Howell v. Sebring

14 N.J. Eq. 84
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 14 N.J. Eq. 84 (Howell v. Sebring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howell v. Sebring, 14 N.J. Eq. 84 (N.J. Ct. App. 1861).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Adam Smith, of the county of Somerset, by his last will and testament, bearing date on the 5th December, 1823, devised the use of a moiety of the residue [87]*87of lais real estate to his daughter Frances, the wife of John Van Nest, for her life, and on her death to the use of her husband, John Van Nest, for his life, and on the death of the husband, to his children by the said daughter of the testator in fee; and the testator by his will directed, that when the said land should belong to his said grandchildren, the surviving executors or executor might make sale of the said real estate, in order to make an equal division among the said grandchildren of the proceeds thereof, unless they could all agree upon a division of their parents’ share. The testator died seized of the land so devised in the year 1825. Frances Van Nest, the daughter of the testator, survived her husband, and died on the 29th of January, 1857, leaving three children and the issue of a deceased daughter surviving. The complainant, as one of the children of John and Frances Van Nest, is entitled to one-fourth part of the lands so devised.

Prior to the death of Francos Van Nest, all the executors named in the will had died. On the 23d of February, 1857, the defendant, Peter L. Sebring, took out letters of administration de bonis non with the will annexed upon the estate of the said testator, and took upon himself the administration and settlement of said estate.

On the 26th of February, 1858, the land was exposed to sale at public vendue by the administrator, and was struck off and sold to Abraham Sebring, one of the defendants and a son of the administrator, for thirty dollars an acre.

The bill is filed to set aside the said sale on the grounds—

1. That the administrator had no authority to make the said sale — and

2. That the said sale -was fraudulent, and made by collusion between the administrator and his son.

I. The first objection to the validity of the sale is, that the power vested in the executors to make sale of the real estate in question was not an absolute or unconditional power, but contingent upon the failure of the devisees to agree among [88]*88themselves upon a division; and that an unsuccessful attempt to make a division by the devisees was a prerequisite to the power of sale being vested in the executors.

The power of sale is vested by the terms of the will. The exercise of the power is contingent upon the failure of the devisees to agree upon a division. The language of the will is, that the surviving executor or executors may make sale of the real estate, in order to make an equal division among the devisees, unless they can all agree upon a division. The exercise of the power by the executors is contingent upon the ability or inability of all the devisees to agree upon a division. The inability may be legal, resulting from legal disability, or it may be voluntary. It is manifest, upon the face of the bill, that the devisees cannot agree upon a division. Part of them are infants. There is no ground for assuming that the testator intended to provide merely for the case of a disagreement as to the mode of division among parties Competent to contract. It is more reasonable to presume that he intended to provide, also, for cases of legal disability to make the agreement. The case therefore falls both within the language and the intention of the testator. Hnder such circumstances, there can be no necessity for an attempt at agreement among the devisees as a prerequisite to the exercise of the power by the executors.

It was suggested, upon the argument, that the estate of the testator, Adam Smith, had been fully administered by his executors, and their final accounts settled; that after their death there were no debts of the testator to be paid, and no assets to be administered; and that consequently there was no authority in the surrogate to grant letters of administration for the mere purpose of executing the power in question. It is enough to say, in answer to this objection, that it is neither suggested by the bill nor sustained by competent evidence; on the contrary the bill and answer both allege that Peter L. Sebring took out letters of administration de bonis non mm testamento annexo upon the estate of [89]*89the testator, and that ho has since taken upon himself the settlement of the estate.

If, therefore, the objection to the legality of the grant of letters of administration be well founded, both in law and in fact, upon which it is not designed to intimate any opinion whatever, it is clear that it cannot now bo drawn in question in the progress of this cause.

The power vested by the will in the executors to sell and convey real estate, is by the statute conferred upon the administrator cum testamento annexo, and a sale and conveyance by him is declared to be as valid and effectual as if made by the executors named in the will. Nix. Dig. 258, § 20.

II. It is objected that the sale made by the administrator is actually or constructively fraudulent.

The bill charges, among other circumstances of fraud, that there was collusion between the administrator and his son, to whom the property was sold, and that the administrator fraudulently furnished to the son information which was withheld from other bidders at the sale. On filing the bill, an injunction issued to restrain the delivery of the deed to the purchaser. The son has been examined as a witness, and it appears satisfactorily, from his evidence, that lie purchased the promises not by collusion with his father for his own benefit, but that they were in fact purchased for the benefit of his father. The sale took place on the 26th of February. By the conditions of sale, the purchase money was to be paid in cash within thirty days, and possession to be given on the first day of April. The deed was executed, and delivered to the son on the eighth of March, ten days after the sale, and twenty days before the time limited for the payment of the purchase money. The purchaser paid no part of the consideration, but gave a mortgage to his father for the whole amount, being fourteen hundred and ten dollars^ On the same day he conveyed the property back to his father, at the same price at which it was struck off to [90]*90him. Both deeds were executed before the service of the injunction and before the time limited by the conditions of the sale for the payment of the purchase money and the delivery of the deed. The evidence of the son leaves no room for doubt that in point of fact the administrator became indirectly the purchaser at his own sale, in violation of the well settled doctrine of equity. This objection must prove fatal to the sale. Den v. Wright, 2 Halst. 175; Den v. McKnight, 6 Halst. 385; Scott v. Gamble, 1 Stock. 235; Mulford v. Bowen, 1 Ibid. 797; Obert v. Obert, 2 Stock. 98, 1 Beas. 423; Mulford v. Minch, 3 Stock. 16.

The complainant, however, is not entitled to relief upon this ground in the present shape of the pleadings. It is well objected, on the part of the defendant, that the case thus made is not the case made by the bill nor within the issue between the parties. Before a decree can be made against the defendant on this ground it should be distinctly charged in the bill, and the defendant have an opportunity of meeting the charge by his answer.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.J. Eq. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-sebring-njch-1861.