Chambers v. Tulane

9 N.J. Eq. 146
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.J. Eq. 146 (Chambers v. Tulane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chambers v. Tulane, 9 N.J. Eq. 146 (N.J. Ct. App. 1852).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainant seeks to enforce the performance of an agreement in writing, made and executed between himself, as the executor of the last will of James Hamilton, the younger, deceased, and the defendant, Paul Tulane.

The agreement is for a house and lot of land in the borough of Princeton, which the complainant agrees to convey to the defendant, and the defendant agrees to purchase at a price of seven thousand one hundred and fifty dollars.

The defendant, by his answer, resists a specific performance, on the ground that the property in question is part of the real estate of which James Hamilton the elder died seized, and which was disposed of by his will; that James Hamilton the younger is not the sole devisee of the land mentioned in the agreement, but takes only an interest with several other children of his father; that no power is given to the executors by the said will to sell this land, and that if any such power is given, it is not transmitted, by operation of law, or otherwise, to the complainant, as the executor of James Hamilton the younger.

Looking at the bill alone, I cannot ascertain what the question in controversy is between the parties, nor can I see that it makes any case calling for the court’s interference. It is true, with the aid of the answer, and of the briefs of counsel, I can see that there are questions which may arise of very considerable importance, but they never can arise upon any facts stated in the bill.

[151]*151The agreement set oat by the complainant, is one executed between himself, as the executor of James Hamilton the younger, and the defendant. First, the will of James Hamilton the younger, is set out at length. The bill then alleges that James Hamilton, the younger, was, at the time of his death, the executor of his father’s will. Then the will of the father is introduced at length; then follows the agreement in question, and then the allegation that the complainant tendered the deed in pursuance of the agreement, and that the defendant refused to receive it. And this is the whole case made by the bill. What eonneetion the will or estate of James Hamilton, Sr., has with this agreement, or how, in an agreement between James Hamilton, Jr.’s, executor and the defendant, a controversy can arise, involving the question mainly discussed on the argument- — whether the executor of an executor can execute a power conferred on the former by the testator, to sell lands, in no manner appears; nor is there an allusion to any facts or circumstances by which it could be conjectured that any controversy as to these matters could possibly arise.

The bill does not state, nor intimate, whose lands these were, that the complainants agreed to convey to the defendant; whether they were lands of which James Hamilton, Sr., died seized, and if so, how the right to sell them devolved upon the complainant; or whether they were part of the real estate of the complainant’s testator; or whether they were the complainant’s own lands. The complainant shows no right, title, or interest in any way, to the land embraced in the agreemen t; and if, in this case, I decree a specific performance, I must compel the defendant to pay upwards of seven thousand dollars, without the complainant’s showing, or even alleging that he has any right whatever to execute the conveyance for which this consideration is paid.

But it appears by the answer — and the arguments of counsel on both sides were based upon the assumption — that the land which has given rise to this suit, was land which belonged to the real estate of which James Hamilton the elder died seized, and part of which, the complainant alleges, James Hamilton, [152]*152Jr., as executor, was empowered, by his testator’s will, to sell, and which power, by his death, was transmitted by law to his executor, who is the complainant, and the other part of which James took, as devisee under his father’s will.

As the questions arising upon such a state of facts have been fully discussed, and the complainant may amend his bill to correspond with the facts as they exist; and as both parties desire a settlement of the questions involving their respective rights, I will consider the bill amended in the particulars referred to.

But there is another defect in this bill, which must be removed before the questions alluded to can be properly presented for determination to the court.

James Hamilton, Sr., left his wife Sarah executrix, and his two sons, James and Henry, executors of his will. Whatever power of sale was conferred by the will, was to be exercised after the decease of his wife Sarah, and after Henry arrived at the age of twenty-one years.

Admitting that, by the will, the power of sale of the land in question was conferred on the' executors, there can be no pretence that the complainant, in the capacity of executor to the will of James, can have any right to interfere with the execution of the will of James Hamilton, Sr., if Henry, the other executor, is living. The bill does not show that Henry is dead, or that he has renounced, or by what right this complainant can supersede him. The answer alleges that Henry is dead. But how is the fact? Must the court take the case as made by the bill, or by the answer ? Though the fact is stated in the answer, the complainant may or may not be willing to take it as a part of his case. But I suppose the fact to be that Henry is dead — that he died before James Hamilton, Jr., and that the complainant is the executor of the surviving executor of the will of James Hamilton the' elder.

Upon this assumption, let us examine whether the complainant can fulfill his part of the agreement, and can give to the defendant a good title to the land embraced in it. It is admitted that if he cannot, the defendant ought not to be held to a specific performance.

[153]*153In examining this question, I must draw my facts from the briefs of counsel. As there stated, they are admitted to be correct, and the pleadings must be amended to correspond.

It is admitted that part of the land in controversy is embraced in the devise in the fifth clause of the will; and the residue in the devise contained in the sixth clause.

As to the portion embraced in the fifth clause, the complainant insists it was devised to James Hamilton the younger, in fee simple; and that as there is no dispute but that ample power is given to the complainant by the last will of James Hamilton the younger, to sell all the real estate of which he died seized, the complainant can make a good title for that part of the land covered by this agreement. And as to the residue, namely, that embraced in the sixth clause, the complainant insists he has the right to sell and convey it, by virtue of a power of sale contained in the will of James Hamilton the elder.

To the devise made to his son James, in the fifth clause of the will, as well as to the devise to Henry, in the sixth clause, the testator annexes this condition, “ and it is my will that after those two events, (these two events were the death of his widow and his son Henry’s arriving at lawful age,) mentioned in the above fifth and sixth sections, shall have taken place, the two lots aforesaid shall be valued by discreet and indifferent persons chosen by the parties, and that they, my two sons, shall pay to each of their surviving sisters, or to their lawful representatives, each one equal share, they, my said sons, reserving to themselves each two equal shares therein.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.J. Eq. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-tulane-njch-1852.