected with and dependent upon the other dispositions of the will especially the devise to the daughters and their children as a part of a general scheme for the disposal of the property of the testator, and the whole estate therein, the case is directly within Knox v. Jones (47 N. Y., 389), and the entire devise void, and the plaintiff is well entitled as heir at law to an equal moiety of the estate of the deceased as tenant in eommon with her sister, subject to the dower right of her mother in the realty, and her rights to share in the personalty. The absolute ownership of the personalty and the power of alienation of the realty would be suspended for a longer period than two lives in being at the death of the testator. (1 R. S., 723, §. 15 ; id., 773, § 1.) If however the devise to Mrs. Mulford of the rents and profits for her life is independent of the other and subsequent disposals of the estate in controversy, that is of the devise of the rents and profits of the same property to the daughters for their lives after the death of Mrs. Mulford, and the devise over of the estate upon their death, the action of the plaintiff must necessarily fail. She would have in that event no present right of action for a partition of the realty, whatever her rights might be upon the termination of the life estate of her mother. It matters not so far as the plaintiff’s present right to a partition is concerned whether the-legal estate for the life of Mrs. Mulford is in her under the enactment (1 R. S., 727, § 2) declaring that every person entitled to the possession of lands and the receipt of the rents and profits thereof shall be deemed to have a legal estate therein of the same quality and direction, and subject to the
The judgment must be reversed, and as the right of the plaintiff rests entirely upon the construction of the will of Mr. Mulford, and a new trial cannot change the rights of the parties, the complaint must be dismissed with costs.
All concur, Chüboh, Oh. J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed, and judgment accordingly.