In re Chapter 52 of the Laws of 1909 & Acts Supplemental & Amendatory thereof for the Sale of Real Property Devised by & Under the Last Will & Testament of Callahan

96 Misc. 74
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 Misc. 74 (In re Chapter 52 of the Laws of 1909 & Acts Supplemental & Amendatory thereof for the Sale of Real Property Devised by & Under the Last Will & Testament of Callahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Chapter 52 of the Laws of 1909 & Acts Supplemental & Amendatory thereof for the Sale of Real Property Devised by & Under the Last Will & Testament of Callahan, 96 Misc. 74 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Giegerich, J.

This is a proceeding brought by the

life tenant under section 67 and the following sections of the Real Property Law for the sale of a number of parcels of real estate located in the city of New York. The will under which the property is held devises all of it to the testator’s daughter, the petitioner, for life, and on her death to her surviving issue. The will contains the further provision: “I direct and empower my said executors upon the death of my said daughter without issue as aforesaid, that is to say, as soon thereafter as is practicable, to sell all my real and personal estate at public or private sale in their discretion and to divide and distribute the net proceeds thereof in the following manner: (a) To my executors, hereinafter named, the proceeds of the sale of my premises, 124 East Thirty-first street," Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, to be given by them in equal shares and divided among the five or ten most needy Roman Catholic churches within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York as they and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York or his successor or a majority of them shall select, designate and appoint, (b) To my said executors the proceeds of the sale of my premises, Nos. 227 East Twenty-sixth street and 226 East Twenty-seventh street, 342 East Twenty-fourth street, 46 Grand street and 434 "West Forty-ninth street,, in the said borough and city, to be given by them in equal shares and divided among - such Roman Catholic charitable institutions within said archdiocese as, they and the said archbishop or a majority of them shall select, designate and appoint, (c) To the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, in the City of New York, the sum of $2,000 and the income thereon to be used for the purposes of said society, and I desire that said sum be deposited in the Emigrants’ Industrial Savings Bank of the City of New York, (d) To [76]*76John P. McG-owan, M.D., of No. 110 Bast Thirtieth street, Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, the sum of $500. (e) To the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, in the City of New York, the sum of $5,000. (f) To the pastor of St. Stephen’s Roman Catholic Church, in Bast Twenty-eighth street, in the City of New York, Borough of Manhattan, the sum of $5,000, on condition that he use the same towards building a new front and improving the entrances on the Twenty-eighth street end of said church, (g) If, after the foregoing legacies are fully paid, there should be anything left of my estate, I direct the same to be paid to the same persons and devoted to the same uses and distributed in the same manner as set out in the subdivisions ‘A’ and / B ’ of paragraph ‘ thirteenth ’ of this my will.” Section 67 of the Real Property Law, as amended by chapter 55 of the Laws of 1913, provides as follows: “ Sale or lease of real property held by tenant for life with contingent remainder or remainders over to persons whose identity is unknown. In any case where real property is devised by will or conveyed by deed to a person for life, with contingent remainder or remainders over, to persons the identity of whom cannot be definitely ascertained until the death of the person entitled to the life estate, the Supreme Court may, by order, on such terms and conditions as seem just and proper, authorize the sale or lease of such real property, or any part thereof, whenever it appears to the satisfaction of the court that said real property, or some portion thereof has become so unproductive or such circumstances or conditions have arisen subsequent to the devise or deed that it is for the best interests of the life tenant and of the remaindermen that a sale or lease should be had, or that for other peculiar reasons, or on account of other peculiar circumstances, it is for the best interest of the [77]*77life tenant and the remaindermen that a sale or lease should be had. The Supreme Court shall not grant such an order, unless it appears to the satisfaction of such court that a written notice stating the time and place of the application therefor has been served upon the life tenant and upon every other person in being having an estate, vested or contingent, in reversion or remainder in said real property at least eight days before the making thereof. If such beneficiary or other person is an adult without the state, or is a minor, lunatic, person of unsound mind, habitual drunkard or absentee, notice shall be served on such beneficiary or other person in such manner as the court or a justice thereof may prescribe. Upon the return day of the notice the court shall, upon its own motion, appoint a special guardian for any minor and for any lunatic, person of unsound mind or habitual drunkard who shall not be represented by a committee duly appointed.” The matter was referred to a referee who reported that the petition should bo granted and the sale made, and that report was confirmed by the court, and the referee has sold at private sale, pursuant to the said order of confirmation, two of the parcels. described in the petition as parcels Q- and H and known by the street numbers 14 and 16 West End avenue, in the borough of Manhattan, in the city, county and state of New York. The purchaser rejected title, and this motion is made to compel him to complete his purchase. It is hardly necessary to cite authorities for the proposition that upon a motion of this character the objections to the title tendered are not to be passed upon by the court in the same way they would be if raised in a direct proceeding between the very parties to the right. In such a direct proceeding, where all the parties in interest are before the court and the court has jurisdiction to decide, they are con-[78]*78eluded by the judgment pronounced, so long as it stands unreversed, but the court stands in quite a different attitude where it is called upon to compel a purchaser to take title under a judicial sale, who asserts that there are outstanding rights and interests not cut off or concluded by the adjudication under which the sale was made. The objection may involve a mere question of fact or it may involve a pure question of law upon undisputed facts. In either case it may very well happen that the question is so doubtful that, although the court would decide it upon the facts disclosed, in a proceeding where all the parties interested were before the court, nevertheless it would decline to pass upon it in a proceeding to compel a purchaser to take title and would relieve him from his purchase. Fleming v. Burnham, 100 N. Y. 1, 9. In Jordan v. Poillon, 77 N. Y. 518, 521-522, the court said that the “ ease should be very plain which would authorize a court to decide a question arising on a motion to compel a party to take a conveyance.” In Brooklyn Park Commissioner v. Armstrong, 45 N. Y. 234, 247, 248, the court held that, even though the danger to the purchaser, to all seeming, is very slight and very remote, if there is in fact an existing defect in the title, the purchaser will not be compelled to perform. In Warner v. De Nyse, 188 N. Y. 378, 380, the court said that the decision on a motion to compel a purchaser at a judicial sale to complete his purchase should be based on equitable principles. It does not even as between the parties amount to a determination that the title to the property is perfect or imperfect. The purchaser being entitled to a marketable title should not be compelled to take a title that will not be accepted by an ordinarily prudent man when the property is again offered for sale or as security for a loan.” Without attempting to pass upon the questions presented, it [79]

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Bluebook (online)
96 Misc. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chapter-52-of-the-laws-of-1909-acts-supplemental-amendatory-nysupct-1916.