Allen v. Arkenburgh

2 A.D. 452, 37 N.Y.S. 1032, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 327
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2 A.D. 452 (Allen v. Arkenburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Arkenburgh, 2 A.D. 452, 37 N.Y.S. 1032, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 327 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Barrett, J.:

The question presented is whether tne circumstances attending the agreement in question are such as to impress a trust upon the land which will entitle the plaintiff and the other interested parties to share in the proceeds.

The defendant executrix relies upon the Statute of Frauds, while the plaintiff claims that Mr. Arkenburgh took the property as a trustee for all the tenants; and she invokes the docti’ine that the statute may not be used to shield a fraud. It is conceded that the mere breach of a verbal agreement is not ordinarily such a fraud as is contemplated by the doctrine last stated. (Levy v. Brush, 45 N. Y. 589 ; Wheeler v. Reynolds, 66 id. 221.) It is not enough that one person has relied upon the promise of another with regard to the purchase of a piece of property. The party seeking relief in such a case must go farther, and show a change of position on his part due to such reliance. He must prove, in fact, the elements of an estoppel in pais. As was held in Wheeler v. Reynolds, “ the promisee must have been induced, at the instance of the promisor, to incur some expense or perform some act which he otherwise would not have done.” But this rule applies in its full force only where the parties sustain no trust or confidential relations to each other, where they are simply contracting parties in the ordinary sense. It does not apply where there is a’trust or confidential relation with regard to the property itself, where there is a community of interest between the owners, and where the promise' of one relates to the vested interests of all.

The plaintiff here had a vested interest in the property in question and so had the deceased. So, too, had the other tenants in common. There was a community of interest upon the part of all concerned. It was with reference to this community Of interest [456]*456that the agreement was made. The deceased did not assert his independent fight to purchase the property for his own benefit, but avowed his purpose to buy it for the benefit of all parties in interest including himself. That was what he offered, and that was what they accepted. And he coupled this offer with the suggestion that they .should not bid against him at the sale. In other words, he avowed a trust relationship with regard to the property, based partly' upon community of interest, partly upon . ties of blood. ' It was a plain acknowledgment that there, was, as said, by Miller, J., in Rothwell v. Dewees (67 U. S. 619) : “A community of interest in a common title, which -created such a relation of trust and confidence between the .parties that it would be inequitable to permit one of them to do .anything to the prejudice of the other in reference to the property so- situated.” , -

The authorities make this clear distinction between the- purchase of property by ordinary contracting parties and the acquisition' of joint or common interests, already vested in' several persons by one of their number for the benefit of all. '

In Van Horne v. Fonda (5 Johns. Ch. 388,. 401) Chancellor-Kent said: “ Community of interest produces a community of duty, and there is.no, real difference on the ground of policy and justice whether one co-tenant buys up an outstanding incumbrance or an adverse title, to disseise and expel his co-tenant. It cannot be tolerated when applied to^a common - subject in which the parties had equal' concern, and which created a mutual 'obligation to deal candidly and benevolently with each other and to ' cause. no harm to their joint interest.” The.' learned chancellor admitted that there might be a particular 'case in which -a tenant in common could, buy ■ in an outstanding, title' for his own benefit, but held that this, could not. be done where two were in possession under an imperfect title derived by devise from a common ancestor.

Mitchell v. Reed (61 N. Y. 123) was an action betweeen partners, but.the rule there laid down was held to be applicable to tenants in-common. Speaking of the rule which declares a partner to be a trustee as to renewals of a lease for a term commencing after. the dissolution of the firm, Dwight, C., said (pp. 138, 139): “ On principle, in many cases it is of but little consequence whether the partnership is dissolved or not before- the renewal, since,, if the. [457]*457former partners become tenants in common, the result is the same.” And in summing up his conclusions he says (pp. 139, 140): “ It -cannot necessarily be assumed that the renewal can be taken- by an individual member of the firm, even aftqr dissolution. The former partners may still be tenants in common, or there may be other reasons of a fiduciary nature why the transaction cannot be entered into.”

In Knolls v. Barnhart (71 N. Y. 474) Chief Judge Church ■stated the facts and the principle applicable thereto as follows: <( The possession of the widow as dowress and as gyardian in socage of the minor children was as tenant in common with all the heirs. ■* * * She could not buy in the contract or title for her individ•ual benefit. She occupied a fiduciary relation to the heirs, which would prevent her ¡purchasing for her individual benefit. * * * The general rule is, that one tenant in common cannot purchase in an outstanding claim or title to the exclusion of his co-tenant.”

In Carpenter v. Carpenter (131 N. Y. 101) the defendants, who were tenants in common with the plaintiffs, instigated the. foreclosure of mortgages on the common property (although they had in their hands funds sufficient to pay the interest due), and bought in at the sale'. ' It was held that they were trustees for all interested. Andrews, J., said (pp. 109, 110) : “ If the foreclosure of the mortgages was a proceeding hostile to the defendants, and they had not been in default, and their purchase was made of necessity to protect their own rights, with full knowledge of the situation on the part of the plaintiffs, the moral and perhaps the legal aspect of the case would be altered. But to permit the plaintiffs, all but two of whom were infants, to be cut off by a proceeding instigated by the defendants for that very purpose, and in the absence of any effort on their part to avert the danger, and when they were in actual possession of the common property, receiving the rents and profits, is not a mere ethical grievance, but one which the law will recognize and redress.”

On the other hand, Streeter v. Shultz (45 Hun, 406, affirmed without opinion in 121 N. Y. 652) upholds the right of the tenant in common to deal with the property under the special circumstances therein disclosed. There the defendant bought in the property at a foreclosure sale under a mortgage executed by the plaintiff alone prior to the defendant’s acquisition of his interest. “ There [458]*458was no arrangement between Shultz and plaintiff that Shultz was to buy for joint benefit.” (P. 407.) The sale was open and public,. and defendant paid a fair price. There was not a fact or circumstance in the case except -the joint relation upon which to found the action. It was held that the relation of tenants in common is not such a strict trust relation as would incapacitate- one tenant from purchasing for his individual benefit.

The application of the rule may vary with the variation in the facts, but the general rule may well be stated in the language of . Judge Story in Baker v. Whiting (3 Sumn. 475), that a .

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.D. 452, 37 N.Y.S. 1032, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-arkenburgh-nyappdiv-1896.