Hayes v. Kerr

40 A.D. 348, 57 N.Y.S. 1114
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 A.D. 348 (Hayes v. Kerr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Kerr, 40 A.D. 348, 57 N.Y.S. 1114 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

This suit in equity, brought by the plaintiff as next of kin and heir at law of Mary Kerr, deceased, to set aside certain conveyances and transfers of property, including a hotel and its furnishings, for an accounting and for the appointment of a receiver, resulted after a trial in an interlocutory judgment granting the relief asked for in the complaint. On appeal to this court the judgment was modified in some respects unnecessary here to discuss, and the questions of an accounting were sent to a referee. In the opinion of this court •on that appeal (19 App. Div. 91) all the facts are fully set forth and need not be repeated. This appeal presents questions relating to the proceedings had before the referee.

The interlocutory judgment, as modified, provided that the defendants Leonard R. Kerr and Lawrence R. Kerr account before the referee for all the “ property covered by the transfers which are avoided by the said interlocutory judgment, * * * and for all of the proceeds, rents, issues and profits thereof received by them, or either of them, including all of the rents, issues and profits as may have, been received by them, or either of them, under the agreement made by and between Leonard R. Kerr and the said Mary Kerr, deceased, dated the 11th day of January, 1889, and known as Defendants’ Exhibit 3.” Exhibit 3 is as follows : ■

“ Hew York, January 11th, 1889.
“ I agree to run the Hotel with my son Leonard R. Kerr on equal terms, Leonard to have the entire management of the Hotel.
her
“ MARY X KERR.”
mark.

The learned referee in his decision and also in his report states: "In this case, when the parties first appeared before the referee, it was agreed that the three questions of fact on which the referee was to find and report as to the amount due, were : First. What was the value of the personal estate at the time of its conversion by the defendant ? Secondly. What was the rental value of the premises, real estate, the deed in regard to which had been set aside by the court ? Third. When did the agreement of the 11th of January, 1891, commence by its terms to run^ and what the amount of the profits under it were.”

[350]*350The appellants insist that there was no such agreement upon questions to be disposed of, and the respondent virtually admits that the record does not show it: The extent to which the respondent: goes is in saying that the referee correctly states the substance of what occurred at the opening of the case, but the-defendants were not held to their admissions during the trial. We are required, therefore, to consider the questions presented for determination, there being no binding stipulation -or agreement limiting the scope of the inquiry, and to decide from the entire record'arid testimony whether "the conclusions reached by the referee were right.

Considering the principal questions passed upon by the referee, we may, following the same order he adopted, take up in the' first place the éxtent to which the defendant Leonard R. Kerr is chargeable with the personal property in .the hotel under the terms of the-decree. ■

The plaintiff, and those situated alike with her in interest, refused to accept the furniture, and insisted upon the right to elect to take •its value upon the theory that the defendant had been guilty of . converting the same, and was chargeable on that theory. There are many legal objections to the plaintiff’s right so to elect at this time, growing out of the form of her action, which was one in equity for an accounting, and from the language of the interlocutory judgment entered, and from the terms of the decision'of the court-on the former, appeal affirming that judgment which, in effect, ordered that the defendant Leonard R. Kerr should account as. trustee ” for the property. • Though it was held that the bill of •sale which he had received from his mother of the furniture in ¡the hotel should be set aside, he was not, by our decision, deprived of the title or interest which he had in that property as a joint owner to the extent of one-half, nor of the additional amount or interest: to which he was entitled in common with the other next of kin in the one-half belonging to his mother. Having possession of the-personal property, and having rented it in connection with the hotel, he should account as trustee for all the profits or rents received. In other words, the theory of the plaintiff’s action and of the decree, was not to charge the defendants with having converted the property;, but rather to establish and restore title and to assert that as to a. portion of the personal property the title thereto was in the plain[351]*351tiff and the others next of kin. Such persons, having established their right to a portion of the personal property which was in the possession of the defendant and which he had rented in connection with the hotel property, were entitled as against him to have their interest fixed and to require him to account as trustee for what he had received from the property from the time he took possession down to the time it was decreed that he was no longer the exclusive owner thereof.

The plaintiff, having originally elected to treat this as a suit in equity to establish title and to obtain an accounting, could not, subsequently, elect to treat it as an action for conversion. Where a suit in equity is brought to establish title and to secure an accounting, the one in whose possession the property still is cannot be charged with the value as though he had converted it. The relief to be accorded is that given in this action for the return of the property together with such profits as may have been realized from its use while it was withheld or employed by the wrongdoer, and it is only in cases where the property taken is destroyed, or the title to it in some way parted with by the wrongdoer to some third person, and the proceeds converted, or in some other way the identity of the property is lost or its possession cannot be regained, that the value of the property on the theory of conversion will be allowed.

The instances in which the joint owner of personal property in possession can be charged with the value of the property upon the theory of conversion are pointed out in the case relied on by' the respondent. (Osborn v. Schenck, 83 N. Y. 201.) As said by the learned judge writing the opinion in that case: “When and for what cause one of two or more tenants in common of personal property may maintain trover against those retaining its possession is sufficiently clear on principle, but not always'of easy application.to confused and varying facts. The right of each to the use and possession of the property is precisely the same, and neither can have or exercise a superior authority over the other. It follows necessarily that the mere fact of such possession and use by one, even though it prevents the use and possession of the other, can furnish no ground of action, since it is rightful and rests upon a lawful authority. But it also follows that if that possession develops into a destruction of the property or of the interest of the co-tenant, or [352]*352into such a hostile appropriation of it as excludes the possibility of beneficial enjoyment by him, or ends in a sale of the whole property which ignores and denies any other right, then a conversion is established and trover may be maintained against the wrongdoer.

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.D. 348, 57 N.Y.S. 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-kerr-nyappdiv-1899.