Ellwood v. . Northrup

12 N.E. 590, 106 N.Y. 172, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 687, 61 Sickels 172, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 872
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 N.E. 590 (Ellwood v. . Northrup) 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
Ellwood v. . Northrup, 12 N.E. 590, 106 N.Y. 172, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 687, 61 Sickels 172, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 872 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

This was an action of ejectment to recover an undivided three-fifths part of a parcel of one hundred and thirty acres of land in Jefferson county, by the male heirs of one Peggy Ellwood.

The plaintiffs claim to have acquired title to such land "under the will of their grandfather, Oasper J. Lieb, who died in March 1846. By such will Lieb devised to his daughter, Peggy Ellwood, one hundred and thirty acres of land, being j>art of a farm of three hundred and twenty-five acres purchased by him of Eli Watson, the conveyance of which was made to Adam W. Walrath in “ trust for my sole use, benefit and behoof.” The demise was to said daughter “for and during her natural life, in trust for the male heirs of her body to have and to hold the same from and after the death of their .said mother Peggy.” The remainder of the farm was devised to his daughter Mary, wife of said Adam W. Walrath, substantially upon the same terms and conditions as attended the devise to Peggy. By the will which was originally executed in 1839, provision was made for the payment of a mortgage upon the farm for $1,500 held by one JDepau, by applying thereon moneys due the testator from one Brown, upon a mortgage held by him against Brown, for a larger sum.

• Adam W. Walrath was made one of the executors of the will and he, after the death of Lieb, entered upon the performance of his duties, and, so far as appears, fully administered the estate. Immediately upon the death of Lieb, the farm was surveyed and a division was made among the ■devisees, Mary with her husband continuing to occupy the part devised to her, which was previously occupied by her husband,- and Peggy taking possession of the one hundred -and thirty acres devised to her, and continuing to occupy *180 them until 1856. She died in 1870 and this action was commenced in 1881.

The defenses to the action as stated in the answer, were-substantially as follows;

First. A denial of any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief that plaintiffs, as tenants in common, were seized and possessed of an estate of inheritance in fee simple absolute of said premises.

Second. Certain proceedings taken in May, 1856, under the statute for the sale of infant’s real estate, whereby the defendant claimed that his grantor acquired the title of the plaintiffs to the lands in dispute.

Third. That neither the plaintiffs or their ancestors were seized or possessed of the premises within twenty years before the commencement of the action.

Fourth. That the defendant and his grantors have been in adverse possession of the premises for a period exceeding twenty-live years under a claim of title founded upon a deed thereof dated April 11, 1856, from one Adam W. Walrathwho was claimed to have held title thereto.

On the trial the defendants, among othfer conveyances, put in evidence a quit-claim deed of the premises, dated April 11, 1856, upon a consideration of one dollar, from Adam W. Walrath to one Wooliver, the defendants’ remote grantor. The trial court found all of the issues of fact made by the pleadings for the plaintiffs, but also found that the defendant, under the deed from Adam W. Walrath, succeeded to all of his rights to such land, among which was the right of mortgagee in possession, as owner of the Depau mortgage. It refused to find, upon plaintiffs’ request, that Walrath was not in possession of the premises in dispute at the date of his deed, to which refusal the plaintiffs excepted.

The uncontradicted evidence established the fact that Peggy Ellwood entered into possession of the 130 acres in 1846, under the devise from her father, and continued in such possession, with the knowledge and consent of Walrath, until 1856, and held such possession under a claim of title at the *181 date of Walrath’s deed to Wooliver. (Ba ker v. Lorillard, 4 N. Y. 257.)

The entire evidence upon which Walrath was held to be a mortgagee in possession was admitted against plaintiffs objection, and consisted of the facts, that after his death, in 1881, his widow found among his papers the Depau mortgage, with an indorsement thereon reading as follows:

“ Received, January 23, 1843, of Adam W. Walrath, one dollar in full discharge of the above and within mortgaged premises, which mortgage has been duly assigned to me.

“STEPHEN W. BROWN, [l. s.]”

This discharge was duly acknowledged on the same day by Brown before a Supreme Court commissioner. There was also found among the papers an assignment of the same mortgage from Brown to Walrath, dated Hay 10, 1842. This assignment was also acknowledged by Brown on the same day he executed the discharge of the mortgage. It does not appear that Walrath ever claimed any interest under this mortgage, or ever entered into possession of the property, or claimed to hold it by virtue of such mortgage or by any other right or tenure whatever. It also appears that the mortgage held by Lieb agains°t Brown for $4,000 was satisfied of record on January 24, 1843, almost simultaneously with the satisfaction of the Depau mortgage. The evidence also shows that when Lieb purchased the Watson farm, in 1836, he paid the whole consideration therefor, with the exception of the amount of the Depau mortgage and a small balance of about $250, and the title therefor was taken in the name of Walrath, as trustee for Lieb, with the view of protecting it from anticipated claims of Lieb’s wife, with whom he was then at variance. Thereafter both Lieb and Walrath lived on the farm until Lieb’s death in 1846. Lieb was the purchaser in fact of the farm and, as conceded both by the trial court and the General Term, took an absolute title in fee under the statute of uses and trusts to the same under the *182 conveyance thereof by Watson to Walrath, and an agreement of trust simultaneously executed therewith between Lieb and Walrath.

As between Walrath and Lieb, the latter was primarily liable for the payment of the Depau mortgage, and if any presumption of an indebtedness from Lieb to Walrath could arise under the circumstances of this case for payments made thereon by Walrath, it would be fully rebutted by the voluntary division of the farm between the devisees of Lieb, after' his death, with Walrath’s assent, and without any claim on liispart of an interest therein, and the administration of the estate of Lieb by Walrath, as executor thereof. As such executor he had the right to retain, as a creditor of the estate, so much of the assets as were necessary to discharge his debts (2 Wms. Exr’s, 896, 897), and in the absence of any claim on the part of Walrath, during his life, that the debt had not been paid, a conclusive presumption arises that, if it ever existed, it had in fact been paid. We, have therefore, reached the conclusion that Wooliver took no interest in the-premises in question by his deed from Walrath :

First. Because it was void by statute by reason of Peggy Ellwood’s adverse possession of the premises conveyed at the time of its execution.

Second. Because Walrath did not have possession of the property at the time of the conveyance.

Third.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brown v. Brown
275 A.D.2d 1068 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1949)
City Real Estate Co. v. Realty Construction Corp.
167 Misc. 379 (New York Supreme Court, 1938)
Coleman v. Virginia Stave & Heading Co.
70 S.E. 545 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1911)
Ammons v. Ammons
40 S.E. 490 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1901)
Blanchard v. Blanchard
33 Misc. 284 (New York Supreme Court, 1900)
O'Donoghue v. . Boies
53 N.E. 537 (New York Court of Appeals, 1899)
Warren v. . Union Bank of Rochester
51 N.E. 1036 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
Warren v. Union Bank
28 A.D. 7 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Moran v. James
21 A.D. 183 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)
Moran v. James
20 Misc. 235 (New York Supreme Court, 1897)
Losey v. . Stanley
42 N.E. 8 (New York Court of Appeals, 1895)
Hutchins v. . Van Vechten
35 N.E. 446 (New York Court of Appeals, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.E. 590, 106 N.Y. 172, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 687, 61 Sickels 172, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellwood-v-northrup-ny-1887.