Pease v. . Egan

30 N.E. 102, 131 N.Y. 262, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 105, 86 Sickels 262, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1022
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 30 N.E. 102 (Pease v. . Egan) 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
Pease v. . Egan, 30 N.E. 102, 131 N.Y. 262, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 105, 86 Sickels 262, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1022 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The plaintiff’s complaint has been dismissed in the courts below for the reason, as stated, that no case for subrogation had been made out, although the Special and General Terms arrived at this result by different and, to some extent, opposing views as to the construction of the testator’s will. We think the construction adopted by the Géneral Term is the true one. The children under this will took an absolute title to the personal property of the testator (excepting a small portion bequeathed to the widow) upon their reaching the age of twenty-one years. This was not the case with the real estate. After the children arrived at the age of twenty-one years, the trustee was authorized to sell, provided the widow consented and an arrangement could be agreed upon respecting the payment of an annuity. This worked no equitable conversion of realty into personalty until an actual sale took place. Hone did take place. The title to the real estate remained in the trustee until it should be sold, and if a child died without issue before the death of the mother and before any sale, the share which would otherwise have gone, to such child or its issue'upon the mother’s death and the sub *268 sequent sale and distribution of the proceeds of the real estate, went to the surviving brother or sister.

The sister did die in the life-time of the mother, without issue and before any sale or distribution of the proceeds of the real estate. The share of the sister in such realty or its proceeds, upon her death without issue, passed to her brother by virtue of the will of the testator. Upon these facts the rights of the parties must be determined. At the time when the mortgage for $18,000 was paid by the widow and executrix from the personal estate left by the testator, the son and daughter having arrived at the age of twenty-one years, were the absolute owners of that estate. The money was taken from that estate by their mother, the executrix, with their knowledge and consent and for the purpose of paying the mortgage on the real property. It is a fact that was admitted upon the trial of the action that the condition of the real estate market in 1877 (the time when the mortgage was paid) was such that real property could not be disposed of except at great loss. In the answer of the adult defendants, it was admitted that it was represented to the daughter before the mortgage was paid that it was necessary to pay the same in order to preserve the property covered thereby, and that it was necessary and to the advantage of all parties interested that the mortgage should be paid out of the personal estate of the testator, as in no other way could funds .for such purpose be obtained.

Inasmuch as there was an infant defendant who could make no admissions, the General Term thought the facts thus admitted by the adult defendants could not be regarded for any purpose in the consideration of the case. Assuming this to be correct we still have the fact that the mortgage was due and from the terms of the will it is apparent there were no funds provided thereby from which to pay it. The condition of the real estate market was then such that real property could not be disposed of except at great loss. The interest of both children in the personal estate was that of absolute ownership, while at the same time each had but a contingent interest in the real estate.

*269 It is plain enough from these facts as we think, that there was a necessity of raising money to pay this mortgage and that there were no funds for this purpose unless they were to come from the personal estate left by the testator. It is, therefore, true that a necessity existed to preserve the estate upon which the mortgage was a lien and that the only way of doing it was the way which was pursued. The burden of paying this mortgage was by the terms of our statute laid upon the devisee of the realty. (1 R. S. 749, § 4.) Whether the daughter was the devisee of a portion of the realty (or its proceeds as representing the realty), was not certain at the time when the payment of the mortgage was to be made. If she lived she would, at some future time, be entitled to a half of the realty or its proceeds, but no one could say that she was, when the money was paid, entitled as devisee, for she was not. When she aid her share it could not be said she was paying her own debt in her character of devisee of the property mortgaged. She might or she might not be such devisee. Yet, notwithstanding this conditional state of affairs, it is still claimed that the devisees of the realty and the legatees of the personalty are the same, and hence when the personal estate was taken to 23ay the mortgage it was only the taking from one fund instead of another, both of which were owned hy the same individuals, and for the purpose of 23aying a debt for the payment of which, so far as funds came to their hands from the testator, both were equally bound. This argument overlooks the contingent nature of the devise, and, therefore, overlooks the fact that neither child could at that time have been described as a devisee. The estate had absolutely vested in neither, and although it was but a contingent interest, yet each child had the right to protect it. When an encumbrance upon the realty became due and there was danger of a sacrifice or destruction of the estate by a sale thereof under the mortgage, each had the right to devote his or her property to the payment of the mortgage and the preservation of an estate which at the time neither certainly owned but which might become theirs at some future time. A payment by either cliild while the *270 contingency existed, or an equal payment by both must be regarded as having been made with respect to the conditional character of the interest each had and with a right to be placed in the position of the original creditor, if it should subsequently appear that the payment of either had been made for the preservation of an estate or an interest therein which never could be his or hers.

We can regard the consent of the son and daughter to the Use of this personal property by the mother for the purpose of the payment of the mortgage, as of no more materiality than the voluntary use of their own property by the son and daughter for the purpose of making such payment.

If a imluntary payment under the facts of this cáse would be no bar to the maintenance of this action, we see nothing constituting a defense in the fact that the daughter consented to such use by the mother. Of course the consent thus given operated as a justification to the. mother to use the personal estate for the payment of the mortgage, and no attempt is now made to undo the consequences of such consent so far as she is concerned. The decree of the surrogate founded upon that consent is a perfect bar to any proceedings against the mother by reason of her use of this property. Upon the question involved in this case, she must be considered as the agent of the daughter, applying the property of the latter with her consent to the payment of this mortgage, and making this application for the purpose of thereby protecting a contingent interest of the daughter in the property and saving it from destruction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.E. 102, 131 N.Y. 262, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 105, 86 Sickels 262, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pease-v-egan-ny-1892.