Cowan v. Storms

2 A.2d 183, 121 N.J.L. 336, 36 Gummere 336, 1938 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 3, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 183 (Cowan v. Storms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan v. Storms, 2 A.2d 183, 121 N.J.L. 336, 36 Gummere 336, 1938 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 108 (N.J. 1938).

Opinion

Heher, J.

The rule directs defendant Ann Storms, plaintiff’s judgment debtor,’to show cause why her “interest” in the residuary estate of Henry Cowan, deceased, should not be sold to satisfy the judgment debt, and, “in the alternative, why the moneys due and accruing from said estate monthly” should not be so appropriated.

The will of the deceased Henry Cowan devised certain of his lands to his executors “during the lives” of his three children, Annie Swift, Lizzie Berdan and Wesley Cowan, “and during the life of the last survivor of them,” in trust, “to manage, control and lease the same * * *; to collect and receive the rents, issues and profits therefrom,” and, after payment of taxes, assessments, repairs, insurance premiums and other carrying charges, “to divide [the] net income among” said children, “in equal proportions;” and, upon the decease of any of the named children, leaving lawful issue, to pay “the share of said income which such deceased child would have received, if living, * * * to such issue, per *338 stirpes.” It was further provided that, in case any of his said children should die “without leaving issue, or all of the issue of said child” should die “before the death” of his “last surviving child, * * * the share of the income which would have gone to” his “deceased child, or the issue of such deceased child,” should “go to” his “child or children, or in case of their death, to their issue per stirpes

Upon the decease of the testator’s last surviving child, the corpus was devised thus: The issue of each child to take, per stirpes, one-third thereof; and, in case any of his said children should “leave no issue surviving them, at time of death of last surviving child, then the share which would otherwise have gone to the issue of * * * said deceased child,” was given “to the issue of both of my other children per stirpes.”

Wesley Cowan died leaving two children, viz.: the defendant Ann Storms and a son, Henry. Annie Swift and Lizzie Berdan are still living. The judgment debtor’s share of the net income of the trust estate is said to amount to $90 monthly, but there is no proof of this. The sheriff levied upon “all the rights, credits, moneys and effects, goods and chattels, lands and tenements” of the judgment debtor, “to wit, one-sixth interest in the residuary estate of Henry Cowan and moneys due and accruing from the said estate monthly.”

Plainly, the judgment debtor has an estate in remainder in fee in the corpus, vested as to an undivided sixth part thereof, and contingent as to the rest. The contention that her entire interest is contingent is patently unsound. She has a present absolute right to an undivided sixth part of the corpus the instant the particular prior estate shall cease. The distinguishing characteristic of a vested remainder is a present capacity to take effect in possession or enjoyment on the certain determination of the precedent particular estate, rather than the certainty of enjoyment by the remainderman. It is the uncertainty of the right of enjoyment, rather than the uncertainty of its actual enjoyment, that renders a remainder contingent. Den v. Hillman, 1 N. J. L. 180; Den v. Crawford, 8 Id. 90; Price v. Sisson, 13 N. J. Eq. 168; affirmed, *339 sub nom. Weehawken Ferry Co. v. Sisson, 17 Id. 475; Voorhees v. Singer, 73 Id. 532; In re Clark’s Estate, 13 N. J. Mis. R. 393; 2 Blk. Com. 168.

As regards the estate in remainder, plaintiff asserts the right of execution only against the vested interest; and the question for decision is whether this is now a leviable and vendible interest. I find that it is.

At common law, due to the nature of the feudal tenure, the lands of a judgment debtor were not liable to execution and sale at the instance of a citizen creditor; they were subject to such seizure only for the satisfaction of a debt due the state or the crown. 23 C. J. 334.

And so we must have recourse to the statutes for the measure of plaintiff’s right to subject the debtor’s testamentary estate to the payment of her judgment. It is therein provided that “all real estate shall be liable to be levied upon and sold by executions to be issued on judgments obtained in any court of record in this state,” with certain exceptions not here pertinent, and that the particular execution shall command the officer to whom it is directed, if sufficient goods and chattels cannot be found to “cause” the judgment debt “to be made of the real estate whereof” the judgment debtor “was seized on the day when such real estate became liable to such debt, * * * or at any time afterwards * * R. S. 1937, §§ 2 :26-80, 2 :26-97.1.

It is settled in this state that a vested remainder in fee is leviable and saleable before the termination of the precedent estate under an execution against the remainderman. It rises to the dignity of an estate in lands within the intendment of the statute. The possession of the tenant of the particular estate “is construed to be the possession of him in remainder, so that the remainderman is held to be seized of his remainder.” Den v. Hillman, supra. It is the general rule that such remainders are subject to execution. 21 C. J. 979, 980; 23 Id. 335; 34 Id. 593. And it does not matter that the remainderman’s interest is an undivided one. 17 R. C. L. 119. Such an interest is sufficiently certain and definite to permit of a fair appraisement and sale.

*340 But it is likewise the insistence of plaintiff that the “income from the estate is also vested and therefore is subject to execution” in its entirety under sections 2:26-168 et seq. (B. 8. 1937), while the judgment debtor maintains that, under sections 2:26-182 et seq., plaintiff is entitled to no more than ten per cent, of the income.

It is clear that, in respect of the precedent life estate, the legal title is in the trustees; and it is an established doctrine in this state that, except as modified by statute, a trust estate is not liable to seizure and sale on execution at law. At law, in the absence of statutory provision, neither a judgment nor an execution issued thereon gives rise to a lien upon a mere equitable estate or interest. The interest of the cestui que trust is in such case reachable only in equity for'the satisfaction of a judgment against him. Halstead v. Davison, 10 N. J. Eq. 290; Hogan v. Jaques, 19 Id. 123; Linn v. Davis, 59 N. J. L. 29; Vancleve v. Groves, 4 N. J. Eq. 330.

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 183, 121 N.J.L. 336, 36 Gummere 336, 1938 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-storms-nj-1938.