Roy v. Monroe

47 N.J. Eq. 356
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 N.J. Eq. 356 (Roy v. Monroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roy v. Monroe, 47 N.J. Eq. 356 (N.J. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

This is a contest between heirs at law and next of kin, and the principal question to be decided is, which set of claimants are-entitled to the property in dispute ? The facts necessary to be considered in deciding this question are the following: George W. Greenmyre died testate in September, 1876-. His will bears-[357]*357date about a year before his death. He left an only child, George W. Greenmyre, Jr., and a widow. By his will, after directing the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, he gave all his property, real and personal, to his executors “ in trust,” as his will says,

“to carry out the directions and bequests of this my will; and I hereby authorize them to sell at public or private sale, and upon such terms, at such times, and for such prices as they may think best, all my real estate, and to give deeds for the same.”

He next directs his executors to pay the net income of his estate to his wife for the joint support of herself and his son, until his son shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years. He then makes a gift of all his estate, real and personal, to his wife and her heirs in case his son shall die before he attains twenty-one years of age. And then his will says;

“ When my son attains the age of twenty-one years, then I desire my executors to take from my estate the sum of §10,000, and the residue of my estate pay over or convoy to my son. Said sum of §10,000 I direct my executors to invest, and keep invested, and the interest and dividends arising and accruing therefrom pay over to my son, but not to any creditor or assignee of his, upon his sole and personal receipt, during his natural life, and at his death pay said sum of §10,000 to his children.”

This is the whole of the will except the clause by which the widow and Edmund D. Halsey were appointed executors. The widow renounced, and Mr. Halsey proved the will alone.

The testator died possessed of a very trifling amount of personal property, but he held title in his own right to two parcels of land. The executor conveyed one of the tracts, in 1880, for $165, and the other, on the 20th day of August, 1888, for $17,500. But the tract last conveyed was subject to a mortgage for $6,000, made by the testator, so that the amount realized from that tract, for the estate of the testator, was only $11,500. The testator’s only child was born on the 13th day of May, 1863, and consequently attained full age on the 12th day of May, 1884. He died intestate on the 27th day of August, 1888, more than four years after he had attained full age, and only seven [358]*358days after the executor made the last conveyance. He died-without issue, never having been married. His mind was weak. Prior to the death of his father he had been placed in an institution organized for the care and education of feeble-minded persons, and remained there up to the time of his death. He died in the institution. His mother, the testator’s widow, died on the 30th day of November, 1886. She left four daughters, the off-, spring of a prior marriage. She was a widow when the testator married her. These daughters were George’s half sisters. They are not, however, of the blood of the testator. The complainants are. They were the testator’s sisters and George’s aunts. The persons standing nearest in blood to the testator, at the time of his death, were, first, his son, and, second, his two sisters, the complainants. He left no other sister, nor the descendant of a sister, nor a brother, nor the descendant of a brother. The executor has filed his final account, showing a net balance in his hands of $10,763.33. This balance consists entirely of the proceeds of the sale of real estate. In this posture of affairs, it is clear, that if the property in dispute still retains, as between the contestants, the character of land, the complainants are entitled to it, and this will be so, although the fact may be that the land has been converted into money pursuant to the direction of the.testator.

The land was sold pursuant to the direction of the testator. It is true, in that- part of his will in which the testator gives direction as to the disposition to be made of his land, he does not give an imperative order for its sale, but simply authorizes his executors to sell it, yet, by a subsequent direction which he gave,, he made it impossible to execute the principal provision of his willy as he manifestly intended it should be executed, until his land was sold. The provision here referred to is that in which the testator orders his executors, when his son attains twenty-one years of age, to take $10,000 from his estate and invest it, and pay the income arising from it to his son during his life, and the principal to his children on his death. In view of the fact that the estate consisted entirely of land, and that the land could not, without sacrifice, be sold in parcels, and was only worth about [359]*359enough to pay the mortgage on it and raise the $10,000, it is plain that this provision of the will could not be carried into effect unless the land was sold. The condition of the testator’s estate and the requirements of his will created an exigency which was, in all respects, equivalent to a plain and positive command to sell. The rule on this subject is settled. Said Chancellor Zabriskie, in Cook’s Exr. v. Cook’s Admr., 5 C. E. Gr. 375, 377: “When land is directed to be sold, absolutely and positively, without any time fixed for the sale, it is considered as converted into money from the death of the testator; but for this the direction must be imperative. If it is optional with the executor whether to sell or not to sell, or if it is only an authority to sell without any direction, then the land retains its character as land until it is actually sold. If the direction of the will, as to the proceeds, require a sale, it is equivalent to a positive direction to sell, and the land is deemed personal property from the death of the testator.” In the previous case of Wurts’s Exrs. v. Page, 4 C. E. Gr. 365, 375, the same chancellor had stated the rule in substantially the same way, and Chancellor McGill, in Dutton v. Pugh, 18 Stew. Eq. 426, 428, adopted the statement of it, made in Cook’s Exr. v. Cook’s Admr., as an established principle of equity jurisprudence.

No doubt can, therefore, be entertained, I think, that the money in dispute here must be regarded as having been converted from land into money by the direction of the testator, and that it must accordingly be held, in conformity to well-established principle, that so far as the testator has disposed of the money thus raised, it must pass to those who are entitled to take under his will as personalty and not as land. For, as the leading case on this subject declares, nothing is better established than this principle': that money directed to be employed in the purchase of land, and land directed to be sold and turned into money, are to be considered as that species of property into which they are directed to be converted. Fletcher v. Ashburner, 1 Lead. Cas. Eq. Am. ed.) 1120. This principle is the natural result of the dominion which the law confers upon every property owner, who is sui juris, over that which he owns in his own absolute right. He has power to do with his own whatever he pleases, so long as he [360]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.J. Eq. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-monroe-njch-1890.