Marsh v. Wheeler

2 Edw. Ch. 156
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 6, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2 Edw. Ch. 156 (Marsh v. Wheeler) 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
Marsh v. Wheeler, 2 Edw. Ch. 156 (N.Y. 1834).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor:

The general question in this case is, whether the complainant, widow and administratrix of David Marsh the younger, is entitled to any share or portion of the estate of David Marsh the elder, and if so, how much ?

The real estate is not devised to the exeeutors, nor was the legal title vested in them by operation of law. And from not being expressly devised to any one, it descended to the heirs at law: subject to the power of sale conferred upon the executors. The power here given is a general one in trust, coming under the statute (1. R. S. 732. §. 77. 94.), and is imperative upon the grantees of the power (§. 96). It operates as an incumbrance; and when it is executed, the [159]*159game overreaches and divests the legal title and estate in the heirs. The power could not be executed until after the expiration of one year from the testator’s death ; but, the moment it was executed, the legal title passed to the purchaser and the purchase money became assets in the hands of the executors—like the proceeds of the personal estate and for the same general purposes. The obvious intention of the testator was to convert the whole of his real estate, with the exception of the house and lot devised to his daughters, into money, in order to have the proceeds taken as a part of his personal estate, to have them blended, and all disposed of together and as one fund in payment of debts and legacies of five hundred dollars apiece to the daughters and so as to have the remainder divided between the four sons as residuary legatees. The conversion here intended is a conversion « out and outand its effect is “ to impress the real estate with the quality of money, so, that, after the testator’s death, it shall be taken to have existed as money previously to his death and, therefore, be considered, to all intents and purposes, part of his general personal estate Ram on Assets, 206. The difference in the effect of conversions of this kind is fully explained by the author just quoted; and the doctrine may also be found in Smith v. Claxton, 4. Mad. 484. In this case, Sir John Leach, V. C., upon a review of all the cases, states certain general principles which admit of clear and decisive application in determining the effect of a conversion where the object and purpose of it, partially or wholly, fails. He observes, “ a devisor may give to his devisee either land or the price of land at his pleasure ; and the devisee must receive it in the quality in which it is given and cannot intercept the purpose of the devisor. If it be the purpose to give land to the devisee, the land will descend to his heir; and' if it be the purpose of the devisor to give the price of land to the devisee, it will, like other money, be part of his personal estate.” And he puts the case, where a testator directs his land to be sold and the produce divided between several, there the obvious purpose is that the sale is to be made for the convenience of division and they take their several interests as money and not land. So, if one, of several devisees, dies in the lifetime of the devisor [160]*160and the heir stands in his place, the purpose of a sale, for the convenience of a division, still applies to the case in the event • 1 t which has happened and the share of the one dying will pass as money and not land. But in the event of all the devisees dying in the lifetime of the devisor, the purpose of such a sale, in an event of the kind, could have no application to the case and the heir would, consequently, take the whole interest as land.

The same able judge, in the subsequent case of Dixon v. Dawson, 2. S. & S. 327. adhered to the principles stated by him in Smith v. Claxton, namely, that where the whole land is properly sold by trustees and there is only a partial disposition of the produce of the sale (owing, for instance, to the failure, by death, of a devisee to take) there the surplus belongs to the heir as money and not as land, (and on this point see Green v. Jackson, 5. Russ. 35.) In the case of Dixon v. Dawson, this point,' amongst others, arose : The testatrix, at her death, left Philip Dixon her heir at law; and her real estate was sold by trustees in execution of the trusts of her will during the life time of this Philip Dixon. He died, however, before the trusts of the will were completed; and there being a surplus arising from the real estate beyond the particular purposes of the will, and which came to him as heir at law, the question was, whether it vested in him as land or money and belonged to his heir or personal representative. The vice-chancellor held, the surplus to belong to the personal representative.

I am entirely satisfied with the principle raised in these decisions and with the rules there laid down; and, applying them to the case now under consideration, it is plain that the share left to David Marsh the younger, whoever may be entitled to it, is to be regarded as personal estate. The sale directed by the will was obviously for the purpose of more conveniently effecting a division among the sons as well as for paying the legacies to the daughters; and this purpose remains applicable to the case whether all the sons be living or one of-them be dead. I am of opinion the matter in controversy must be considered as money or personal estate in the hands of the executors; and, that, if any right vested in David Marsh the younger which can now be claimed under [161]*161him, it is a right to money and not to land: and, consequentIy, that it belongs to the personal representative and not to his heirs at law.

This point being settled, I proceed to consider the next important question: whether the right of David Marsh the younger, as residuary legatee, was vested so as to pass, upon his death, to his personal representative or was contingent and merged in the estate 1 I put the question in this way, because it is certain the share of David Marsh the younger did not go to the surviving brothers. The bequest is not to them in joint tenancy. There are no words of survivorship; and when distinct legacies are given to individuals or an aggregate fund is directed to be divided among them in equal shares, their interests are several and if any of them die before the shares are vested, what was intended for them will fall into the -residue: because the benefits intended for the deceased legatees are not given over to the survivors: Page v. Page, 2. P. Wms. 489. Hence, in the case of a joint tenancy, the death of one will not occasion a lapse, but, in the other, such an event, under certain circumstances, will defeat the legacy or share (of the deceased) in the aggregate fund.

Then, as to the question of lapse. The ordinary case in which it happens is, where the intended legatee dies before the testator and there is no express limitation or bequest over. In the present instance, the testator has undertaken to guard against a lapse which might happen by the death of either of his sons before him, by giving the shares over to their lawful issue, in case they had any. These events, however, have not happened. David died, without issue, after the testator. Still, there are cases of a lapse where the party interested dies after the testator, provided it happen before the legacy is payable.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Edw. Ch. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-wheeler-nychanct-1834.