Morris v. . Ward

36 N.Y. 587, 3 Trans. App. 148
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 N.Y. 587 (Morris v. . Ward) 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
Morris v. . Ward, 36 N.Y. 587, 3 Trans. App. 148 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This action was brought in the Supreme Court, to obtain an adjudication declaring the Plaintiff’s estate in certain city lots, in the city of New York, which he holds with the Defendant, to be an estate in fee, instead of an estate for the life of the Defendant’s father, Samuel Ward, as claimed by the Defendant.

The Plaintiff, through several conveyances, has obtained the interest which Samuel Ward had in the premises; and what that interest is, whether a moiety for the life of Samuel Ward, or in fee, is the principal question in the case.

The action was referred, and the referee held that the estate of Samuel Ward was only an undivided moiety in the lands in question for his life, and dismissed the complaint, and directed judgment for the Defendant, against the Plaintiff, for costs.

The material facts established in the case by the findings of the referee, and the admissions in the pleadings, are as follows:

On the 25th day of January, 1838, the said Samuel Ward married Emily Astor, the daughter of William B. Astor, and grand-daughter of John Jacob Astor, late of the city of New York, deceased. On the 16th day of February, 1838, the said John Jacob Astor, by deed of that date, for the consideration therein expressed, of natural love and affection to said Emily, and of one dollar, did give and grant unto her (besides certain bonds and mortgages), thirty-two lots of land, therein and in the complaint described, with the hereditaments *149 and appurtenances thereof, to have and to hold the same to the said Emily during her life, unless she or her husband should attempt any sale thereof, or make or allow any incumbrance thereon, in which case her estate was to cease, and the same was given to trustees, to receive the rents and profits thereof, and apply them to her use during her life; and by the same deed, and for the same consideration, the said John Jacob Astor did give and grant the said lands and their appurtenances, from and after the death of the said Emily, unto her surviving issue, and their heirs and assigns forever, and did declare that the provisions therein made were to be deemed an advancement to the said Emily, out of his estate, and to be so accounted under his will, and that the said lands and bonds and mortgages were, for such purpose, valued at $200,000.

This sum of $200,000 the will of the said John Jacob Astor, published December 30,1846, charged upon the residuary portion of his estate, therein given to the said William B. Astor, as a sum to be settled on the said Emily and her issue, and in regard to which, by a codicil to said will, made and published January 19, 1848, he made the following provision : “ I direct that the said portions of $200,000, for each of the daughters of my son William B. Astor, shall be settled on them on their respectively attaining the age of twenty-one years, or their marriage.”

On the 18th day of February, 1841, the said Emily died, leaving her surviving her husband, the said Samuel Ward, and two children, the issue of said marriage, viz., Margaret Astor Ward, the Defendant, and William Samuel Ward, now deceased. On the 23d day of February, 1841, the said William Samuel Ward died intestate, leaving no descendant, but leaving him surviving his father, the said Samuel Ward, and his sister, the said Defendant, and no other heir-at-law.

The said Samuel Ward, and Margaret A. Ward, the Defendant, as proprietors of the parcel of land, consisting of thirty-two lots, described and conveyed by the said deed of settlement, had the right of pre-emption to take out a grant from the Mayor, Aider-men, and Commonalty of the city of Mew York, of the land undo]1 *150 the waters of the Hudson river, between the said lands, and the westerly exterior line of said city.

In July, 1844, the Mayor, &c., of the city of Hew York passed an ordinance that a bulkhead and sufficient return bulkheads be built on the Hudson River, along the westerly exterior line of said city, opposite said thirty-two lots, and that the space between the bulkhead so to be built and said lots, be filled up with good and wholesome earth.

Whereupon the said Samuel Ward and the said William B. Astor, who were the guardians of the person and estate of the said Defendant, applied to the Court of Chancery, and obtained authority, as such guardians, to make the necessary expenditures to obtain the grant, and fill up the space aforesaid, representing in their petition that the said lots of lands adjacent to which the said lands under water lay, belonged to the Defendant in fee, subject to a life estate in the equal undivided one-half part thereof, which belonged to the said Samuel Ward for and during his natural life. And the said Samuel Ward, in said petition, offered to pay the proportion of such expense which the value of his life estate in said thirty-two lots bore to the value of the whole estate in the same.

The order thereupon made directed the said guardians to obtain such grant to the Defendant and said Samuel Ward, conveying to them, respectively, the same estates in said lands under water as they were represented in said -petition to have in the thirty-two lots aforesaid. And also directed the said expenses to be borne by the Defendant and said Samuel Ward, in the. proportion of their said respective interests in said lots.

On or about the 26th day of August, 1847, the Mayor, Aider-men, and Commonalty of the said city, by deed of that date, granted to the said Samuel Ward and the said Defendant the said lands under water, above mentioned and described in the complaint, to have and to hold to them and their legal representatives in manner following, to wit: the one equal undivided moiety or half-part to said Samuel Ward for and during his natural life, and the other equal undivided moiety or half-part, together *151 with the remainder in the undivided half-part held by the said Samuel Ward, for life, as aforesaid, unto the said Margaret A. Ward, and her legal representatives, to and for her and their own proper use and benefit forever.

By the construction of bulkheads, and the filling in of the said land under water, so granted by the Mayor, &c., as aforesaid, thirty-two additional lots were acquired; but the said - Samuel Ward was charged, and he paid, on account of the cost and expense of obtaining said grant, and the making of said bulkheads, and filling in the said land so granted, only such portion thereof as the value of an estate in an undivided moiety thereof for his life bore to the value of an estate in fee in the whole property.

The referee found that the deed of settlement dated on the 16th day of February was not made in pursuance of any promise by said John Jacob Astor, to the said Emily Astor and Samuel Ward, or either of them, before their marriage, nor in pursuance or execution of any ante-nuptial agreement of said John Jacob Astor with them, or either of them, in regard to such settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.Y. 587, 3 Trans. App. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-ward-ny-1867.