Grout v. Van Schoonhoven

1 Sand. Ch. 336, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 459, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 47
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 27, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Sand. Ch. 336 (Grout v. Van Schoonhoven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grout v. Van Schoonhoven, 1 Sand. Ch. 336, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 459, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 47 (N.Y. 1844).

Opinion

The Assistant Vice-Chancellor.

By the trust deecf executed' in 1835, the complainant conveyed to the trustees his life estate as tenant by the curtesy initiate, in the real estate in question. But no other or greater estate or interest was vested' in the trustees. Mrs. Grout was not a party to the deed, and" the estate in fee after the death of the complainant will remain in her.

When this deed was before my learned predecessor in November, 1842,-he held upon an examination of the trusts, that the limitations in the deed after the death of Mrs. Grout were voidj as providing for a suspension of the power of alienation beyond the period’allowed by the statute. He inclined to the opinion that to the extent of her life,-the trusts would be upheld, and that at all events, the complainant ought not, in the face of his covenants, to be permitted to avoid the deed in any part of it that was valid.

As the trustees-interest in the realty under the deed must necessarily cease at the death of the complainant, the excess* [339]*339in the trust which was deemed void by the late assistant vice-chancellor, is the possible continuance of the estate in the trustees, in case the complainant survived his wife, during the period of such survivorship.

In this view of the case, it may justly be said that the utmost duration of the trust as to the real estate, is to the termination of the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Grout; and in the event of her surviving him, the trust must terminate with his life. In its greatest possible extent, it is limited therefore, to two lives in being at the time of its creation. Indeed, as nothing more than the life estate of the complainant was conveyed, the trust must of necessity cease at the end of his life; and therefore although the deed assumed to make disposition of the income till the youngest child of Mrs. Grout should become of age, it was inoperative beyond the life of Mr. Grout, for the simple reason that the estate of the trustees in the land, would then terminate.

The operation of the conveyance being thus limited to his life estate, and the land at his death remaining in fee in Mrs. Grout, or in her issue if she shall not survive him; I can see no objection to its validity. It máy be desirable for the greater security of the issue, to extend the trust, especially if it is to be reformed in respect of the personal estate.

I will next examine the effect of this instrument upon the personal property transferred to the trustees. At the time of its execution, the complainant was entitled to the personalty absolutely, jure mariti. Therefore his conveyance of the same was sufficient to transmit the whole title to the trustees, if the instrument itself did not contain provisions which invalidated or abridged its operation.

It is clearly shown by the opinion of the late assistant vice-chancellor, that the trusts for the children after the death of Mrs. Grout, cannot be sustained under the Revised Statutes.

It is equally clear that the trust for the benefit of Mrs. Grout, during her life-time is valid.

In the case of Darling v. Rogers, (22 Wend. 483,) an assignment of real estate for the benefit of creditors, upon trust to sell or mortgage, was held valid by the Court for the Correction [340]*340of Errors, as to the trust to sell, although the trust to mortgage was deemed void under the statute relative to uses and trusts.

The Chancellor, speaking of this decision in Van Vechten v. Van Veghten, (8 Paige’s R. 119,) says that it was thereby “settled that a conveyance in trust was valid, so as to vest the estate in the trustees pro tanto, if any of the trusts therein specified were authorized by the Revised Statutes, although the property was conveyed upon other express trusts which were prohibited by law.”

In the same case he says, “ in trusts of personal estate, a suspension of the absolute ownership as to one part of the fund, for a longer period than is allowed by law, will not make void the disposition which has been made of another part thereofand the Chancellor there decided, that where personal estate is vested in trustees upon various trusts, some of which are valid and others void, the courts must sustain those which are legal and valid, if they can be separated from those which are illegal and void.

The result is, that the personal estate in question vested in the trustees upon a valid trust to pay the income thereof to Mrs. Grout, for her separate usé during her life. The future estates limited upon that trust are void, but the whole estate passed to the trustees in order to support the trust which is valid. Upon the accomplishment of this trust, the residuary interest results to the complainant.

If the wife asserts her equity for a more suitable settlement in respect of her children, the fund is still sufficiently within the control of the court to direct such a provision.

This leads me to the consideration of the nature of the wife’s interest in the existing trust of the personal estate, and of her wishes in regard to the whole property.

She has expressed her desire, on a private examination before the assistant vice-chancellor, to have her husband restored to his marital rights in the real estate known as Knickerbacker TTa.ll, and that he may receive absolutely, $10,000 of the personal estate in question, and that the residue of the personal estate be vested in trustees, for her sole and separate use during her life, and for his use for life from and after her death, if he survives' [341]*341her, and after the death of both, to be equally divided amongst her children.

As to the real estate, this cannot be done. The statute relative .to uses and trusts provides, that no person beneficially interested in a trust for ¡the receipt of the rents and profits of land, .can assign or in any manner dispose of such interest. (1 Rev. Stat. 729, § 63.) And where the trust shall be expressed in the instrument creating the estate, every sale, conveyance, or other act of the trustees, in contravention of the trust, shall be abso? lutely void. (Ibid. § 65.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Sand. Ch. 336, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 459, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grout-v-van-schoonhoven-nychanct-1844.