Salmon v. Stuyvesant

1 Lock. Rev. Cas. 518

This text of 1 Lock. Rev. Cas. 518 (Salmon v. Stuyvesant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salmon v. Stuyvesant, 1 Lock. Rev. Cas. 518 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1799).

Opinion

The cause was brought to a hearing before the Chancellor upon bill and answer, who decreed, that the power contained in the will, authorizing the sons and daughters to devise and appoint their shares to or in trust for their children, <fcc., for such estates, &c., as they should think fit, was illegal and void;. that the limitation over of the ultimate remainder was also void; and that consequently the real estate of the testator upon his death descended to his heirs at law. The Chancellor, however, further held that the directions of the will were valid as to the shares to be distributed to each ; that the partition should be deemed valid, and that the respondent could therefore convey an absolute fee simple in the lot in question; and he decreed that the defendant specifically perform the agreement. The defendant appealed. In the court of Errors, Cowen, J., delivered an opinion in favor of reversal:

He held:

I. That the codicil brought the will within the operation of the revised statutes, which transferred all the uses and trusts for the sons and daughters into possession. The executors took no legal estate. (1 Rev. Stat. 722, 2d Ed. § 47.)

II. 1. The power of appointment by devise, and of leasing for years, are the only other parts of the will affected by the revised statutes.

[520]*520The power of appointment of estates for life, to persons not living at the testator’s death, he holds to be void ; but not so as to those in esse : and it still may be effectual to pass a fee to either. 6 17, and 129. Alienation is here suspended for one life only in being. It will be time enough to nullify the execution of this power, when we see the appointment of a life estate to a relative who was unborn when the testator died, or other estate created beyond the legal scope of the power. § 129 of Powers.

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Related

Stall v. Catskill Bank
18 Wend. 246 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Benedict v. Hecox
18 Wend. 258 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Hawley v. James
16 Wend. 61 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1836)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Lock. Rev. Cas. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salmon-v-stuyvesant-nycterr-1799.