Nichols v. Park

79 N.Y.S. 547
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 9, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 N.Y.S. 547 (Nichols v. Park) 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
Nichols v. Park, 79 N.Y.S. 547 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

In many of its features this case is like Phelps v. Phelps, 143 N. Y. 197, 38 N. E. 280, 25 L. R. A. 625, and the principles thereof, so far as applicable, are controlling. The learned judge at special term distinguished that case on the ground that it could be fairly inferred or implied from the allegations of the complaint herein “that upon payment of the agreed price the vendee might compel a specific performance by the vendor, and this was clearly such a seisin in law as would entitle him to its possession.” As authority for this proposition that from such facts seisin in law would arise, reference is made to Clybourn v. Railway Co., 4 111. App. 463. Assuming that this is a correct statement of the law existing in Illinois, it does not help us, for the reason that it in no way appears that the statutes relating to the dower interest of a wife are the same in both states. In this state one who pays money for property, and takes title in the name of another, cannot maintain a suit for specific performance, and under such facts there is no resulting trust. It is only in case of fraud, or possibly of mistake, or where the rights of creditors intervene, that such a title can be successfully assailed. In Phelps v. Phelps, supra, the husband paid the consideration, and the case was decided upon the provisions of our own Revised Statutes, and it was said in the opinion that to such statutes “we must look for the authority for the claims of a wife to be entitled to dower in lands. To entitle the wife to dower, the husband must be seised either in fact or in law of a present freehold in the premises, as well as an estate of inheritance. That proposition follows from the language of the section in the Revised Statutes that ‘a widow shall be endowed of the third part of all the lands whereof her husband was seised of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage.’ ” The complaint herein does not expressly aver that it was contracted in writing between the husband and Coburn [549]*549that the premises in question should be conveyed to the husband, but simply that the husband contracted in writing for the purchase from said Coburn of the premises. It is alleged that it was his money that paid for the property; but from all that appears he might have intended to make a present of the money which paid for the house to his brother, to whom title was given. There was nothing to prevent the husband from doing as he pleased with his money. He was under no duty or obligation to his wife to invest in real property, so that her dower interest might attach. There is, however, the further allegation in the complaint that the husband “fraudulently,” and for the purpose of forestalling the plaintiff from her dower right, “took record title * * * in the name of his brother;” Admitting that the title was in the brother, all that the husband would have would be the equitable right to have the title vested in him. He certainly had not seisin in fact, nor could such an equitable interest, if any, be construed as a seisin in law. “Seisin in law,” as defined in Bouvier’s Dictionary (page 976), is “a right of immediate possession.” Surely, the right of a husband to compel his brother to turn over the title of the property to him is not similar to the right of an heir to take property from his ancestor by descent. The latter is such a right, however, as it has been said constitutes seisin in law. Thus, in 3 Washb. Real Prop. (5th Ed.) p. 138, the author says:

“Where there is no adverse holding, the possession follows the property in the land, and is in him who has the title. There is a seisin in deed and a seisin in law, and the difference between the two is that in one case an actual possession has been taken, and in the other there is a right like that of an heir upon descent from his ancestors while the possession is vacant, before he has made an actual entry.”

The husband, therefore, during marriage, and down to 1886, when he took title in his own name, which was after the plaintiff had secured from him a divorce, possessed at best merely an equitable right to have the property conveyed to him, and this was not such seisin as gave rise to inchoate right of dower.

The only material fact averred in addition to those appearing in Phelps v. Phelps, supra, is that here it is alleged that the husband went into possession and continued therein until his death. It is not alleged, however, that he took possession with intent to claim a freehold estate of inheritance. Not having title, or possession under claim of title, his mere possession, whatever his equitable rights, did not give him seisin in fact or in law. “It will be presumed that one in possession of land holds the possession under the owner of the legal title” (1 Am. Dig. [Cent. Ed.] p. 2261, § 313; Smith v. Burtis, 6 Johns. 197, 217, 5 Am. Dec. 218; Jackson v. Sharp, 9 Johns. 163, 167, 6 Am. Dec. 267; Sanders v. Riedinger, 30 App. Div. 277, 281, 51 N. Y. Supp. 937, affirmed on opinion below, 164 N. Y. 564, 58 N. E. 1092). With respect to land or an interest in land acquired by the husband subsequent to the divorce granted in 1877 terminating the marriage relation, no dower right could attach. In re Ensign’s Estate, 103 N. Y. 284, 8 N. E. 544, 57 Am. Rep. 717; Kade v. Lauber, 16 Abb. Prac. (N. S.) 288. We must, therefore, determine the plaintiff’s right to dower upon the facts stated with respect to the husband’s interest in this land in [550]*550question prior to that date. If we construe the allegations more favorably than we think the language would really justify, as intending to state facts from which the inference is to be drawn that the hus'band contracted to take the property in his own name, then the only interest,—and that of an equitable character,—to which the wife could have been entitled during the time the land was thus under contract to her husband, would have ceased after the title had been conveyed to the brother. Such an interest of the wife could, at the best, be but an equitable one to have her husband take title so that dower might attach. That such a right would, as stated, end with the transfer of title to the brother, appears from what was well said in I Scrib. Dower (page 443), as follows:

“The general rule is that if the husband, during his lifetime, dispose of any equitable estate he may have in lands, the dower right of his wife therein, will be defeated. It is only in such equitable interests as he may possess at the time of his death that she can claim dower. ‘The principle of the Revised Statutes,’ says the chancellor in Hawley v. James, 5 Paige, 318, 453, ‘extends only to those cases in which the equitable interest of the husband in the trust property continues down to the time of his death, so as to be inheritable by his heirs; and, if he aliens it in his lifetime, the widow will not be entitled to dower therein as against the grantee;’ and this is the general doctrine of the authorities, and in some states is expressly declared by statute.”

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y.S. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-park-nyappdiv-1903.