Scholle v. . Scholle

21 N.E. 84, 113 N.Y. 261, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 171, 68 Sickels 261, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 943
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 84 (Scholle v. . Scholle) 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
Scholle v. . Scholle, 21 N.E. 84, 113 N.Y. 261, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 171, 68 Sickels 261, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 943 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Finch, J.

Very convincing proof is furnished in this case that Baynor, at his death, owned an undivided three-tenths of the land in controversy notwithstanding his deed to Phillips, which, on its face, purported to convey his entire interest. That deed is liable to be reformed as against all the parties before us, and in judging the title proffered to the purchaser we must assume, in the interest of his safety, that such reformation may occur; and proceed to the inquiry whether that undivided three-tenths passed under his will to the grandchildren in remainder, or was taken from them and *270 their interest extinguished by the sale on foreclosure, or the deed given by the executrix.

The grandchildren were not made parties to the foreclosure •of the mortgage given to Scholle; but the executrix, who alone qualified and entered upon the execution of the will, was made a party defendant. It is now claimed in behalf ■of the title tendered, that by the terms of Raynor’s will there was an equitable conversion of the real estate into personal, and that the grandchildren took no interest in the land, but ■only legacies in money coming to them through the exe■cutrix, and so her presence as a party was alone needed to make the judgment of foreclosure pass a clear title to the land when executed by a sale.

There is in the will no imperative direction for the sale of the real estate. Indeed, there is no direction to sell at all. A power or authority to sell is given, but unless the exercise -of that power is rendered necessary and essential by the scope of the will and its declared purposes, the authority is to be deemed discretionary, to be exercised or not, as the judgment of the executrix may dictate, and so an equitable ■ conversion will not be decreed. ( White v. Howard, 46 N. Y. 162.) To justify such a conversion there must be a positive •direction to convert, which, though not expressed, may be Implied; but, in the latter case, only when the design and ■purpose of the testator is unequivocal and the implication so . strong as to leave no substantial doubt. (Hobson v. Hale, 95 N. Y. 598.) Where, however, only a power of sale is given without explicit and imperative direction for its exercise, and the intention of the testator in the disposition of his , ■estate can be carried out, although no conversion is adjudged, the land will pass as such and not be changed into personalty. (Chamberlain v. Taylor, 105 N. Y. 194.)

We are, therefore, required to consider the terms of the will .and the purposes which they indicate. The testator, after a formal direction for the payment of debts and funeral expenses, gives certain specific articles to his wife and to his children; •and then, in the fifth clause of his will, gives, devises and *271 bequeaths to his executors all the rest, residue and remainder of his estate in trust, with power, first, to receive the rents and profits; second, to sell and convey the property; third, to invest both rents and profits and proceeds of sales; and, fourth, “to divide and apply the same and the income thereof” as directed. By the words “ the same,” as used in the last clause, the testator obviously means the entire residue given in trust, for the same words were used in a preceding clause where they ■could have no other interpretation, and the division referred to, as shown by its carefully expressed terms, was of the whole ■estate, and not merely of some portion invested. The testator then directs his executors to apply the income of two-sixths of the residue and remainder to the use of his wife for life, and, -upon her death, bequeaths and devises such two-sixths to his ■children then living, and the issue of those deceased. Then follow four clauses identical in construction and language, by which, as to each of his four children, he gives and bequeaths .and directs his executors to apply one-sixth of the residue to ■such child for life, with remainder over to the issue of such ■child then living, or the children of such issue," if deceased. A final provision respects the death of a child without issue and ■carries that over to the survivors and the issue of those deceased. There is thus contemplated beyond the life estate of the widow an equal division of the whole residue among the children for life, with a remainder over to the grandchildren. The final ■and ultimate division in no sense or respect requires or compels a conversion of the land into money, and each devise and bequest is of an aliquot part of the residue, and not of the proceeds of such residue when turned into money. A conversion would,, perhaps, be convenient as an aid to the ultimate distribution, but is not rendered necessary or essential to the final division. ISTor, as it respects the intermediate income, is any ■such conversion requisite. The executors are to receive the rents and profits, and are authorized to invest the same, together with any proceeds of sales which, in the exercise of their discretion, they may have made, but the income of the whole residue is given, and not merely of the invested funds; and *272 while the executors are apparently empowered to turn rents' and profits into capital by investing the same, they are not required to do so by any implied direction, and if they were, it would only indicate the testator’s expectation that land, as the origin of rents and profits, would remain in the hands of the executors until, by possibility, the date of final division. It is observable that the language of the testator is very carefully employed to rebut the theory of a conversion. In each of five articles, when giving income merely, he uses the phrase “ I give and bequeath,” appropriate to a mete gift of personal property, but when he creates the remainders, the language changes uniformly and in every instance and becomes “ I give, devise and bequeath.” The change of phraseology seems not to be accidental, but intentional, and to indicate the testator’s expectation that land, as such, would pass in the remainders, and their gift require "the added word “ devise.”

Our attention is drawn to an adverse conclusion of the Supreme Court in another case not reported involving, by way of specific performance, the same title here in question. (Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Wood, 51 Hun, 640.) We have given the opinion in that case a careful consideration. Its argument for a conversion is founded upon the idea that rents and profits are never to be divided as such, but to pass as capital into a fund the income of which is to be divided, and then the fund itself. If we concede that the power given to invest rents and profits makes such investment in all cases obligatory, which is a point open to question, it does not follow that the land was not given, subject to an appropriation during lives of the rents and profits, to a fund the income of which was otherwise appropriated.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 84, 113 N.Y. 261, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 171, 68 Sickels 261, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scholle-v-scholle-ny-1889.