Roome v. . Philips

27 N.Y. 357
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 27 N.Y. 357 (Roome v. . Philips) 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
Roome v. . Philips, 27 N.Y. 357 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

Denio, Ch. J.

This action was commenced in February, 1860, by Elisha Burrows, of whom the present plaintiff is the administratrix, with the will annexed. Its object was to compel the specific performance of a written contract, by which the defendant agreed to purchase of the original plaintiff a lot of land in the city of Hew York. The agreement, as set out in the complaint, bore date September 14th, 1859, and by its terms the plaintiff agreed to sell and convey to the defendant, and the latter agreed to purchase the lot in question for $4;000, the conveyance to be delivered on the 5th October following, at a place named, the defendant agreeing, upon receiving the deed' at the place mentioned, the title being good,” to pay the plaintiff the said amount. The purchaser was to have the rents from the 1st October, allowing interest from that day until the 5th, when he was to have possession. The complaint averred the execution of a deed, and that the-plaintiff attended at the time and place agreed on for its delivery, but that the defendant did not appear to receive it. In addition to these statements, the complaint set forth the will of the plaintiff’s father, Elisha Burrows, senior, under which he claimed title to the premises, and the death of a party-who had a prior life interest therein. Before any further proceedings were had, and on the 27th February, 1860, the plaintiff died without issue, having by his will, dated May 4, 1859, *359 named one John Colyer his executor, and directed him to sell and convey all his real estate, and to pay over the proceeds, after payment of his debts, to his mother and aunt, in certain proportions. Colyer renouncing the executorship, letters of administration, with the will annexed, were issued by the surrogate to the present plaintiff, who caused herself to be substituted as plaintiff; and the defendant then demurred to the complaint.- The question upon the demurrer depended upon the construction and effect of the will of the elder Burrows. The Supreme Court, at special and general term, sustained the demurrer, and judgment was given in favor of the defendant, with costs, that court holding that by the effect of the will, in connection with the events which had happened, the original plaintiff had not, at the time of entering into the contract, any title to the premises. Upon appeal to this court, the judgment of the Supreme Court was reversed with costs, and judgment was given for the plaintiff, but with leave to the defendant to answer the complaint; and the record and proceedings were ordered to be remitted to the Supreme Court, to be proceeded upon according to law. The determination here was, that Elisha Burrows, the vendor and original plaintiff, acquired a legal title to the premises by the will of his father, and that he held such title when he contracted to sell them to the defendant. It became the duty of the Supreme Court to give effect to this judgment by such further proceedings as the circumstances of the case required. The formal judgment for the plaintiff, pronounced here, did not complete the process, for the deed which had been executed had become ineffectual and void by the death of the grantor before delivery, and the court could not, upon principles of equity, compel the defendant to part with the price, unless the plaintiff was able to give him a valid title to the land. The vendor having died without having devised an estate in the premises to any one, they descended to his heirs-at-law, subject to the power given to the executor to sell and convey them, provided' that power attached to land which the testator had already sold and agreed to convey by an executory contract. There *360 was, besides, an account to be settled respecting the rents and profits. The vendor and his representatives had continued in possession, but the purchaser, paying interest on the purchase price, was entitled to the rents. It would have been a correct course for the Supreme Court, upon being possessed of the case, by the filing of the remittitur, to have entered a judgment in conformity with the determination which had been made here, and upon the application of either party to have ordered a reference to ascertain whether the plaintiff could furnish to the defendant a good title,'and to adjust the account of rents and interest, and settle the amount to be paid by the defendant; and upon the coming in of the report to have perfected the details of the judgment. The course which was in effect pursued was this: The defendant, on affidavit, showing that he was ready to complete the purchase, if a good title could be made to him, obtained an order to show cause why an order of reference, with other directions, should not be granted. These affidavits assumed the title to have been in the vendor at the making of the contract, as we had decided, but suggested that the deed which he had executed in "his lifetime, and a deed from the plaintiff, as-administratrix, with the will annexed, which seem to have been offered, would not constitute a sufficient title, and claimed that the heir-at-law of the vendor, who was his mother, Mrs. Hersfield, together with her husband, and a trustee, to be duly appointed in the place of the executor who had renounced, should unite in a deed to him, upon which he professed a willingness to pay the amount of purchase-money due and complete the transaction,,

The time of showing cause was the 18th August, 1862, the judgment of this court having been pronounced at the preceding June term. The motion was not heard on the day named, but on the succeeding day, the 19th August, the plaintiffs applied, at a special term, upon the production of the remittitur from this court, and evidence that it had been served on the defendant’s attorney, and obtained an order to the effect that the defendant should receive the deed of the present plaintiff, as administratrix, with the will annexed, of the vendor, *361 who, it was recited, had been appointed by the Supreme Court a trustee to execute the power of sale contained in the will of the vendor, and pay the purchase price of $4,000, with interest thereon from October 1, 1860, together with the costs and expenses of the suit, and an additional allowance, which were liquidated at a sum amounting in the aggregate to $5,177.43; and that in default of such payment the premises should be sold at the Merchants’ Exchange, on three weeks public notice, and that the above amount should be paid to the plaintiff, if the sale realized so much; and that in case of a deficiency the plaintiff should have judgment against the defendant for such deficiency. From this order the defendant appealed to the general term. The defendant’s motion, pursuant to the order to show cause, was made on the 21st November following, and was denied with costs, and the defendant appealed from that determination to the general term. These appeals were brought on together, and the orders appealed from were both reversed, with costs, on the 7th day of March, 1863. From the determination of the general term, in reversing the two orders of the special term, the present appeal is taken. From this statement it is quite apparent that the orders appealed from are not final in the sense of the Code, so as to be appealable to this court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.Y. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roome-v-philips-ny-1863.