Matter of Earnshaw

89 N.E. 825, 196 N.Y. 330, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 827
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 89 N.E. 825 (Matter of Earnshaw) 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
Matter of Earnshaw, 89 N.E. 825, 196 N.Y. 330, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 827 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Haight, J.

Joseph W. Corlies, Sr., died on the 25th day of October, 1860, seized of the premises in question. He left him surviving a widow, three sons and two daughters. He left a last will and testament which was duly proved and admitted to probate, in which, after making provision for his widow, he divided three-fifths of the remainder among his sous, and then gave the other two-fifths to his trustees in trust for his two daughters, Cornelia and Emily, during their lives, with remainders to their children. The will named his widow and three sons as executrix and executors and trustees. It authorized his executrix and executors, the survivors and survivor of them, to sell and dispose of the real estate of which he died possessed, excepting that bequeathed to his wife, at either private or public sale, and to give good and sufficient deeds *332 therefor. He then further provided : I desire that my executrix and my executors shall convert the two-fifths of my residuary estate bequeathed to them in trust into cash as soon as they can conveniently do so without loss, and to invest and keep the same invested upon bond and mortgage upon good productive real estate in the cities of Hew York and Brooklyn during the continuance of said trust.”

On the 22d day of January, 1868, the executrix and executors, under the power of sale in the will, sold the premises in question to Meyers & Johnson for the sum of $21,267, which sum was paid to them. But the deed was executed only by the executrix and two of the executors, the other executor being absent in Europe. Thereupon Meyers & Johnson paid the consideration and entered into possession of the premises, and they, or their successors and assignees, have ever since continued in the‘possession thereof. Subsequently the widow and the three sons all died, the last on the 8th day of June, 1877, thus leaving the trust estate without any trustee to manage it. Thereupon, upon petition of Cornelia, one of the testator’s daughters, the Supreme Court appointed her husband, John W. S. Earnshaw, as trustee under the will, and he continued to act as such trustee until his death on the 24th of September, 1891, since which time no person had been appointed trustee under the will until the 8th day of March, 1907, at which time Edward M. Berrien, the appel lant, was appointed such trustee upon the joint petition of the two daughters of the testator, Cornelia C. Earnshaw and Emily C. Beese. Berrien, upon his appointment, qualified as such trustee by taking the oath and giving the bond required, and entered upon his duties as such. Subsequently he sold as such trustee and conveyed the premises in question to one Louis Stern for the sum of $500, Stern having succeeded to the title and possession of Meyers & Johnson. Thereupon Emily C. Beese, one of the daughters, petitioned the court for the removal of Berrien as trustee, alleging that she was induced to petition for his appointment through false and fraudulent statements with reference to the value of the property and *333 the facts of the case. The prayer of the petition concluded by demanding that the order appointing Berrien as trustee be vacated and set aside, and that all papers, deeds and documents made and executed or delivered by him be vacated. Attached to her petition is an affidavit of her daughter, Katherine It. Parker, in which she joined with her mother in asking for the same relief. Upon the hearing of the matter in Special Term the judge found that Mrs. Reese was not deceived by any false or fraudulent statements made to her at the time she executed the petition for the appointment of Berrien as trustee, and expressly found that all of the charges of false statements and allegations were unfounded and without merit. But the judge concluded by finding the Special Term that appointed Berrien as trustee was without jurisdiction, and thereupon the judge vacated the order appointing Berrien trustee, and stated in the order the grounds therefor to be that the former order was made without jurisdiction.

It further appears that Stern had entered into an agreement with one Henry Corn to exchange properties of the value of upwards of two millions of dollars, which included the lands in question ; that, on the law day fixed for the concluding of the exchange, Corn objected to the title of these premises, whereupon it was agreed he might retain in his hands the sum of §36,000.00, and that Stern should have six months' time in which to perfect the title. The rest of the agreement was carried out and the exchange of properties consummated. Stern thereupon applied to Mrs."Reese and Mrs. Earnshaw for deeds which would perfect his title, and upon his paying to each the sum of §500.00 they respectively executed and delivered such deeds, and” in addition thereto petitioned the court for the appointment of Berrien as trustee. The land is described as located about one and three-quarters miles southeast of Tarrytown, to be rough and uncultivated, about half of it covered with small timber and the balance with bushes and used as a pasture; that it has no frontage upon any highway or road or right of way, but is entirely cut off from approach except by the crossing of lands *334 of adjoining owners. The evidence tends to show that Stem when he purchased it in 1901 paid $4,000.00 for it, and a number of experts gave its present value to be $5,000.00, while on behalf of the petitioner, Mrs. Reese, it is claimed that its present value is the amount retained by Corn, $36,000.00.

It is contended that Stem and Com are the parties chiefly interested in this litigation, and that one of them instigated or procured Mrs. Reese to institute these proceedings. But we do not consider the differences between Stern and Corn, as now before us, for determination, and we shall, therefore, limit our review of the case to the determination of the legal questions raised by the order vacating the appointment of Berrien as trustee. This order we regard as a final order in a special proceeding, and, therefore, it may be appealed from to this court.

In the first place it is not clear to us that Mrs. Reese should be permitted to be heard upon the question of the validity of the order appointing Berrien as trustee. For, as we have seen, he was appointed upon her own petition and her own motion. It is true that if she had been deceived by false and fraudulent statements and was improperly induced -to make the petition for the appointment of Berrien, then she had the right to petition the court for relief. But, as we have seen, the court has found that she was not deceived by any false statements or fraudulent representations, that she knew all of the facts, and, so knowing the facts, she had executed a deed conveying away her entire interest in the premises. With the charges of fraud disposed of, we would naturally suppose that the Special Term would have dismissed her application, but the court saw fit to vacate the order appointing Berrien, for the reason that the court appointing him was without jurisdiction. We are thus brought to a consideration of that question. As we have seen, the will gave to the executrix and executors not only the power to sell and convey the real estate at public or private sale, but the testator specifically directed such executrix and executors to convert two-fifths of *335

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.E. 825, 196 N.Y. 330, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-earnshaw-ny-1909.