Gedney v. Marlton Realty Co.

179 N.E. 766, 258 N.Y. 355, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 1192
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 179 N.E. 766 (Gedney v. Marlton Realty Co.) 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
Gedney v. Marlton Realty Co., 179 N.E. 766, 258 N.Y. 355, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 1192 (N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

Crane, J.

This action is brought in ejectment to recover two parcels of real property, known respectively as Nos. 108 and 110 West Eighteenth street, in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York, which were formerly owned by one John Tonnele, who died in 1846. By his will he devised property, including these premises, to his executors, the income therefrom after his wife’s decease to be applied to the suitable education and support of his granddaughter, Rebecca T. Rice, during her minority, and the entire net income of the property thereafter to be paid to her during her lifetime. At the decease of the granddaughter he gave and devised the said premises to her lawful issue, but in case she died without issue, then to his son John, referred to in the case as John Tonnele, II.

The life interest or estate of the granddaughter, Rebecca T. Rice, continued until November 2, 1917 (seventy-one years), at which time she died without issue, never having had a child. The property thereupon passed to, or vested in possession of, the heirs of John Tonnele, II. These plaintiffs are the descendants of Eloise, who was one of the daughters of John Tonnele, II. He had died intestate in 1852, his children then inheriting his vested remainder in the premises in question. This remainder was subject to divestment only in the event that Rebecca T. Rice, granddaughter of John Tonnele, the elder, died leaving lawful issue. John Tonnele, II, at his death in 1852 left eight children, three of whom, Cecile Josephine, *359 Laurencine Salles and Isabella Zadina, died intestate, leaving no issue. The vested remainder of each of these three children being in each case an undivided one-eighth interest, passfed upon their deaths to the other five children of John Tonnele, II. The interest of these plaintiffs, therefore, is derived in part from Eloise and in part from Cecile Josephine, Laurencine Salles and Isabella Zadina. The importance of these details of inheritance lies in the fact that the year 1865 is the important date for the determination of the rights of the parties to this action. At that time Eloise was an infant, while the other children were adults. The plaintiffs’ interest, therefore, comes through those children of John Tonnele, II, who in 1865 were all adults, with the exception of the infant Eloise. Cecile Josephine and Isabella Zadina died in 1856 and 1860 respectively, the other six children inheriting their vested interest. In 1865, therefore, there were five adult surviving children and one infant, Eloise, who were entitled to the remainder after the death of Rebecca T. Rice, without lawful issue her surviving.

Talcing ourselves back, therefore, to the year 1865, we find the Legislature, on March 20th of that year, enacting a law known as chapter 154 of the Laws of 1865, authorizing the Supreme Court of the State of New York upon the petition of Rebecca T. Rice, and upon notice as therein directed to all parties having an interest in the properties, to direct a sale of the premises which are held in trust by the executors of said John Tonnelle, under the provision of the said will for the benefit of the said Rebecca T. Rice, or any part or parcel thereof, from time to time, as may be adjudged to be expedient and calculated to promote the interests of the said Rebecca T. Rice, or any persons whether yet in being or not, to whom or for whose benefit the trusts under the will of said John Tonnelle may inure after the death of the said Rebecca T. Rice. * * *

§ 3. The proceeds of such sale or sales may, under the *360 direction of the court, be applied by the said trustees to the payment of any debt lawfully incurred by them as such trustees, or the said Rebecca T. Rice, in respect to such trust property, and any assessments paid by her for the benefit of the Said trust property, and in fulfilling the trusts declared or created in and by said will; and to the payment of all incumbrances, legally placed upon the same, and all taxes and assessments now due or to become due on said trust property, and the balance shall be invested upon said lots or other real estate in the city of New York, or in stock, bonds or securities of the state of New York, or the United States of America, to be held and disposed of for the benefit of such persons as may be or may become interested therein, under the provisions of said will, in accordance with the terms of said will.”

Thereafter, upon the petition of Rebecca T. Rice, the life tenant, for the sale of four lots, including the premises here in question, Nos. 108 and 110 West Eighteenth street, an order of the Supreme Court was made directing the sale of the property in accordance with the terms and conditions of said statute. Notice to all the parties in interest, including those from whom the plaintiffs inherit, was given, a guardian for Eloise appointed, a reference had, testimony taken showing the conditions of the property and the necessity for the sale and all other steps complied with, so that in this action no attack is made upon the regularity of the proceedings leading up to the sale.

The defendants derive title through the purchaser at this sale, the property in the meantime having become very valuable in comparison with prices in 1865. As before stated, the plaintiffs have brought this action of ejectment, seeking to oust the defendants on the ground that chapter 154 of the Laws of 1865 was unconstitutional in that it authorized the sale of vested interests of living adult persons whose property could not legally be dis *361 posed of without their consent. In Powers v. Bergen (6 N. Y. 358) and Brevoort v. Grace (53 N. Y. 245) it was held by this court that the Legislature has no power to authorize by special act the sale of private property, for other than public uses, without the consent of the owner, except in cases of necessity arising from infancy, insanity or other incompetency or the interests of those not in being. Where the parties entitled to future estates are under no disability to act for themselves the Legislature has no constitutional power to cause lands to be sold by special act. As the exceptions indicate, the Legislature can, by special act, authorize the sale of infant's property, vested or contingent, when it is for the benefit of the infant, and thus convert real property into personalty. (L eggett v. Hunter, 19 N. Y. 445.) The Legislature, by general act, had also provided by 2 Revised Statutes, page 315, title III, sections 1 to 95, for the partition of lands when held in joint tenancy or tenancy in common. In Blakeley v. Calder (15 N. Y. 617, 623) it was stated in an opinion by Denio, J., that the remaindermen under these provisions could partition real property over the objection and against the will of the life tenant, a thing which cannot be done to-day according to section 1014 of the Civil Practice Act. (See, also, Jackson v. Babcock, 16 N. Y. 246, p. 249.)

The act of 1865, however,- was enacted for the benefit of the life tenant, Rebecca T. Rice, and was not an authorization for an infant’s proceeding for the benefit of Eloise Tonnele. “ On the petition of Rebecca T. Rice, and her husband,” the Supreme Court may authorize the sale of the trust property, if it be calculated to promote her interests.

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Bluebook (online)
179 N.E. 766, 258 N.Y. 355, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 1192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gedney-v-marlton-realty-co-ny-1932.