Prentice v. . Janssen

79 N.Y. 478, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 19
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 79 N.Y. 478 (Prentice v. . Janssen) 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
Prentice v. . Janssen, 79 N.Y. 478, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 19 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The complaint in this action demands an equitable partition or sale of several pieces of land therein described, upon a portion of which was erected a hotel, called the Pavilion Hotel, together with the personal property, consisting of furniture in said hotel, and that an account be taken of the disbursements and expenditures made by the plaintiff, Augustus Prentice, for the benefit of and as additions to said property, and that the share of the defendant, Mary Ami Janssen, be charged upon the same and deducted from her portion of the proceeds of the sale of the property. The land belonged to Francis Blaneard at the time of his decease in 1868, and the title is derived under the provisipns of his last will and testament. The plaintiff, Augustus Prentice, *484 holds three-fourths, by conveyances from the residuary legatees or their representatives, and the defendant, Mary Ann Janssen, the remaining one-fourth. The defendant last named has joined with the plaintiff in making leases of the property since 1873 ; large sums have been expended in making improvements by the owners, and the rents have been received and applied in part, if not entirely, for that purpose.

The residuary clause in the will of Francis Blaneard devised and bequeathed his property to five of his children, among whom were Francis H. Blaneard and the defendant, Mary Ann Janssen. It also authorized Francis H. Blaneard to carry on the hotel business in the Pavilion Hotel, for the term of five years, if he so desired, and the executors were empowered and directed, after the testator’s death, to sell and convert into money all the real and personal property of which he should be seized or possessed, including the hotel property, after the right of occupancy of his son had ceased, as they should deem advisable, and divide the proceeds equally among the residuary legatees. The son, Francis II., died before the testator, and no action was ever taken by the executors to sell the property, and it remained undisposed of, and was used and regarded by the owners as real estate to which they had title. Only one of the executors, the defendant, Gerhard Janssen, was living at the time of the commencement of this action, and he is made a party,, as the husband of the defendant, Mary Ann Janssen, and does not by his answer claim any rights as executor or that he is a proper party as such. The answers admitted that plaintiff and the defendant, Mrs. Janssen, owned the property as tenants in common. Wo think that under the provision cited from the testator’s will, the executors who were donees of a power took no estate in the lands as trustees, but merely a power in trust to be executed for the purposes of distribution, according to the will, which was liable to be defeated by a reconversion of the property, which was made personal by the will, into real estate.

*485 The testator, by the authority and direction to his executors to sell the real estate, constructively converted the same into personal estate, and, being thus converted, the residuary legatees were entitled to take the same as such and had a right at their election to reconvert into real estate. No distinct and positive act is required for such a purpose, and the rule applicable to such a case is that “in the reconversion of real estate, a slight expression of intention will likewise be considered sufficient to demonstrate an election on the part of those absolutely entitled : ” (Leigh & Dalzell on Eq. Conversion [5th vol. of Law Library], m. p., 168; Mutlow v. Bigg, L. R. [1 Chan. Div.], 385; 1 Jarman on Wills, 523, et seq.) The real estate was not disposed of by the executors under the provisions contained in the will, and as there was no lawful purpose for which a sale was absolutely required, there was no obstacle to prevent a reconversion of the same by the parties in interest from personal into real estate. This they elected to do by positive and unequivocal acts. Three of the four residuary interests were conveyed to the plaintiff, Augustus Prentice, and the defendant, Mary Ann Janssen, retained the other one-fourth. The whole has since been enjoyed, possessed and treated the same as real estate. This was done by the acquiescence of the executors and all the parties in interest, not only by possession, but by acts showing their intention beyond any question. In Story’s Equity Jurisprudence (§ 793), it is said that if land is directed to be converted into money merely, the party entitled to the beneficial interest may, if he elects so to do, prevent any conversion of the property and hold it as it is. This has been done by the residuary legatees here; and as the lands were not sold and disposed of by the executors, and no diversion made, the rule applies that the person entitled to the money, being of lawful age, can elect to take the land, if the rights of others will not be affected by such election. (Hetzel v. Barber, 69 N. Y., 1, 11.) No rights of other parties were injured by the election to reconvert; and as three-fourths of the residuary interests had been sold *486 and conveyed to the plaintiff by those who were entitled to the proceeds of a sale, if one had been made under the power, and the owner of the remaining one-fourth had assented to the reconversion, by exercising acts of ownership, and the purpose of the power had become unattainable, the power to sell became extinguished, and the plaintiff and defendant already named became owners as tenants in common. (Hetzel v. Barber, supra; Garvey v. McDevitt, 72 N. Y., 563.) Neither the will itself nor the surrounding circumstances evince in any way that the testator intended not only to confer a power of sale, but t[iat the exercise of such power would become absolutely necessary to enable the executors to make the distribution required to the residuary legatees, within the principle laid down in Crittenden v. Fairchild (41 N. Y., 289, 292), which is relied upon by the defendant’s counsel. The facts here are far different from the case cited. The distribution was actually made and the purpose of the will fully accomplished by the reconversion of the personal estate into real estate by the parties in interest, as is quite obvious, and each of the legatees had received their full share as directed; thus rendering the exercise of the power of no avail. It follows that the executors having only a power to sell for the purpose of distribution—which power never was exercised, and which became of no use, by reason of the reconversion of the land into realty — Gerhard Janssen, the surviving executor, had no right, title, interest, or lien upon the property, which rendered him a necessary party to the action as such executor. The provision of section 107 (1 R. S., 735), which makes a power of salo a lien or charge upon the land, has no application when it had ceased to j operate, and was of no practical use. As by the reconversion no interest remained in the executors, there could be no lien or charge upon the land. Equity would not interfere to compel the execution of the power under 1 Revised Statutes, page 734, section 96, because the purpose had been accomplished without its exercise.

¡Nor was it necessary that Gerhard Janssen, the surviving *487 executor should bo a party for any other reason.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y. 478, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prentice-v-janssen-ny-1880.