Shriver v. . Shriver

86 N.Y. 575, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 255
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 86 N.Y. 575 (Shriver v. . Shriver) 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
Shriver v. . Shriver, 86 N.Y. 575, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 255 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Folger, Ch. J.

Most of the objections to the title set up by the purchaser have been answered by the learned General Term. The one, that arises from the fact that Mellveen was not made a party to the foreclosure of the Douglass mortgage, is presented in this court differently from what it seems to have been at the General Term. It is needful that we consider it further. The appellants seek to avoid that objection, by the claim that the statute of limitations has run against any right of Mellveen or his assigns; This claim has two branches. First, it is insisted that that right is barred by the lapse of eleven years since Mrs. Murray entered into possession of the premises under the foreclosure sale and referee’s deed. (Old Code, §§ 99-102.) The case is supposed to be like that of Miner v. Beekman (50 N. Y. 337). It is different in an important particular.- There the entry was by the mortgagee, who was also the purchaser at the sale. He thus became a mortgagee in possession, and could defend against the owner of the equity of redemption, or his representative, any action, except one for an accounting of the rents and ' profits, and to redeem. (Phyfe v. Riley, 15 Wend. 248; Van Duyne v. Thayre, 14 id. 233.) The new Code has changed the time of limitation in such case to twenty years. (New Code, § 379.) But that would not have affected Mrs. Murray’s right if she had acquired one, for it would have be *581 come vested before that change in the law, and sacred from alterative legislation. (Beckford v. Wade, 17 Ves. 97.) She did not acquire any, however, for she was not the mortgagee nor the assignee of the mortgagee, in possession, and could not in that character have defended" against Mcllveen or his assigns. (Watson v. Spence, 20 Wend. 260.) She could not have defended as purchaser, for the foreclosure was void against him and them. (Id.) He or they had twenty years from the entry in which to bring suit to regain the possession.

It is the second branch of the appellants’ claim that there was a clear adverse possession of twenty years. The facts of the case make out a continuous, uninterrupted actual possession, beginning with an entry under claim of exclusive title founded on a written instrument and so kept up for over, twenty years. (Hew Code, § 369.) A clear adverse possession for that time makes a title which a purchaser at a judicial sale may not refuse. (Seymour v. DeLancey, Hopk. Ch. 436.) Though there may have been possession thus characterized for the requisite time, there may also ■ be circumstances that will prevent it becoming adverse. There are circumstances in the case in hand that need to be examined, for that reason. We may assume that Mcllveen was alive when Mrs. Murray entered into the premises in 1856. He gave an assignment in writing dated in that year and acknowledged in 1857. There is an affidavit in the case, made in 1880, averring that McHveen died “some years .ago,” in Australia, and that his heirs-at-law are residents of Scotland in Great Britain. This averment is on information and belief, and it is. objected by the appellants that a statement on information and belief is not evidence. We must consider, however, that courts of equity have assumed jurisdiction of this class of questions between vendor and purchaser, and having done so they must pass upon them, and must pass upon them by the means in use in such inquiries, one of which is the production of allegations of fact by affidavits as either within the knowledge of the affiant or existing in his information and-belief. These affidavits submitted to the opposing' parties (as were the affidavits in the case), *582 and answered, or assented to tacitly or expressly, in their material allegations, or some of them, form a basis of adjudication. (Q uincy v. Foot, 1 Barb. Ch. 496.) It is to be noticed that this allegation is not denied or explained, nor its force broken by the appellants, nor is there any attempt made to do so. The appellants, the vendors, ought to know better than the vendee the facts in which their title is involved, and if sp important an allegation is incorrect, or vague and indefinite, they ought to be as able as the purchaser to give a court information about it. We must take it then as shown in the case, that' Mcllveen died and left heirs-at-law as stated. The. time when he died is' not certain. The phrase some, years ago,” may carry the event so far back as to fall within the term of twenty years that began to run in 1856 and would end in 1876. That would be a fair interpretation of it.' There is no proof that he left a will. We must assume that he died intestate. If his heirs-at-law in Scotland were aliens, then any interest he left in the'lands escheated to the State, and the statute has not yet run against the State. (Old.Code, § 75 ; new Code, § 362.) The only fact as to them made known to us is that they are residents of Scotland. The probabilities are that they were subjects of the Queen of England, and were aliens. If those probabilities were not in the case, there is the possibility that some of them have been, during the lapse of - years, since the death of Mcllveen, under the disability of infancy, or some other disability. (Old Code, §§ 88, 101; new Code, §§ 375, 396.) Before discussing the effect of these probabilities and this possibility, it is well to .see whether any other facts in the case preclude the necessity of so doing. It appears that in 1857 "Mcllveen -made a transfer of all his property, real and personal, to the Becks for their benefit and behoof forever, but to apply the same toward their indebtedness. This was not an absolute .transfer of all right to the Becks. The true construction of it is, that it was a transfer as a means of paying Mcllveen’s debt to the Becks. If indeed they had sold and conveyed, as they had authority to do, Mcllveen’s interest would have passed to their grantees and he have had no claim *583 upon it or upon them save for a proper application of the avails, and for any surplus, equity would sustain him or his assigns in calling the Becks to an account, and if they had not sold, in asking for a reconveyance by reason of the debt having been otherwise paid, or of an offer to pay it. There was ail equity of redemption in Mcllveen, and his assigns or successors in interest. The lapse of eleven years, but for disability to sue, would have been a bar to this equity, before the new Code* The same possibility of the existence of .a disability comes in here, however, to create doubt whether the bar of the statute has attached. The fact appears, that the Becks did not sell and make conveyance on a sale. In 1858 they made an insolvent’s assignment in trust for creditors, to Theriotfc and Hurd, of all their property, real and personal. Under that assignment, all their interest in these premises passed to the assignees, yet subject to the equity of redemption, existing in Mcllveen or his representatives, with all its incidents, as we have above stated them. There is an allegation in the affidavits, that the assignees fully executed the trust, and that the property reverted to the Becks, and this averment is ■ sustained by another that the Becks quit-claimed and released all their interest in the premises to Mrs. Murray. Then it reverted to them with all its incidents.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.Y. 575, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shriver-v-shriver-ny-1881.