Atlantic Trust Co. v. Holdsworth

50 A.D. 623, 63 N.Y.S. 756
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 A.D. 623 (Atlantic Trust Co. v. Holdsworth) 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
Atlantic Trust Co. v. Holdsworth, 50 A.D. 623, 63 N.Y.S. 756 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

The questions presented relate to the validity of certain liens upon a onefourtn interest in a portion of the estate of William Tilden, deceased, who, by will, gave all his property, consisting of realty and personalty, to his four sons, subject to an annuity to his wife. By an agreement among the legatees a part of the estate was retained by the executors from the income of which the annuity was to be paid; and the testator’s widow having died in 1896 this action was brought to partition that part of the estate reserved to meet her annuity. The one-fourth share thereof involved on this appeal is that of thesonMilando C. Tilden, who died leaving a widow, Lilian E. F. Tilden, to whom he gave his interest. She subsequently married one Braddon, and, after creating a large number of charges upon her interest in the estate, conveyed it, subject to certain claims designated, to the defendant Holdsworth. The disputed claims may be divided into three classes, first, those of Stuart, Brantford and Thomas G. Hartland and lago; second, that of Holdsworth; and third, the claim of Bon. The asserted claims of the defendants Stuart, Hartland and lago are not assailed in the answers of any of the defendants. As to Holdsworth’s claim a question is presented as to what was the nature of the instrument under which he took title. His theory is that it was an absolute conveyance of all the remaining interests; but the other creditors contend that his instrument was but an assignment of what was left or remained in Mrs. Brad-don after the satisfaction of the liens against her undivided interest in the estate. The determination of this question is important as affecting the third claim, which is a good, equitable mortgage and is enforcible against Mrs. Braddon, but which, because not being in the form of a mortgage or recorded, would not be good, though prior in point of time, as against any subsequent claimant, who in good faith advanced money trusting to her apparent interest in the estate. The claims of the defendants Stuart, Hartland and lago arose by virtue of certain instruments given by Lilian E. F. Tilden to them purporting “to sell” or grant a sum of money payable out of the estate in consideration of the advance to her of a specified amount. Stuart’s “Indenture” is dated February 9,1892, and recites that “the said Lilian Tilden has agreed with the said Frederick Stuart to execute these presents and to sell to the said Frederick Stuart the sum of nine hundred pounds to be payable out of the said one-fourth share in consideration of the sum of three hundred pounds and subject to such right of repurchase as hereinafter contained; * * * that the said Lilian Tilden may repurchase the said sum of nine hundred pounds at any time during three years from the date of these presents; * * * that is to say, at any time before the expiration of six calendar months from the date of these presents by payment of the sum of five hundred pounds * * * between six calendar months * * * and twelve calendar [624]*624months * * * on the payment of six hundred pounds and * * on payment of an additional sum of onp hundred pounds over and above the said sum of six hundred pounds for every period of six months which shall have elapsed before such repurchase shall be effected. And * * * in case that such sum of nine hundred pounds shall not be repurchased on the terms aforesaid before the expiration of three years * * * then the said Frederick Stuart shall, in addition to the said sum of nine hundred pounds, be entitled to a further sum, * * * that is to say, the aggregate amount of interest on the sum of nine hundred pounds calculated from the expiration of three years from the date of these presents at the rate of five pounds per cent per annum, with half yearly rests by way of compound interest. * * *” Similarly the instrument given the defendants Hartland on January 9, 1893, sold to them the sum of £400, to be payable out of the one-fourth share in consideration of the sum of £100; and that to lago, dated February 24, 1893, sold him the sum of £350 similarly payable in consideration of £100. These deeds, it will be seen, were all given prior to the death of the annuitant upon whose death they were to become payable out of one-fourth of the sum set aside to provide the annuity On the trial, David. P. Faekler, an actuary, testified that the present worth of the sum of £900 payable on the failure of a life aged seventy-two, such sum of £900, after the expiration of three years, to he increased at the rate of five per cent per annum until the failure of the life, computed at five per cent, would be £755.28; and on the assumption of four per cent. £814.88; that the value of a reversion of £350 under such circumstances at five per •cent would be £263.06, and one of £400 at five per cent would be £281.91, and at four per cent £300.64. The claim of Holdsworth, leaving out of consideration prior instruments, is formally embodied in an instrument dated June 4, 1896, which recited that Lilian E. F. Braddon had agreed for an absolute sale to him of the said one-fourth share of the residuary real and personal estate, subject to the annuity and subject to the several charges and incumbrances affecting the same specified, and such of them as are valid and subsisting, and in consideration of £2,000 did grant and .assign, as did Herbert C. Braddon, according to his estate and interest, “ the one-fourth or other the part or share to which she, the said Lilian Elizabeth Florence Braddon, is entitled;” that should the share or interest be vested within twelve months, then she should receive one-half the profits thereof, hut if the possession was delayed longer than that date, £500 was to be deducted for each six months’ delay; that subject to the right of prior mortgages or judgments, all surplus income received after March 26, 1896, during the life of the annuitant, should be equally divided between the parties, Lilian Braddon and Frederick Holdsworth. The schedule mentioned includes the liens of Stuart, Hart-land and lago, stated at the full figures. The claim of Charles and Leonie Bon is set forth in a written agreement dated December 18, 1891, entitled an Acknowledgment of Debt.” It states that in consideration of dresses and cloaks supplied to Lilian Tilden’s account, valued at 13,750 francs, she agreed to give a mortgage upon a vested estate in remainder •(namely, the . one-fourth share) for the amount due, with interest at six per cent ■from date. The Bons -had never filed any notice of this agreement, nor was it known prior to this action. The questions urged upon this appeal relate to the nature of the instruments given to lago, Stuart, Hartland and Holdsworth, the nature of the Bon claim and their priority, respectively, to payment out of the real and personal property owned by Mrs. Braddon. With respect to those of lago. Stuart and Hartland. the referee decided, that they were'conveyances, but this conclusion was modified by the judge at Special Term, who held that they constituted only liens or mortgages, and, as against other creditors, were good only for the amount actually advanced, with interest thereon. In this view we concur, because it is difficult to formulate any legal theory upon which these instruments can be sustained as deeds. It must be recalled that the interests which they affected consisted of one-fourth of the real and personal property which, with the the' other three-fourths of the estate, was in the hands of the executors of William Tilden, deceased, subject to the right of such executors upon the death of his widow, the annuitant, to turn the real estate into cash and thereafter to divide the total sum equally among the four sons.

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Related

Atlantic Trust Co. v. Holds-Worth
64 N.Y.S. 1131 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
50 A.D. 623, 63 N.Y.S. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-trust-co-v-holdsworth-nyappdiv-1900.