Cutting v. . Cutting

86 N.Y. 522, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 251
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 86 N.Y. 522 (Cutting v. . Cutting) 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
Cutting v. . Cutting, 86 N.Y. 522, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 251 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Folger, Ch. J.

This is a suit in equity, seeking to charge a debt owned by the plaintiff, against the estate of Fulton Cutting, deceased, upon certain estate, made up of real and personal property. The estate sought to be charged was owned, in her life-time, by Mrs. Gertrude Cutting, the mother of Fulton Cutting. She made a will, and died; by which will she gave that estate to executors, in trust, to take the rents and profits during his life, and apply them to -his use; and upon his decease, to make over the body of the estate to whomsoever he should by his will appoint to receive it. He made a will, and a codicil to it, and died; having appointed by that will, that that estate should be made over to Walter L. Cutting, in trust for two sons of him, the testator, and by that codicil, having given to his sister all the interest which he had or might have in the estate of his mother. Neither Walter L. Cutting, nor the two sons, nor the sister, appear from the case to have been creditors of the testator, but volunteers. The plaintiff is a creditor of the testator, by judgment got against him in his life-time. It is that judgment debt that it is sought to have charged. The plaintiff relies, therefor, upon a rule of *529 equity, which he claims to be, that where a person has a general power of appointment by will over property, and has exercised the power, the property thus appointed forms a part of his assets, and is subject to the claims of creditors; and that, too, in preference to those of a legatee or of the gratuitous appointee. The text-books state the rule to be, as it is claimed by the plaintiff. 4 Kent, *339 ; 2 Sugden on Powers, *29, § 7; id. *173, § 2; Bam on Assets, *148-9 ; 2 Williams on Ex’rs, *1435; Chance on Powers, § 1817; and the decisions cited in them, amply uphold the statement they make.

The defendants deny that this is the rule in this State, and insist that though it may have been at some time, and may be yet, the rule in England, it has never been adopted as the rule here. They concede that such part of the common law of England as was the law of the colony of Yew York on the 19th day of April, A. D. 1775, continued to be the law of the State of Yew York, unless altered by the legislature thereof; as indeed they must. (Const, of 1777, § 35; Const, of 1821, art. 7, § 13; Const, of 1846, art. 1, § 17.) And the common law of England was the law of the colony at that date, so far as it was applicable to the circumstances of the colonists. (Bogardus v. Trinity Church, 4 Paige, 178, 198; Myers v. Gemmel, 10 Barb. 537, 541.) And it has since continued so to be, when conforinable to our institutions, unless it was established by an English statute which has been abrogated, or was rejected in colonial jurisprudence, or has been abolished by our legislation. (Williams v. Williams, 8 N. Y. 525, 541; Perry v. Perry, 2 Paige, 501; Griffin v. Griffin, 47 N. Y. 134; Brinkley v. Brinkley, 50 id. 184, 190.) We confess that we see not why the rule is not as conformable to our institutions as to those of England. The objections that have been at times made to it have been general, based rather upon the abstract hardship and arbitrary nature of it (In re Harvey’s Estate, L. R., 13 Ch. Div. 216) than upon its inaptitude to the institutions of a peculiar people; and the remark of Earl, J., in Jennings v. Conboy (73 N. Y. 230, 233), while directed against the whole law of powers, as it had grown up in England, ab *530 struse, intricate, and ñdl of nice distinctions, concedes that it was the rule in this State, and that there was needed legislative interposition to root it out. We think, too that it is clearly indicated in the revisers’ notes to the Revised Statutes, and in the action of the legislature that adopted the article of powers ”, of their framing, that it was then conceded that the English rule was the law of this State at that time. And we need not now go farther in that inquiry, for we have come to a conclusion, based upon the Revised Statutes, that the English rule has been abrogated by our legislature, and that the plaintiff cannot maintain his position.

All of the facts in this case arose since the adoption of the Revised Statutes, and the solution of the legal questions presented by those facts must he made by the application to them of the provisions of article 3, title 2, chapter 1, part 2 of those statutes, entitled, “ of Powers.” Thereby, powers, as they then existed bylaw, were abolished; and thenceforth, the creation, construction, and execution of powers were to be governed by those provisions. (1 R. S. 732, § 73.) It is not denied that, if the will of Mrs. Cutting created a valid power, it has been well executed by the testamentary disposition made by Fulton Cutting ; so that what we have to determine is this : Did her will create a valid power, and if it did, what sort of a power is it, and how shall that power be construed ?

The will of Mrs. Cutting gave to Fulton Cutting the authority to- direct and .appoint by his will to whom, upon his decease, certain property should be assigned and conveyed by the trustees named in her will, and who had the legal estate in it. This was an authority to do an act. in relation to lands, or the creation of an estate therein, which Mrs. Cutting herself might, so far as appears, have lawfully performed; and so, the authority thus given falls within the primary definition of a power, made in the Revised Statutes. (Id., § 74; and see Kane v. Astor's Executors, 9 N. Y. 113, 132.) It was given “ by a devise contained in a last will and testament; ” and so it is granted in manner and form as called for by the Revised Statutes. (1 R. S. 735, § 106.) Proceeding further, we find *531 that the authority given is what the statutes call a general power, for it authorizes the alienation in fee of the lands embraced in it, to any alienee whatever, and is thus directly within the language and intent of section 77, and without that of section 78, which defines what is a special power. (Jennings v. Conboy, 73 N. Y. 230.) We may next inquire, whether the authority given created a beneficial power. The language of section 79, applicable to this case, is this: “A general * * power is beneficial, when no person other than the grantee has, by the terms of its creation, any interest in its execution.” It is certain that no person other than Fulton Cutting had, by reason of the words of Mrs. Cutting’s will that gave him authority, an interest that he should execute that authority. Thereby, the literal force of the section is met and satisfied. But the defendants contend that there is an implication that should be made; and that not only is there a negative expressed in the language, but an afiirmative also, to be implied; that while to make a power beneficial, no one other than the grantee of it can, by the terms of its creation, have an interest in the execution of it; yet it must also appear affirmatively by those terms that the grantee of the power has an interest in that execution. If this is granted, they farther contend that a power to appoint by will is such that the grantee has no interest in the execution of it. There are decisions in this State adverse to the contention.

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86 N.Y. 522, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutting-v-cutting-ny-1881.