Cambrelleng v. . Purton

26 N.E. 907, 125 N.Y. 610, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 190, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1522
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 907 (Cambrelleng v. . Purton) 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
Cambrelleng v. . Purton, 26 N.E. 907, 125 N.Y. 610, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 190, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1522 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

This was an action to partition certain real estate in the city of New York, and resulted. in a judgment, directing the sale of the same. The sale was conducted by a-referee under the decree, and Morris Littman became the purchaser. He afterwards applied to the court to be relieved from his bid and to have refunded to him the ten per cent of the purchase-money, auctioneer’s fees and expenses of searching the title which he had paid. This application was based upon an- alleged defect in the title. The Special Term denied the application, and that order having been affirmed at General *613 Term, he appeals to this court. The premises embraced in the partition action, and which were sold to the appellant, were owned by Alfred Colvill at the time of his death, December 6, 1878. He died intestate, and the title passed to his children. The children, who were known to be alive, were all made parties to the action and named in the decree under which the sale was made. The only question that arises in regard to the title relates to the interest of John Colvill, one of the children, who disappeared from his father’s house in New York in June, 1874, and since then has not been seen or heard from, and the order appealed from is based upon the conclusion that he died without children, unmarried and intestate, and that his interest in the real estate decended to his brother and sister surviving, who were alive and parties to the decree. The premises were purchased by the appellant for $24,700, and are located on Madison avenue. The purchaser, in his application to be relieved, states that he is informed and believes that the referee is not able to convey and deliver to liim a good and marketable title. The only question involved in this appeal is whether the facts presented to the court in ■opposition to the application to be relieved from the purchase were of such a character as to warrant the conclusion that the title was good and marketable beyond all reasonable doubt. John Colvill had resided with his father at 251 Fifth avenue in the city of New York up to the time of his final disappearance in June, 1874, and was then twenty-nine yearstof age. From the affidavits of his brother, sister and two or three other relatives of the family and the family physician read in opposition to the application of the appellant, the following facts appear: From 1865 to 1870, he was very intemperate and had spells of very haid drinking about every three months. On these occasions ho disappeared from home and remained away from a week to a, month, and on his return he was generally prostrated and in a very weak and nervous condition. The family physician discovered, from an examination in 1873, that he was suffering from a number of oiganic diseases incident to indulgence in excessive drinking, such as chronic dis *614 ease of the Ever, congestion of the kidneys and valvular disease of the heart. In 1873, at the advice of the physician, he went to the Binghamton Inebriate Asyl inn and remained there for some time, but returned home against the advice of the physician and his family. On his return he indulged in frequent and prolonged debauches which lasted sometimes several weeks. In March, 1874, after one of these sprees, he had a severe illness marked by two violent hemorrhages of the stomach. It was discovered that his kidneys had become much worse, that there was extreme congestion of the liver and that the action of the heart was greatly disturbed. In May, 1874, he again disappeared, was gone about the usual time and returned apparently more prostrated than ever before. The physician, who attended him and who made the affidavit, thought he might die at any moment, and that if he went upon another spree death would be inevitable. The physician states that he had never known such severe hemorrhages of the stomach and was astonished that the man did not die from them. His legs were badly swollen and the action of the heart was labored and intermittent as the result of blood poisoning from the condition of the kidneys. The physician was of the opinion then and so informed the family that under the most favorable circumstances he could not live a year. He gave instructions that it would be unsafe for him to go out of his room and would not allow his sister to see him, and expressed the opinion then that if he got away again he would not come back alive. The physician warned Colvill that another attack woul<J probably prove fatal, but he expressed a desire to die,, as he could not control his passion for drinking. In June, 1874, while he was seriously ill, he was advised of the death of a lady to whom he had been attached and, it was reported,, engaged. He was very much affected by this information and about two-o’clock in the afternoon of that day he told his brother that he had some business tp attend to down town and would return in a couple of hours. His brother saw him enter a Fifth avenue stage; he wore a one-buttoned gaiter and a shoe and left his valise packed in the house- It was raining and he *615 was subjected to an exposure, which from the testimony of the physician and others in the case, was liable to produce his death in a very short time. He has never been seen or heard, of since this disappearance, though his family and friends have made diligent inquiry for and efforts to find him.

The father, it seems, left a considerable personal estate, in which John would, if alive, share with the other children. One of his sisters, in June, 1882, applied to the surrogate to> be appointed administratrix of the estate upon the assumption that he was dead. The surrogate appointed a referee to take proof in regard to the death of John, and he.reported the facts above stated and other facts, and found that he .died shortly after his disappearance in June, 1874. The surrogate confirmed the report and .appointed Mrs. Purton, one of the sisters, administratrix in January, 1883. She administered and distributed John’s personal estate and was discharged. In an action to partition or sell the house on Fifth avenue, brought by one of the heirs, the summons was published as against John, the property was sold for $100,000, and after the sale the question arose as to the distribution of the proceeds. The court in that action found that John was dead and directed that his brother and sister, parties to this action, were entitled to the proceeds of the sale. There is no dispute as to these facts, but the purchaser nevertheless claims that John Colvill may have survived his father, from whom the title to the property descended, and then died, leaving a widow or children surviving or a last will. Mo objection is made, as we understand, to the title on the ground that John may be alive. It is assumed that this position would be sufficiently answered by the fact that service of the summons by publication was made upon him in the action. It is well settled that a purchaser at a judicial sale is entitled to a marketable title, and that has been defined to be a title free from reasonable doubt. A purchaser will not be compelled to take title where a doubtful question of fact relating to an outstanding right is not concluded by the judgment under which the sale was made. (Fleming v. Burnham, 100 N. Y. 1.)

*616 But this rule will not operate in every case" to bar the enforcement of the sale.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 907, 125 N.Y. 610, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 190, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cambrelleng-v-purton-ny-1891.