Ebling v. . Dreyer

44 N.E. 155, 149 N.Y. 460, 3 E.H. Smith 460, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 726
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 44 N.E. 155 (Ebling v. . Dreyer) 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
Ebling v. . Dreyer, 44 N.E. 155, 149 N.Y. 460, 3 E.H. Smith 460, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 726 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

Vann, J.

This appeal presents a question of power on the part of the legislature to pass the statute in question (L. 1872, ch. 479), and of regularity on.the part of .the Supreme Court in its proceedings under the statute.

The power of the legislature by special act to authorize a sale .of infants’ lands, including the future contingent interests of those not in being, is well established in this state. In the case of Clarke v. Van Surlay (15 Wend. 436) it was held by the Supreme Court that where the rents and profits of land are given to a father during his life, with remainder in fee to his lawful issue, and it is necessary for the support and maintenance of the father and his family, and the education of his children, that the land should be sold, a private act of the legislature, authorizing a sale for such purposes, as well as for the payment of debts necessarily incurred by the father for those purposes, is not unconstitutional, although its operation is limited to a particular property and does not extend to all cases of like character. Judge Bronson, in delivering the opinion of the court, quoted a passage from Blackstone’s Commentaries in regard to the power of Parliament by a particular law to unfetter an estate, by assuring it to a purchaser against the remote or latent claims of infants, and settling a proper equivalent in proportion to the interest so barred. (2 Black. Com. 344, 5.) The learned judge, however, said that acts of this description do riot depend for validity on the omnipotent power of Parliament, for, while the legislature ought not to interfere upon light considerations, there was no constitutional impediment in the way of enacting private laws *467 affecting individual interests, where proper care is taken to preserve the substantial rights of the parties. When the case reached the Court of Errors under the name of Cochran v. Van Surlay (20 Wend. 365), it was affirmed, and the act held to conflict with neither the State nor Federal Constitution. The power of the legislature was upheld upon the ground that &s parens patrias, it had the right to interfere in particular cases for the benefit of incompetent persons, and that a change from unproductive real estate into productive personal property, the income of the latter to be applied in the same way as the income from the former, was a proper case for the exercise of the power.

In Brevoort v. Grace (53 N. Y. 245) this court sustained the right by special act to “ authorize the sale of the lands of those not capable of acting for themselves, and also the contingent rights of those not in esse ” at the time, but held that the power did not extend to the sale of lands in which adults, competent to act for themselves, have an interest, without their consent. There are other cases bearing upon the subject, from which the following are cited : Leggett v. Hunter (19 N. Y. 445); In re Field (131 N. Y. 184); Kent v. Church of St. Michael (136 N. Y. 10).

While the power is not unlimited, but is subject to judicial review, where the parties in interest are incapable of acting for themselves, and the legislation is for their benefit, not only in theory but in fact, it should be sustained both upon principle and authority. That a sale of the lands in question was necessary to protect all persons interested, in being or not, is hardly open to discussion, for the income was nothing, the outgo large, the life tenants had limited and the remainder-men no means, while the taxes and assessments and sales for the same were rapidly sweeping the property out of existence. The legislature came to the rescue, and but for its timely action nothing could have been saved for any one.

It is insisted, however, that even if the legislature had power to pass an act upon the subject, it had no power to pass the act in question, because, it is argued, it permits the court *468 to deal with the separate properties of different infants as a single parcel, and provides for an unlawful distribution of the proceeds. In considering these objections regard must be paid to the fact that the situation of the parties had become so changed between the date of the testator’s death and the time when the act was passed, as to make any course other than the one pursued impracticable as Well as unjust. The property when devised by the testator consisted of a single tract of land, without streets or any visible lines of division. He divided it into four equal parts by imaginary lines running the longer way. Subsequently, under lawful authority, streets were laid out through it, in such a manner as to leave three of the parcels without any frontage, except upon cross streéts, while the parcel remaining was cut into two long, narrow strips by a street running lengthwise, so that although there was a frontage on both sides there was so little depth as to make the lots of slight value. It is obvious that, under these circumstances, parcels could not he separately sold except at a disadvantage, while if sold together the highest price possible could be realized. The property came through one will, although by separate devises, and all of the devisees were nearly related. Situated as the property was, it would'have been impossible to observe the lines of individual ownership in making a sale without a serious sacrifice of value. A separate sale of the four parcels would have been an injury to the remaindermen. As the legislature had the power to„authorize a sale for the benefit of the infants, it necessarily had the right to so order the sale as, in its reasonable judgment, to confer the greatest benefit upon them. It was practicable after the sale, first deducting the expense thereof, to separate the remainder of the proceeds of the several parcels in proportion to their respective values and thus to preserve every right that each of the several interests was entitled to. It simply involved the determination of what each separate par.cel, situated as it was before the sale, was worth when compared with the value of the entire tract, and the four fractions resulting would represent the proportion of each of *469 the four interests in the proceeds of the sale. After tiras separating the money into four separate parts, each representing the value of the four different interests in the land, and deducting from each the charges against it for taxes, liens, incumbrances, and the value of the life estate pertaining to it, the result would be equal and exact justice between all. As it was the duty of the life tenants to pay the annual taxes, that fact would have to be taken into account in fixing the value of their life estates if they elected to take a gross sum, or if they did not, the amount of those taxes unpaid would have to be deducted from the annual income going to them respectively.

The statute, as we read it, does not authorize an unlawful distribution of the proceeds of the sale. The theory of the act is to convert the land into money, so as to save it from total loss, and after payment of the money into court and deducting the expenses of the sale, including the expenditures necessary to give a good title to the purchaser, to treat the remainder as land, and divide it according to the directions of the will.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.E. 155, 149 N.Y. 460, 3 E.H. Smith 460, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebling-v-dreyer-ny-1896.