Bostwick v. Hall
This text of 191 A.D. 610 (Bostwick v. Hall) 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.
Opinion
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage executed m the year 1895 by the trustee under the will of Eliza D. Hall. She died in the year 1894. The action is defended by one of the remaindermen of the trust estate who has also acquired the rights of the other remaindermen. The ground of the defense is that the trustee had no authority to give the mortgage.
The testatrix devised certain real estate including that subsequently covered by the mortgage herein in trust for the benefit of her son Bray D. Hall (not the defendant) and directed that the premises should be rented by the trustees under her will and the rents thereof applied “ to the payment of the expenses of the trust property, taxes thereon, the neces[612]*612sary expenses of repairs and insurance, and all other expense of executing the trust, including fees of the trustees,” and that the remainder of the rents and income should be applied to the maintenance and support of her said son and his family. She further provided that upon the death of her said son if no issue survived him the premises which were subsequently incumbered by the mortgage should vest absolutely in her heirs. She further provided that if by reason of sickness or other infirmity of her said son or by reason of other adverse circumstances the income which should be realized from the trust estate should be insufficient for his comfortable support and care or for any and all the purposes for which the trust was created her trustees might sell that portion of the devised real estate which was subsequently incumbered by the said mortgage and apply the avails of the sale to the support of her said son and to the other purposes of the trust.
In the year 1895 on a petition by the only trustee then acting stating that the real estate was in a dilapidated condition and in need of repairs and that the income from the trust estate was insufficient for the support of the said Bray D. Hall an order was made by the Supreme Court authorizing the mortgage in question covering the same premises which the testatrix by her will provided might be sold by her trustees under the circumstances therein specified. Pursuant to such order said mortgage was executed. Bray D. Hall died in the year 1899 never having had any issue. Under the will title to the real estate vested in another son of the testatrix and two sons of a deceased son. The two latter were infants at the time of the execution of the mortgage and neither they nor the surviving son of the testatrix had notice of the proceeding which resulted in said mortgage. That proceeding was instituted under chapter 886 of the Laws of 1895 amending the Revised Statutes
The statute was amended by chapter 136 of the Laws of 1897.
The subsequent amendment of the statute by chapter 242 of the Laws of 1907
It is now strenuously contended that the power of sale in the will included the power to mortgage. This question as it here presents itself is not an open one. In Potter v. Hodgman (81 App. Div. 233; affd., on opinion below, 178 N. Y. 580), a case which is undistinguishable from the present case, it was held that a mortgage executed under a power of sale was void.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.
1 R. S. 730, § 65, as amd.— [Rep.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
191 A.D. 610, 181 N.Y.S. 793, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostwick-v-hall-nyappdiv-1920.