Goldstein v. Ancell

258 A.2d 93, 158 Conn. 225, 1969 Conn. LEXIS 597
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 6, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 A.2d 93 (Goldstein v. Ancell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldstein v. Ancell, 258 A.2d 93, 158 Conn. 225, 1969 Conn. LEXIS 597 (Colo. 1969).

Opinion

King, C. J.

The plaintiff is the widow of William Q-. G-oldstein, late of West Hartford, who died on March 29, 1965. The parties were married on December 3, 1950. Each had been previously married, the plaintiff’s first husband having died in 1947, and the decedent’s first wife having died in 1949. There were no children of the second marriage, but the decedent was survived by two adult children of his first marriage, Enid (Groldstein) Ancell and Max R. Groldstein, who, with Enid’s husband, Nathan S. Ancell, are executors of the decedent’s will.

The plaintiff and the decedent first resided together in West Hartford in a house on Whetton Road, a life estate in which had been left to him by his first wife. In 1956, he purchased from his *227 daughter, Enid, the remainder interest in the Whet-ton Road property for $25,000, for which he gave her his promissory note. This note was presented as a claim against the estate, and its payment was approved by the Probate Court. In 1956, he sold the Whetton Road property for about $50,000 and in September purchased a building lot on Kirkwood Road, also in West Hartford, taking title in his own name and negotiating a $25,000 construction mortgage with the Dime Savings Bank. Advances were made up to the full amount of the mortgage note, on which the decedent was the sole obligor. The note was payable in equal monthly instalments over a period of twenty years but was payable on demand if the payee at any time so desired. In 1958, the decedent was confined to his home for about three weeks with a heart insufficiency, and on October 1 of that year, the decedent, through a third person or “straw man”, by quitclaim deeds, conveyed his interest in the home (Kirkwood Road) property to the plaintiff and himself as joint tenants with right of survivorship. No mention of the mortgage was made in the deeds, there was no assumption of the mortgage, in whole or in part, by the plaintiff, and the mortgage note continued to be the sole obligation of the decedent.

Up until his death, all payments on the mortgage note had been made by the decedent or on his behalf, and there was then owing a principal balance on the note and mortgage of $18,079.12. On June 22, 1965, within the period allowed for the presentation of claims, the plaintiff presented a claim demanding the exoneration of the mortgaged property from the amount owing on the mortgage at the date of the decedent’s death. This claim was disallowed in toto, and the present suit was instituted. Also on June *228 22, 1965, the plaintiff had requested the mortgagee bank to present a claim for payment of the indebtedness, but the bank refused to do so, preferring to rely on the security only.

While the plaintiff bases her claim to exoneration on several grounds, as we view the case it is necessary to consider only one of them. That is the claim that executors are required to pay all debts of the decedent owing at his death, and that this necessarily included this debt. This claim to some extent oversimplifies the problem in that it fails to distinguish between the duty of the executors to a creditor, such as the bank, and their duty to the plaintiff. Obviously, if the bank had wished to present a claim for the unpaid balance of the note, it could have done so, and had such a claim been properly presented, the executors would have been under a duty to pay it. But when the time for the presentation of claims had expired, without the bank’s having presented any claim, the Statute of Nonclaim was an effective bar to any liability of the executors, or the estate, to pay the bank as far as the bank was concerned. Lubas v. McCusker, 153 Conn. 250, 254, 216 A.2d 289. This liability, however, ran only to the bank. There still remains the plaintiff’s claim for exoneration from the mortgage debt which she presented to the executors, which they disallowed in toto, and which is the subject matter of this action.

The note and mortgage on the property constituted the personal obligation of the decedent, alone, and indeed, at the time the mortgage loan was taken out, he was the sole owner of the property. It was about two years later that the quitclaim deeds, without mention of the mortgage, created, as previously noted, the joint tenancy with right of survivorship in the plaintiff and the decedent.

*229 There is nothing to indicate that any notice was filed in the land records by either the plaintiff or the decedent within one year after June 29,1959, as provided in §47-14k of the General Statutes, and this left applicable to the joint tenancy any pertinent statutory modifications of our law as to incidents of co-ownership of real estate embraced in No. 677 of the Public Acts of 1959 and now forming §§ 47-14a — 47-14k of the General Statutes. Joint tenancies both under Connecticut common law and under the 1959 statute are thoroughly discussed in Stephenson, “Survivorship Deeds under the [1959] Statute,” 34 Conn. B.J. 15. We find nothing, however, in the statute which modifies the common-law rule in any respect pertinent to our decision of this case.

Upon the death of the plaintiff’s husband, his interest in the property ceased, leaving the plaintiff as the sole owner of the equity of redemption, subject to the encumbrance of the bank mortgage.

Thus, it is clear that no interest in the Kirkwood Road property came into the estate of the decedent or passed from that estate to the plaintiff. Consequently, we are not here concerned with any right of exoneration or discharge of an indebtedness secured by a mortgage covering property passing to a devisee or legatee under the will. Cases of this type are collected in an annotation in 4 A.L.R.3d 1023, 1029.

Rather, we are concerned with the right of a surviving spouse to exoneration by the decedent’s estate respecting an encumbrance on property held in joint tenancy with right of survivorship. Cases of this type are collected in an annotation in 76 A.L.R.2d 1004. While most of the cases in the annotation involved tenancies by the entirety, we find no differ *230 ence, so far as the problems in this appeal are concerned, between a tenancy by the entirety, which is not recognized or permitted in Connecticut, and a joint tenancy of husband and wife with a right of survivorship, such as we have here. See cases such as Dennen v. Searle, 149 Conn. 126, 132, 176 A.2d 561; New Haven Trolley & Bus Employees Credit Union v. Hill, 145 Conn. 332, 334, 142 A.2d 730; Florio v. Greenspan, 340 Mass. 642, 644, 165 N.E.2d 753.

The cases on the problem here are not in complete harmony, and most of them involve situations where husband and wife were personally liable as joint and several obligors on the debt secured by mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 A.2d 93, 158 Conn. 225, 1969 Conn. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldstein-v-ancell-conn-1969.