Ford v. Clendenin

137 N.Y.S. 54
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 N.Y.S. 54 (Ford v. Clendenin) 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
Ford v. Clendenin, 137 N.Y.S. 54 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

MILLS, J.

This is an action to have adjudged null and void as to the plaintiffs a certain judgment of this court, entered in 1883, purporting to appoint a trustee to sell certain real, estate, and as well the sale and deed thereunder and various subsequent deeds by the grantee in that deed.

The premises involved were, at the time of the sale, a farm of nearly 80 acres, situated at Chappaqua, in the county of Westchester, and famous as the homestead of the then late Horace Greeley. It was the estate to which that great editor and author, during the latter years of his life, was accustomed weekly to retire for relief from his multitudinous professional cares, and where he conducted many agricultural experiments, which, through his writings, became widely known throughout this nation, to the edification and instruction of many people, and possibly to the amusement of some.

The plaintiffs are two of the three children of his daughter Ida L., now deceased; and the defendants are his only surviving child and daughter, Gabrielle, who purchased at the sale by the trustee, and her several subsequent grantees of divers parcels conveyed by her out of the farm.

Horace Greeley died November 9, 1872; his wife, Mary Y. C. Greeley, having predeceased him on the 30th of the preceding October. At her death the record title of the farm was in her name, except that such title to two parcels thereof, aggregating a little over seven acres, appears to have been in his name then and up to his death. She left a will, executed November 21, 1867, which was duly admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court of Westchester county December 18, 1872. Such will purported to dispose of all her estate, real and personal, and to give the same ultimately to her two daughters, Ida and Gabrielle, but postponed the entire division of the estate between them until Ida should become 30 years of age. It created a certain power of sale, or certain powers of sale, and possibly established a trust, a point disputed in this case. Ida then, being over 21 years of age and named as an executrix in the will, took out letters testamentary thereon and qualified and acted as such executrix. On May 1, 1875, she married Nicholas Smith, and died April 11, 1882, leaving her surviving their three children, viz., Horace Greeley Smith, born April 6, 1877, and the two plaintiffs, Nixola Greeley Smith, now Ford, who was born April 5, 1880, and married Andrew W. Ford about April 1, 1910, and Ida Greeley Smith, who was born March 9, 1882, and is unmarried.

Gabrielle, the only surviving daughter of Horace Greeley, married the defendant Frank Montrose Clendenin in April, 1891. She took actual possession of the farm directly after receiving her deed from the trustee, September 29, 1883, and has held such possession of it ever since, except the certain portions thereof which from time to time she has sold and conveyed to other persons and corporations, who or which have had such possession of such portions under such deeds since receiving them.

On the 18th day of April, 1883, an action in this court was commenced by such Gabrielle, as plaintiff, against the said Nicholas Smith, [57]*57Horace Greeley Smith, Nixola Greeley Smith Ford, and Ida Greeley Smith as defendants, in which the complaint, after alleging various pertinent facts and that the said Ida L. Smith had died without exercising the power of sale conferred by the will of her mother, asked, as relief:

“The judgment or decree of this court that she or some other suitable person be appointed as a trustee to carry out the provisions of said will and testament of said Mary Y. C. Greeley, deceased, so far as the same may be devolved upon a trustee, to sell the real estate left by said testatrix at her death, and to dispose of the proceeds thereof pursuant to said will or the law of the case as duly established, or for such other, further, or different judgment, decree, or relief as to the court may seem fit, just, and proper, with costs and disbursements of this action.’’

At that time the said Nicholas Smith and his three children, above named, were residing at Shelbyville, Ky.; and on the 19th of April, 1883, an order in that action was duly made by a justice of this court for the service of the summons upon them by publication. Such service, as to these plaintiffs, was actually completed on the 8th of June, 1883. Meanwhile, on May 8, 1883, upon the petition of the father, Mr. George Putnam Smith was, by an order of this court made at Special Term, appointed guardian ad litem for the three infant defendants, viz., the said Horace, Nixola, and Ida, each being then under 14 years of age, viz., Horace 6 years, Nixola 3, and Ida 1. Such guardian, on May 11, 1883, verified and served the usual answer of infant defendants by guardian ad litem, submitting their interests to the protection of the court. On May 15, 1883, the answer of the father, Nicholas Smith, was verified and served. It in effect joined in the prayer of the complaint. The case was tried on June 4, 1883, decision signed June 23, and judgment with the caption as of June 4 was entered July 2, all in 1883.

The judgment recited the appearance of the guardian ad litem and of the attorney for the father, Nicholas Smith, and their being heard, the trial and decision, and granted in effect the relief asked in the complaint, appointed Israel A. Haight as trustee, directed him to sell at public auction said premises, containing about 78.561 acres, by a description which, as I understand the evidence, included the two parcels, of which the record title was, as above stated, in Horace Greeley, but which the decision had found belonged to his wife at her death. The trustee duly qualified, and, after proper advertisement, sold the farm at public auction to the defendant herein, Gabrielle G. Clendenin, for $10,000, which was the highest and indeed the only bid. He thereupon duly reported to this court his proceedings; and thereafter, on September 22, 1883, 'this court at Special Term, after due notice to the attorney of the defendant Nicholas Smith and the said guardian ad litem, and after hearing them, made an order confirming such report and directing the trustee to execute and deliver a deed to consummate such sale. Accordingly, on September 29, 1883, the trustee made, executed, and delivered to the said defendant here, Gabrielle G. _ Clendenin (then Greeley), a deed of said premises by said description; she having paid to him the purchase price of $10,000.

[58]*58There followed various proceedings by which one-half of the net proceeds of the sale were set apart for the said infants, subject to the interest therein of their father, and by which such interest was determined to be one-third of such amount, apparently upon the theory that the will of Mrs. Mary Y. C. Greeley had made an equitable conversion of the real estate, and that the interest of her daughter Ida therein, at the latter’s death, was personal property, and by which such value of the father’s interest was paid to him or his assignee, and the remainder, representing the net interest of the said three infants, was also paid to him as their general guardian, he having been duly appointed as such; all this matter of the final distribution and payment being accomplished, or rather completed, in January, 1886. The proceedings subsequent to the delivery of the deed by the trustee are not here recited more fully, as it is plain that they cannot affect the validity of the title conveyed by that deed.

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Related

Ford v. Clendenin
140 N.Y.S. 1119 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.Y.S. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-clendenin-nysupct-1911.