Akin v. . Kellogg

23 N.E. 1046, 119 N.Y. 441, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 561, 74 Sickels 441, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1105
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 1046 (Akin v. . Kellogg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akin v. . Kellogg, 23 N.E. 1046, 119 N.Y. 441, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 561, 74 Sickels 441, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1105 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The complainant is the widow of Benjamin Aiken, deceased, who, in his will, made certain provisions for her out of his estate, which were expressed to be in lieu of her dower rights. They gave to her one-third of the personalty absolutely, and the net income of one-third of the real estate, which was vested in a trustee for that purpose, during her life. She did not commence any proceedings, or take any steps towards a recovery or assignment of her dower in the real estate, within the year succeeding the testator’s death, and this action was commenced by her some three years afterwards. Through it she seeks to obtain a decree relieving her “ from the penalty imposed by statute for not having, within one year after the- *446 death of her husband, entered on the land to be assigned to her for her dower, or commenced proceedings for the recovery or assignment thereof,” and permitting her to make her election and to renounce the testamentary provision.

The allegations in the complaint are that plaintiff was ignorant of the nature and extent of the estate of said Benjamin Aiken at the time of his death, and for a long time thereafter, and until his executor filed his accounts and asked for a final settlement; that Asa B. Kellogg, the husband of the defendant Sarah A. Kellogg, had been, for many years prior to the death of the said Benjamin Aiken, the agent and confidential adviser of said Benjamin Aiken, and had transacted all Ms business for him, and had been familiar with the affairs and property of the said Benjamin Aiken; that after the death of the said Benjamin Aiken this plaintiff had great confidence in said Asa B. Kellogg, and put entire faith in his representations; that the said Asa B. Kellogg was also the agent of his wife; that shortly after the death of the said Benjamin Aiken he stated and represented to plaintiff that it would be more advantageous to her to accept the provisions of the will than to claim her dower in the real estate left by him, and that such representations were made to plaintiff in the presence of his wife, acting as her agent and for her benefit. She avers that the statements were made for the benefit of Mrs. Kellogg, the owner of the lands out of which the dower is sought, and that by them she was induced to omit and neglect to take steps towards a renunciation of the testamentary provisions and towards securing her dower interest in the real estate, which she would have taken had she not relied upon them, or had she been informed of the actual condition of the estate.

I thmk, even if we assume the truth of these charges of her complaint, that her right to relief in equity is most doubtful. She does not ask for relief against some positive act of her commission, procured by the fraud of another; she asks for it because, through reliance upon the statements of others, she remained inactive, and thus suffered the period of time to *447 expire, within which she should have been diligent to ascertain and to secure her rights.

How equity does not interfere to grant relief, when one has failed in diligence, or in the performance of an obvious and imperative duty imposed by law. It does not rise above the common law and the statute. Its office is not to relieve against a hardship, merely as such; nor should its interference be moved by mere opinion in the judge. I do not think the equitable powers of a court can be properly invoked to interfere with the established rules of law; though the same result may be often reached by an injured party, in preventing another from beneiitting by an act or contract, procured by his artifice, or deceit. The theory of estoppel might be available in some such case. Here the complainant was apprized by the will of an option offered to her with reference to her future property rights, and it became at once her legal duty to be diligent and careful in acting, if she proposed to take what the law assured to her, in place of what the will gave. The ¡Revised Statutes have but followed the common law, in their provision for an election by the widow between a testamentary gift in lieu of dower and the dower right itself; but they have further provided that the widow shall be deemed to have elected her devise, or pecuniary provision, unless, within one year after the death of her husband, she shall enter upon the lands to be assigned to her for her dower, or commence proceedings for the recovery or assignment thereof. Where, then, a provision is, by the express terms of the will, made in lieu of dower, the Avidow is obliged to make an election, Avhetlier to accept it, or to renounce it for what the law gives to her. She cannot have both, and she is at once chargeable with the duty of informing herself, so as to make her election; and that she shall have a certain period of time for that purpose, the legislature has provided AArhat Avas deemed a reasonable season of delay, and its enactment that the election must be made Avithin one year has the same force as a statute of limitation upon the widoAv’s rights. The object of the legislature was to compel the widoAv to make her election a reasonable *448 time after the death of her husband. (Hawley v. James, 5 Paige, 446.) The right to dower out of the estate is a strict legal right, of which the widow cannot be deprived, save by her own act in waiving it, or in accepting some other and inconsistent provision; nor does the statute attempt to deprive her of it, but it provides that where something else is given, to her in lieu of it, if then she does not do some act evidencing a renunciation of the gift, in favor of what the law will admeasure to her, within the period of a year after the husband’s death, such conduct shall be deemed an acceptance of the husband’s provision for her. This being then a statute of limitation upon the widow’s right to enforce her claim to dower, the policy of the law in such a case, as in all cases involving the operation of such a statute upon a person’s rights, or demands, forbids the granting of relief against its provisions. The statute has acted and the right has gone.

Hor is this the ordinary case of election, where knowledge is necessary in order to make it validly, and, hence, where there was a mistake of facts, or a misconception as to rights, relief in equity is allowable. Here the statute does not offer, or create, the election. That existed already. The office of the statute was to impose a limitation of time upon the exercise of the power to elect, and to bar any subsequent exercise of it.

But a phase of this case is presented as to a possible estoppel upon Mrs. Kellogg, through the acts alleged. A party may be estopped from taking advantage of the legal helplessness of another, by reason of his conduct or representations having brought about such a condition. Is that the case here ? Assuming that the allegations of the complaint might be deemed, with some latitude of judgment, to make out such an apparent estoppel upon Mrs. Kellogg, do the proofs make out such a case ? I am unable to agree in such a view.

The testator died in 1882. The lands in question had been conveyed to his daughter, Mrs. Kellogg, for a nominal consideration, in 1877. Testator and his wife had lived upon them much of the time. Five days after his death the deed of con *449 veyance was recorded. The statements, which the plaintiff refers to as having been made by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 1046, 119 N.Y. 441, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 561, 74 Sickels 441, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akin-v-kellogg-ny-1890.