Kip v. . Hirsh

9 N.E. 317, 103 N.Y. 565, 18 Abb. N. Cas. 167, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 257, 58 Sickels 565, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 1093
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 9 N.E. 317 (Kip v. . Hirsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kip v. . Hirsh, 9 N.E. 317, 103 N.Y. 565, 18 Abb. N. Cas. 167, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 257, 58 Sickels 565, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 1093 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

In June, 1835, Leonard W. Kip, the plaintiffs’ testator, was the owner of the lots of*land in controversy and in that month he conveyed them to Daniel E. Delavan, taking from him a mortgage on the same lots to secure $1,500, part of the purchase-money. The deed and the mortgage were recorded on the 29th of June, 1835.

On. the 16th of May, 1840, Delavan made a general assignment to Walter J. Smith, conveying the lots in question, together with a very large amount of other real estate and personal property, in trust, to sell the real estate with all convenient speed, and apply the proceeds of the real and personal estate to the payment first, of certain specified debts of the assignor ; next, to the payment of all his other debts, and when the trust was fully executed to return the surplus, if any, to the assignor. This assignment was recorded June 6, ’ 1840.

In August, 1840, Leonard W. Kip commenced a suit for the foreclosure of the above-mentioned mortgage, making Delavan a party defendant; but his assignee, Smith, was not made a party.

*569 This foreclosure suit proceeded to a decree, and the mortgaged premises were sold under the decree and bought in by Leonard W. Kip, and a master’s deed was executed to him December 30, 1840, and recorded February 23,1841.

The mortgaged premises consisted of three lots on the easterly side of Fourth avenue, between One Hundred and Twentieth and One Hundred and Twenty-first streets, in the city of Hew York. They were vacant and unproductive, and so continued until the death of Leonard W. Kip, which took place in 1863. He left a will, of which the plaintiffs in this action are the surviving executors. By this will, after making certain bequests, he devised the residue of his real and personal estate to his executors, in trust for the benefit of his wife during her life, directing them to let and lease all his productive real and leasehold estates, and empowering them, at any time after his decease, to sell all vacant and unproductive lots and divide the proceeds among his children.

On the 15th of April, 1867, the plaintiffs, as executors of the will, leased the lots in question to John J. Beeber for the term of nine months from the date of the lease, he agreeing to pay as rent the taxes on said lots as soon as due and payable. Beeber took possession of the lots under this lease and inclosed the same with a fence on all four sides and occupied , ’em for storing lumber from April 15,1867, until about the year 1883, when he relinquished his business to his sons, who have since then carried on the same business on the premises as his successors.

On the 17th of March, 1885, the plaintiffs and defendant entered into an agreement in writing, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to sell and the defendant agreed to purchase the premises for the sum of $12,750, payable as set forth in the agreement. But the defendant now refuses to complete the purchase, claiming that the plaintiffs’ title is defective by reason of the omission to make Walter J. Smith, the assignee of Delavan, a party to the foreclosure suit through which the plaintiffs’ testator derived his title.

If the assignment and the title of the assignee were still sub *570 sisting, and the trusts unexecuted, the objection would be unanswerable, but we think that the circumstances of the case are such as to create a legal presumption that the purposes for which the trusts were created have ceased, and that consequently the estate of the trustee has ceased and the title reverted to Delavan, the grantor of the plaintiffs, or those claiming under him. 1 (1 R. S. 730, § 67.) His title was, of course, transferred to the plaintiffs’ testator by the sale under the decree, Delavan, the mortgagor, having been a party to the foreclosure. The assignment to Smith was made'in 1840, more than forty-five years before the trial of this action, and nearly forty-five years before the making of the contract of sale, and although the trust was to sell the real estate with all convenient speed for the purpose of paying the debts, it is found as a fact that no sale was ever made by the assignee of the property in question or any part thereof. It does not appear that any of the property embraced in the assignment was ever sold, or that the assignment was ever acted upon in any manner. Walter J. Smith, the assignee, lived twenty-five years, and Daniel E. Delavan thirty years after the making of the assignment. It is found that no successor in the trust was ever appointed in place of Smith, and it does not appear that Smith ever claimed or asserted any title to the lots in question under the assignment, or that any creditor of Delavan, or any other person, has ever made any claim under the assignment or attempted to enforce the trust, although the executors of Kip have been in actual possession through their tenants for nearly twenty years. After such a great lapse of time since- the making of the assignment and the sale under the foreclosure, we think the presumption that the debts of Delavan secured by the assignment have been paid or in some manner discharged, is so strong that the fact that the assignment once existed is no longer a substantial objection to the title. So much time has elapsed that the presumption of payment would apply even to debts evidenced by specialty or by judgment, and it cannot be conceived that if the debts have not in fact been paid there could be any now outstanding which would not be barred by the statute of lim *571 itations. We think there is no danger in holding that, independently of the act of 1875 (Chap. 375), the trusts created by the assignment should, under such a state of facts as exists in the present case, be decreed discharged, and that the estate of the trustee should be deemed to have ceased. Eo one but the successors of the trustee, if any should ever be appointed, can dispute the title which the defendant will acquire by the conveyance from the executors under the power contained in the will of the testator, and their right to redeem has long been barred by the statute of limitations.

We think the lots in question are embraced in the power of sale. They were unquestionably vacant and unproductive at the time of the death of the testator, and nothing that has happened since has materially changed their condition. The putting of a fence around them and the storing of lumber or building materials thereon did not change their character as vacant lots, so long as they are not built upon; neither did the lease change their character of unproductive lots, as no rent was reserved, the only agreement on the part of the tenant being to pay the taxes. But we think the testator intended to include in the power the real estate which was vacant and unproductive at the time of his death.

The title of Delavan to which the testator succeeded by his purchase at the foreclosure was subject only to the estate of the trustee. That was not an absolute estate, but only for the purposes of the trust. Whenever those purposes ceased the trust ceased, and the assignor, or those who succeeded to his right, were in by their original title.

We are inclined to the opinion further that the act of 1875 (Chap. 545) is applicable to this case. There is nothing in the act which confines its operation to assignments made after its passage, but, on the contrary, its language imports that it applies to trusts theretofore created.

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9 N.E. 317, 103 N.Y. 565, 18 Abb. N. Cas. 167, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 257, 58 Sickels 565, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kip-v-hirsh-ny-1886.