Schwaman v. . Truax

71 N.E. 464, 179 N.Y. 35, 17 Bedell 35, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1067, 103 Am. St. Rep. 832
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 N.E. 464 (Schwaman v. . Truax) 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
Schwaman v. . Truax, 71 N.E. 464, 179 N.Y. 35, 17 Bedell 35, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1067, 103 Am. St. Rep. 832 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

The defendants demurred to the complaint on the grounds that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject of the action and that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. •

*37 The complaint, the allegations of which must be taken as true for the purposes of this appeal, states in detail a scheme of the defendants to defraud, the plaintiff, which is to be regarded in all of its ramifications as one transaction. The fact that independent litigations are to a greater or less extent brought under collateral review is to be considered in the light of this scheme.

This action is brought by a sister against her uncle and an only sister, all residents of the city of Schenectady, in which the plaintiff seeks to set aside a sale in a partition action hereinafter referred to, the order confirming the same and the final judgment; also, that a resale of the property be had under the direction of the court., and for other relief that need not now be referred to in detail.

Isaac I. Truax died in the year 1887, leaving two children, the defendant Edgar, and his sister, Jane E. Lansing, since deceased. The plaintiff Florence, and the defendant Bertha, are the surviving children of Jane E. Lansing. Isaac I. Truax left a considerable amount of real and personal property, devising and bequeathing the same to his children, Edgar and Jane, in equal shares. Jane E. Lansing died in 1893,, and after her death Edgar, Florence and Bertha continued to ■live together until Bertha’s marriage in 1896, after which Edgar and Florence lived together until sometime in 1897, when Florence left the old homestead to live elsewhere; she afterwards married one Schwaman.

It appears that Jane E. Lansing left a last will and testament, giving her estate in equal shares to her daughters, Bertha and Florence,. This will was suppressed by the defendants, and it did not come to the knowledge of the plaintiff until four years after testatrix’s death in October, 1897, as will presently appear. From the time of her mother’s death in 1893, the plaintiff was unable to ascertain what had become of her mother’s personal estate, her uncle, Edgar, saying there was nothing for her, nor was she able to learn of the disposition that had been made of her mother’s one-lialf interest in the real estate, as Edgar, who continued to manage it, as well *38 as the personal property, was very parsimonious and miserly in his treatment of the plaintiff.

The relations between the plaintiff and her uncle became so strained and unbearable that finally in 1897 she left the old homestead without having been able to ascertain what had become of her mother’s property, real or personal, Edgar being in control thereof and fully able to give her information in regard thereto.

After leaving home, and in July, 1897, the plaintiff began an action of partition, under the advice of counsel that it was possible the plaintiff’s mother had in some manner placed one-half of the property in trust for her benefit, although she was not receiving any income from the personal estate, nor her full share of the income from the real estate, assuming that her mother had divided her property equally between her children, and that if such a trust existed the partition suit would develop that fact, and plaintiff would learn something of what had become of her mother’s property.

After the commencement of the partition suit plaintiff learned of the execution by her mother of certain transfers of personal property, one made in June, 1890, and another in October, 1893, about a week before her deatli, to the defendant Bertha, and of a power of attorney executed by Bertha to her uncle, the defendant Edgar, and other facts in relation thereto, which led -the plaintiff to believe that Edgar and Bertha had defrauded her mother of her personal estate and the plaintiff of a half interest therein.

On acquiring this information plaintiff made an application to the surrogate on the 16th of October, 1897, for the appointment of an administrator of her mother’s estate, setting forth in her petition, among other things in detail, the facts which had recently come to her knowledge. Two days later the defendant Edgar filed a petition for the probate of the will of plaintiff’s mother, which had been written by him and remained in his possession since the death of the testatrix four years before. This was the first knowledge that plaintiff had of the existence of this will, which named Edgar and *39 Bertha as executors and devised and bequeathed in equal shares the property of the testatrix to the plaintiff and the defendant Bertha.

The plaintiff opposed the granting of letters testamentary to Edgar and Bertha on the ground that the chief need of an executor or administrator was to bring suit against Edgar and Bertha to recover the testatrix’s personal estate unlawfully obtained and held by them, and that they were dishonest in seeking letters, the only purpose of which would be to thwart and delay plaintiff in obtaining her share of her mother’s estate. The surrogate held that charges of fraud were no proof of fraud and issued the letters, the decree of probate being made November 29th, 1897, and plaintiff appealed from so much thereof as awarded letters testamentary to Edgar and Bertha. In the meantime issue had been joined in the partition suit, and in November, 1897, a referee was appointed to take the proof of title and state the accounts.

Pending the appeal from the surrogate’s decree the proceedings before the referee in the partition action were suspended by consent. The Appellate Division affirmed the surrogate’s decree and denied a motion for leave to go to the Court of Appeals, the order being made May 10th, 1898. Thereafter, and on June 25th, 1898, an interlocutory judgment was entered in the partition action settling the accounts of Edgar and ordering a sale of the property, etc.

The plaintiff believing that she had been defrauded of her share of her mother’s personal estate, and having no other property than her one-fourth share in the real estate decreed to be sold, commenced an action on the 29th of July, 1898, to vacate and set aside the transfers of personal property made by her mother to Bertha in June, 1890, and in October, 1893, the latter only a week before her mother’s death, and the power of attorney executed by Bertha to Edgar, whereby she was wrongfully deprived of her interest in her mother’s personal estate.

On the same day that this action was commenced the plaintiff made a motion in the partition suit to have the sale of the *40 real estate therein postponed, plaintiff in her moving papers showing that she had commenced the action to vacate said transfers and for an accounting. The motion was denied. The plaintiff appealed from the order, which was dated August 6th, 1898, and moved for a stay pending the appeal, which was denied September 10th, 1898. The sale in partition took place September 15th, 1898. The first Trial Term after plaintiff began action to recover the personal property was not held until the following November-and then came up on demurrer.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

David v. Belclare Estates, Inc.
10 A.D.2d 157 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1960)
Johnston v. Stephens
49 S.W.2d 431 (Texas Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 N.E. 464, 179 N.Y. 35, 17 Bedell 35, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1067, 103 Am. St. Rep. 832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwaman-v-truax-ny-1904.