Ackerman v. Crouter

59 A. 574, 68 N.J. Eq. 49, 2 Robb. 49, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 155
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 A. 574 (Ackerman v. Crouter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ackerman v. Crouter, 59 A. 574, 68 N.J. Eq. 49, 2 Robb. 49, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 155 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Magie, Chancellor.

James T. Ackerman, the complainant, alleging himself to be a resident of New York, filed this bill, which he has signed as a party, no solicitor of this state appearing.

His bill is for relief, involving the construction of the will of Peter Ackerman. He is one of the residuary legatees under the clause of the will set forth in the prefatory note. He makes parties to his bill all the other residuary beneficiaries, the executors of Peter Ackerman and the four persons named in the fifth clause of said will, also' set forth above.

The bill seeks to make a case for relief upon these chai-ges. Complainant asserts that Peter Ackerman died seized of lands in Bergen county, possession of which has been taken by the four devisees named in the fifth clause of said will, under the claim that all the said lands were thereby devised to them. Complainant claims that, upon a true construction of the clause, only a part of said lands passed to those devisees, and that the remainder of the lands fell within the power of the executors to sell, shown in the eighteenth clause of the will. He contends that that clause not only empowers, but directs, the executors to make sale of all the lands of decedent n'ot specifically devised. He further claims that he, or those interested with him in the residuum of the estate, have demanded that the [51]*51executors should perform their duty of selling the disputed lands, which the executors have neglected or refused to do.

The prayer of the bill is for a decree requiring the executors to make sale 'of the lands in question if they do not pass by the devise contained in the fifth clause. This involves equitable relief, and therefore brings the case presented within the jurisdiction of this court respecting the construction of wills. Hoagland v. Cooper, 65 N. J. Eq. (20 Dick.) 407.

The question thus presented is doubtless within the jurisdiction of this court, although it involves not so much the construction of any obscure- passage of decedent’s will, but rather the application óf the language to the facts. It is in this sense that jurisdiction has been frequently exercised in this state. Benham v. Hendrickson, 32 N. J. Eq. (5 Stew.) 441. It should be exercised in such eases whenever such construction is necessary to relief, which can only be given in equity. It will not be exercised When the question is a purely legal one. Torrey v. Torrey, 55 N. J. Eq. (10 Dick.) 410; Hoagland v. Cooper, ubi supra. If, therefore, complainant makes out a case, by his bill, under which this court can require the executors to perform a duty in the performance of which complainant is interested, jurisdiction ought to be entertained.

The defendants made no objection to- the bill of complainant, either by demurrer or plea. All those made defendants as interested in the residuary clause of the will filed answers admitting the charge of the bill and supporting the complainant as to the relief sought except one, who disclaims any interest.

The executors have filed an answer, -substantially submitting to any proper order or direction of the court.

The four devisees under the fifth clause have joined in an answer denying the charges contained in the bill, and contesting the construction of the clause asserted by complainant, or the application which complainant seeks to attribute to it.

Replications having been filed, proofs were taken before an examiner of this court 'and the cause has been thus brought to hearing.

The facts disclosed are substantially these: Peter Ackerman, at his death, was seized of lands in the county of Bergen, at a [52]*52place called Wortendyke. He had acquired title thereto by a deed from the sheriff of Bergen county, made by force of a fieri facias issued out of this court, upon a decree for the foreclosure of a mortgage or mortgages upon the said lands. This title was acquired on January 16th, 1886, which was the date of the deed made by the sheriff, and decedent continued to hold all of the lands thereby conveyed up to- the time of his death, except some small tracts which he conveyed out of the same, but which were not in question in this case. The sheriff’s deed conveyed the lots in three tracts. The description of the three tracts was taken from the mortgage upon which the decree was made. That mortgage was made by David D. A. Wortendyke and his wife to one Maria Ackerman. Of tírese three tracts the first is a tract or farm conveyed to David D. A. Wortendyke, in 1859, and described as containing fifty acres and thirty hundredths of an acre. The second is described as containing seven acres and twenty-five hundredths of an acre, more or less, and as the property devised to David D. A. Wortendyke by Abraham Wortendyke. It is recited that this tract was declared in said will to be known as the Lewis Masker lot. The third tract is described as being thirteen lots, each fifty feet front, and of a depth of two hundred and two and sixty-one hundredths feet, and as described by the numbers on a map of property of C. A. Wortendyke, filed in the Bergen county clerk’s office, and further described as bounded by avenues. It is conceded and appears by proof that the second tract adjoins the first, and the third tract lies on the opposite side of a public road, facing the first tract. It is charged and proved that David D. A. Wortendyke acquired title to the second lot by' devise from Abraham Wortendyke, whose will was probated on August 19th, 1851?; that he acquired title to the first tract by deed of John B. Wortendyke and wife, recorded July 25th, 1859, and that he became the owner of the third tract by a deed not otherwise described than as being made to him on or about August 12th, 1863.

Tire complainant’s claim, disclosed by his bill, is that the devise contained in the fifth clause of decedent’s will, which is in this language, viz., “the farm I own at Wortendyke, known as the David D. A. Wortendyke farm,” is to be confined, in its [53]*53application to the first tract described in the Ackerman mortgage and the sheriff’s deed, as being the farm conveyed to David D. A. Wortendyke by John B. Wortendyke. This is the first disputed point.

On the part of defendants, it is contended that the second and third tracts, though acquired by David D. A. Wortendyke from different sources than the first tract, were, after his acquisition of title, joined with and, as it were, annexed to the fifty-acre farm, so that the whole was usually denominated the David D. A. Wortendjdje farm, and that it was that aggregation of land which the testator had in mind and expressed by the devise of the “farm owned by me and known as the David D. A. Wortendyke farm.”

The evidence, in my judgment, sustains the defendants’ contention. It makes clear that after David D. A. Wortendyke had the title to the three tracts, which were contiguous, he used them all together, as one farm. The seven-acre tract and the thirteen lots were from time to time cultivated and made use of by him, and he lived in a house yet standing on the fifty-acre tract. The evidence justifies the conclusion that after Peter Ackerman bought the three tracts at the sheriff’s sale he went into possession of all of them, and continued in the combined use of all of them as one farm. It is true that at times the seven-acre tract and the thirteen lots were not under cultivation, but they did not lose their character as part of the farm by the fact that Peter Ackerman, who lived elsewhere, did not continuously cultivate them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kuser v. Herbst
42 A.2d 467 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1945)
Swetland v. Swetland
134 A. 822 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1926)
Achelis v. Musgrove
101 So. 670 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 574, 68 N.J. Eq. 49, 2 Robb. 49, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ackerman-v-crouter-njch-1905.