Coffin v. Leech

12 Misc. 593, 35 N.Y.S. 771, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 275
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Misc. 593 (Coffin v. Leech) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coffin v. Leech, 12 Misc. 593, 35 N.Y.S. 771, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 275 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Beekman, J.

Ezra Bucknam died seized of an undivided half of the premises in question, leaving a will- under which he devised said .property for the life of his wife, with directions to his executors to divide the same, upon her decease among his four children, Julia Ann Coffin, William H. Bucknam, Elmira J. Bucknam and Helen B. Yiele, with the proviso that if either should have departed this life without leaving issue, the share of the one so dying should belong to the survivor or survivors of them. The testator appointed his wife and his sons-in-law, Francis A. Coffin, Samuel Leech and Hiram Y. Mason, the executors of his will. The first two alone qualified.

At the time of testator’s decease the property in question was subject to a mortgage for $27,500, made by him and his cotenant, Samuel Leech, to secure their joint and several bond for that amount. As the will contained no provision requiring this mortgage to be paid out of the personal estate, the burden of discharging it rested upon the devisees. 1 B. S. 749, § 4. The mortgage having matured, and a call having been made for its payment, the executors on March 18, 1876, paid the sum of $7,500 on account thereof, and on September 18, 1885, again paid a further sum of $6,250 on account, and the owner of the other undivided half of said premises. [595]*595having paid his proportion, the mortgage was thereupon discharged. When the first payment was made all of the children of Ezra Bucknam were living, but in the year 1881 his daughter Elmira died intestate, leaving her surviving her husband (who has since deceased) and the defendants Jane E. Bucknam and Clarence J. Bucknam, her only children and heirs at law.

The money which the executors appropriated for the payment of the mortgage in question was taken by them from the personal estate of the testator, which was subject to a trust during the lifetime of his widow, hut upon her death was to be divided among his four children, under precisely the same limitations and subject to the same contingency which affected the devise of the real estate in question. While technically the appropriation of this money for such a purpose was without legal sanction, yet in view of the fact that the ultimate destination of the real and personal estate was to be the same, no question would have arisen in regard to this misapplication, if it may be so called, had it not been for the fact that one of the devisees, William H. Bucknam, was adjudicated a bankrupt on the 4tli day of January, 1873, and all his estate, real and personal, was transferred to an assignee appointed in that proceeding.

On or about the 15th day of June, 1876, his assignee sold and conveyed to one William Paulding, for the expressed consideration of $310, “ all the right, title and interest which the said William H. Bucknam had on the 4th day of January, 1873, in and to all that certain real estate situated on South street in the city of New York, and known as No. 245 on said street, and described as follows ” (describing the premises in question), subject to a mortgage of twenty-seven thousand five hundred ($27,500) dollars, taxes, assessments and all other valid liens.” At the same time, and as a part of the same sale and upon the same consideration, the said assignee also transferred to Paulding all the right, title and interest whatsoever of the bankrupt in the personal estate under the last will and testament of Ezra Bucknam, deceased. It will be observed [596]*596that this sale took place a few months after the first payment of $7,500 made by the executors on account of the mortgage debt. By a deed bearing even date with the above convey-, anee, William H. Bucknam and wife released-and quit-claimed the premises to William Paulding.

On the 30th day of June, 1876, William Paulding and wife conveyed all their right, title and interest in and to the premises in question to Henry C. Harding, described in the deed as trustee for Ella H. Bucknam, “ subject to a mortgage of twenty-seven thousand five hundred ($27,500) dollars, and to taxes, assessments and all other valid liens, being the right, title and interest in and to the real estate described and conveyed to the party of the first part in an instrument of deed and assignment from John J. Thomasson, of the city, county and state of New York, assignee of William H. Bucknain, bearing date the 15th day of June, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-six.” The conveyance so made was, in terms, upon a trust to collect the rents and apply the same to the use of the said Ella H. Bucknam during her life, and after her death to convey the same to the defendant Ida I. Bucknam, the daughter of the said Ella H. Bucknam.

On August 8, 1887, William Paulding assigned to Theodore P. Austin all the right, title and interest in the personal estate of Ezra Bucknam which he had obtained under the deed from' the assignee. It is this separation of interests in the real and personal estate respectively -which had vested in William H. Bucknam under the will that has occasioned the. controversy in this action.

On the 18th day of January, 1891, Jane Bucknam, the widow of the testator, died, and the estate, real and personal, so bequeathed and devised, became subject to distribution and division. On April 15, 1891, Francis A. Coffin, the sole surviving executor, filed his account in the surrogate’s office, which account showed, among other things, the two payments which had been made on account of the mortgage, aggregating the sum of $13,750. Upon this accounting, Theodore P. Austin, the assignee of William H. Bucknam’s interest in the. [597]*597personal estate, contested, these payments, claiming that they were unauthorized, and as to him, at least, should he disallowed. His contention was sustained, and a decree was made and entered in the Surrogate’s Court whereby a distribution was ordered on the basis of an award to Austin of one-fourth of the personal estate, including the sum of $13,750, the balance being divided among the remaining children and the representatives of the deceased child, according to their respective interests under the will. It thus appears that the whole amount of the mortgage was paid by the devisees other than William H. Bucknam and his grantees, and the one undivided fourth part of the property derived from him was discharged of that portion of the burden which in justice and equity it should have borne. The payment made by the executors has, by virtue of their acts and the decree of the surrogate, become a payment made by the other cotenants, and under the rule which enforces contribution between cotenants where one or more have expended money in reference to the. common property which should be shared by all, the undivided interest of William H. Bucknam, now held by the defendant Harding, as trustee, is subject to a charge in favor of the others, whose money has been so appropriated, equal to the proportion of the mortgage debt with which such share was originally charged. It is a well-settled principle that where a claim for contribution arises a lien may be declared upon the undivided shares of the cotenants against whom such claim exists as security for the discharge of the same. 3 Pom. Eq. Juris. § 1240 ; Story Eq. (13th ed.j § 1236.

The jurisdiction of a court of equity in such a case as this is broad enough to include every power necessary to adjust the rights of parties according to the demands of justice. This principle is clearly recognized in Story’s Equity Jurisprudence (13th ed.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Misc. 593, 35 N.Y.S. 771, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffin-v-leech-nysupct-1895.