Starkey v. Fox

52 N.J. Eq. 758, 7 Dickinson 758
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 N.J. Eq. 758 (Starkey v. Fox) 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
Starkey v. Fox, 52 N.J. Eq. 758, 7 Dickinson 758 (N.J. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Green, V. C.

(After stating the facts as above).

It seems to be conceded that, by the law of the State of New Jersey, as it was at the time of the accounting of Thomas Fox, as administrator of Elizabeth Fox, in the orphans court of Essex county, in 1842, the husbands of Martha Starkey and Zilpah [764]*764Stansberry, the two sisters of Thomas Fox, and with him the next of kin of Elizabeth Fox, deceased, viz., Benjamin Starkey and Elias Stansberry, were respectively entitled to the shares of their wives in the settlement of the estate, namely, each one-third of the amount to be distributed.

By the accounting, which was not a final one, there was found to be due to the administrator from the estate $148.82, which amount would be further increased by about one hundred dollars for sheriff’s fees and other matters not brought into that account. This balance, as due the administrator, was arrived at without taking into account the Holden bond and mortgage, which was inventoried at $1,263.50, but which had realized on the foreclosure sale only the sum of $920.

The only evidence as to the value of the property bought in by Thomas Fox, the administrator, at the sheriff’s sale, is the amount it brought at that sale, and that, in the absence of other testimony, must be taken as the market value.

If a settlement had been made at that time, viz., in 1842, on that basis, Thomas Fox would have been entitled to deduct $248.82, the amount due him from $920, the value of the farm, leaving $671.18 to be equally divided between himself and the husbands of his two sisters, namely, $223.72f each to Starkey and Stansberry respectively, Thomas Fox’s own interest being $472.54|.

. The claim of the complainants rests on the assumption that Thomas Fox never settled with the persons named who were entitled to those two amounts of $223.72f- each.

The possession of Thomas Fox of the premises in question for nearly half a century was open, notorious, exclusive and unquestioned. There was no possible act of assertive ownership which he did not exercise. He tore down not only the outbuildings, but the dwelling-house, and at his own expense erected a new bani and a new house. He fenced, improved and tilled the land, took the product, paid the taxes and never recognized anyone as having an interest with him in the estate, continued to live in the house in undisputed possession until the [765]*765day of his death, in 1891, and, dying, disposed of it by will among his children.

Ordinarily, in such a case, the statute of limitations would be an effective defence unless the claimant rested under one of the specified exceptions. _ The period of twenty years, within which a right of entry could be exercised or any possessory action maintained, had more than twice elapsed. Fox’s title by possession was good against the world at law, for no one could disturb him — could invoke the, exceptions to the statute. There was nothing to impeach his title or imperil his possession but the interposition of a rule of equity that lapse of time does not affect an express trust. It is therefore insisted that the complainants’ right of recovery rests alone on the contention that the possession of Thomas Fox cannot avail the defendants, his devisees, because he was in possession as trustee of an express trust. There can be no dispute that the statute of limitations cannot be successfully invoked in equity by one who occupies such position at a time when there is a continuing and subsisting trust, acknowledged or acted on by the parties, the reason being that, as his possession is that of the cestui que trust, it cannot be said to be adverse. Hovenden v. Lord Annersley, 2 Sch. & L. 633.

The statute of limitations is a statute of repose. The protection it affords is not to be displaced unless the existing conditions clearly show that it should not be maintained. After a lapse of fifty years, when everyone who could explain the surrounding circumstances has passed away, the barrier which it interposes is not to be easily thrust aside, and family settlements and titles disturbed.

The claim here is one founded on a technical rule of equity, applicable to express, but not to implied, trusts. The rule is founded on good and sufficient reasons, which are unassailable, but it should not be applied in a case like the present unless its-applicability is without question. It is not to be invoked if based on presumption unless such presumption is a conclusive one from all the circumstances. The possession of nearly half a century, exclusive and to all appearances adverse, is not to be [766]*766disregarded on the ground that Fox was in possession under an express trust unless it satisfactorily appears from the proofs that he took possession as such trustee, and that the trust continued to subsist during his possession and is impressed on the estate in the hands of his devisees.

The recital in the account filed by Thomas Fox, that he then held the deed in trust for the estate, is a sufficient declaration of an express trust. The statement by the auditors, to whom the account was referred on exceptions filed, cannot, of course, have any such effect. It was not within the province of the orphans court, in passing the account, to declare trusts. But the affidavit annexed to the original account, containing the above recital, is signed by Thomas Fox. In Jamison v. Miller, 12 C. E. Gr. 586, it was held that the signing by the defendant of an answer containing a declaration or admission of a trust, was a manifestation within the statute of frauds, and on the same reasoning, this statement, signed by Thomas Fox, must be considered as a sufficient declaration of trust, and, taken in connection with the deed itself, proof of the existence of an express trust.

The statement, however, was, that he “held the deed in trust.” The account in which it is made is dated July 12th, 1841. Up to that time Fox had not got possession of the property, although the deed is dated July 24th, 1840. Nor was he yet in possession, according to its recitals, at the time of the auditor’s report, March 19 th, 1842.

It further appears, by the account filed, that an action of ejectment, brought by Thomas Fox against someone to recover possession of this property, was pending in the Morris circuit when the account was filed in 1841 and passed in 1842.

There is, however, no evidence who the defendant in that suit was, or on what title it was prosecuted, or on what ground defended; nor when or how it was ultimately decided; nor whether Thomas Fox obtained possession by means of a recovery therein.

To make the possession of Thomas Fox the possession of his cestuis que trust, and for that reason not adverse, it should have been made to appear, by the complainants, on whom is the burden [767]*767of proof, that his possession was taken or continued as trustee, and this should have been proven, and not left, as it is, to inference. It is no answer to say that, at this late day,'it is well-nigh impossible to prove such conditions. This trust was not an active, continuing trust in the sense that the trust fund, or corpus of the trust, was to remain for a length of time subject to the management of the trustee before payment or division. It was ripe as soon as it was declared. It could be executed as soon as it was created.

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Related

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6 A.2d 491 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1939)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.J. Eq. 758, 7 Dickinson 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starkey-v-fox-njch-1894.