New York Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Cuthbert

31 A.D. 191, 52 N.Y.S. 653
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 A.D. 191 (New York Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Cuthbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Cuthbert, 31 A.D. 191, 52 N.Y.S. 653 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinions

Rumsey, J.:

Francis TV. Lasalc, a resident of Westchester county, died on the 13th of February, 1889, seized and possessed of a large estate, consisting of real and personal property. He left a will with several codicils, which were offered for probate to the surrogate of Westchester county, and were by him admitted to probate after a contest, and his decree admitting the will to probate was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. The executor named in the will renounced his trust and the plaintiff was designated in his place, and letters of administration with the will annexed were issued to it. In pursuance of the authority of those letters the plaintiff took possession of all the real and personal estate of which Mr. Lasalc died the owner, and proceeded to administer upon it according to the will. The heirs at law of Mr. Lasak were four children and a granddaughter of a deceased son. Mrs. Schermerhorn, one of the appellants here, was one of the children. By the will of her father she received only the income of $30,000 during her life, which was very much less than the share of the estate which she would have taken had her father died intestate, and she was apparently dissatisfied with the provisions of the will, which dissatisfaction existed to a somewhat less extent, apparently, in the minds of the other heirs at [194]*194law. After the judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the decree of the surrogate had been entered, and sometime in the year 1891, Mrs. Cuthbert, one of the daughters of the testator, brought an action for the partition of the real estate of which he died seized. The plaintiff was made a party to that action, as were all the heirs at law of the testator. It was claimed in that action that Francis W. Lasalc was not competent to make the will under which the plaintiff claimed to own the real estate, and the action seems to have been brought for the purpose of obtaining a judgment declaring the will to be void. Answers were served by several of the defendants, and the action was ready for trial, when, after some considerable negotiation, an agreement for its settlement was reached between the heirs at law of Mr. Lasak. This agreement was made on the 16th day of June, 1892. It proceeded upon the theory that as to his real estate Mr. Lasak died intestate ■ on account of the invalidity of 1ns will, and it provided that four of the five heirs at law should convey their interest in the real estate to Calvin Frost, thus vesting in him the title to four-fifths of that property, the other fifth still remaining in Mrs. Cuthbert, the plaintiff in the action. It ¡provided further that a judgment should be procured in a proper action setting aside the will, and when that had been done the proceeds of the real estate should be divided in a manner more particularly to be mentioned hereafter. It was originally intended that the plaintiff should become a party to that agreement, but the officers of the plaintiff very properly deemed that, as trustees under the will, it was their duty to defend their trust, and they declined to sign the paper. After their declination, however, the heirs at law, by another paper reciting the refusal of the plaintiff to join in the contract, ratified and confirmed it. In pursuance of one of the conditions of this contract, Mr. Frost, to whom four-fifths •of. the real estate had been conveyed by the heirs at law, was made a party to the action of partition and answered in it, setting up the invalidity of the will of Francis Lasak and his title derived from the heirs at law. Upon the issues framed in that action ■.the case was brought for trial at a term of this court held in Westchester county, and after a vigorous contest a judgment was entered •declaring the will to be void and adjudging that Calvin Frost was the owner in fee of four undivided fifths of the real estate and [195]*195Ophelia J. Cuthbert was the owner of the other fifth. The judgment contained the usual provisions for a sale of the property, which was afterwards had, and the proceeds were divided pursuant to the jiro visions of the judgment. This judgment in partition, however, was not entered until the 20th day of January, 1894, and the final judgment confirming the sale was entered on the 16th day of June, 1894.

During the time that elapsed from the adjudication of the surrogate of "Westchester county sustaining the will of Mr. Lasak, to the entry of the final judgment in jiartition, the plaintiff, claiming to be the owner of the real estate as trustee under the will, had collected the rents and jiaid out from them certain expenses and distributed a jiortion of them in the manner jirovided by the will. After the final sale under the judgment of jiartition, the plaintiff, whose title had been divested by that judgment, began this action to jirocure a settlement of its accounts and an adjudication as to the rights of the several defendants to share in the proceeds of the rents which remained for distribution after the jiayment of the exjienses. Answers were served in that action and it was referred to a referee before whom it was tried, and from the judgment entered upon his report this appeal is taken by several of the defendants. The principal question jiresented ujion the appeal arises by reason of the claim of Mrs. Schermerhorn, one of the heirs at law, that she is entitled to receive one-fifth of the rents jiaid over to the jilaintiff while it held this real estate as trustee under the will. Her projiosition is that the will having been declared void and it having been adjudged that Mr. Lasak died intestate as to the real estate, the jilaintiff took no title and is bound to account to the heirs at law for the rents and profits of that property which it held in defiance of their rights. The jilaintiff was a jiarty to the judgment in jiartition and insisted strongly ujion the validity of the will under which it claimed to have the title to this jiroperty. In that litigation it was defeated, and the judgment entered in that action is conclusive upon the jilaintiff that it had no right to take possession of this jirojierty; and as a result it is bound to account to the heirs at law for the rents and jirofits of the real estate precisely as any other jierson who takes jiossession of the real estate to which he has no title, is bound to account.

[196]*196If that were all there were of the case there can be no doubt, not only that the plaintiff would be bound to account to each of the heirs at law for her proportion of the rents received, but that Mrs. Schermerhorn would be entitled to receive one fifth of them, and this is not substantially denied by anybody. Indeed the plaintiff by bringing this action concedes substantially that it is bound to account for these rents to those persons who are entitled to them, and it is a matter of entire indifference to it to whom they are tó be paid. But the right of Mrs. Schermerhorn is not determined solely by the considerations above stated. As has been said, on the 16th day of June, 1892, Mrs. Schermerhorn conveyed all her interest in this real estate to Calvin Frost. She, as well as the plaintiff, was a party to the action of partition, and the judgment in that action, that Calvin Frost is the owner in fee of four-fifths of that estate, is binding upon her as well as upon the plaintiff. Her conveyance upon which this judgment wras made, conveyed to Frost on the 16th day of June, 1892, not only the real estate, .but the right to receive the rents which necessarily followed the conveyance, and, therefore, as to the rents received after the 16th of June, 1892, she clearly has no claim upon them.

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Bluebook (online)
31 A.D. 191, 52 N.Y.S. 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-trust-co-v-cuthbert-nyappdiv-1898.