Stuart v. Kissam

11 Barb. 271, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 58
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 Barb. 271 (Stuart v. Kissam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stuart v. Kissam, 11 Barb. 271, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 58 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court,

Mitchell, J.

There are two questions raised by the appellants, which are of such consequence as to make the consideration of the others comparatively unimportant, viz.: 1st. Was not the second bond and mortgage substituted for the first, with the assent of Mrs. Stuart ? and 2d. Can the legatees and devisees of Dr. Kissam, the obligor in the first bond, be made personally liable for any deficiency in the mortgaged premises on a foreclosure suit, and before resort has been had to his executors ?

On the 29th of April, 1833, Mr. Cotton conveyed No. 3 of Turtle Bay Farm to Dr. Daniel W. Kissam, jr., for $24,000, and on the same day the doctor gave to Mr. Cotton his bond and a mortgage on the same premises for $20,000, payable with interest, on or before the 1st of May, 1843.

On the 3d of May, 1833, Mr. Cotton, with the assent of Mrs. Stuart, assigned the bond and mortgage to Joseph Kissam; on the same day, Joseph Kissam executed a deed poll, witnessed by Isaac A. Johnson, Esq., in which it is declared, substantially, that the assignment is for her sole use and benefit.

Dr. Kissam made his will, dated the 1st of December, 1834, and a codicil, dated 3d March, 1835, and died shortly after-wards. Letters testamentary were granted to his executors, Samuel Kissam and Timothy T. Kissam, on the 15th of May, 1835. The will gave the executors a power to sell the real estate of the testator, and after sundry legacies gave his residuary estate to his three brothers, Joseph, Samuel and Timothy T., and to his two sisters, Mrs. Conklin, and Maria Kissam. He left a personal estate amounting to more than $50,000, as appeared by the inventory filed by his executors, and the bill alledges that his real and personal estate amounted to more than $30,000 over all his debts and liabilities; and that the executors had not caused a final settlement of their accounts to be made before the surrogate. A witness for the plaintiff, (J. [274]*274J. Diossy,) testified that the doctor was reputed to be worth $80,000 or $100,000.

The bill alledges, and the answers of Joseph, Samuel, and Timothy T. Kissam, admit that Joseph and Samuel were jointly interested with the doctor in the purchase. A bill was filed by some of the creditors of Robert Stuart, the husband of Mary R. Stuart, to set aside the conveyance to Dr. Kissam, as being fraudulent as against Mr. Stuart’s creditors. The doctor, in his answer to that bill, states, that the mortgage was held for the benefit of Mrs. Stuart.

In November, 1885, the farm was sold at auction under the direction of the executors, being divided into more than 100 lots; deeds were given, not by the executors, but by the five residuary devisees. The deeds were all dated 8d of December, 1835, and are to Gilbert Leggett, for four lots at $645 per lot ; to him for four other lots at $645 per lot; to Shattuck & Ackland, for eight lots at $620 per lot, and the tV of (as is supposed) the residue of the lots, to Joseph Kissam, for $35,790 ; he already owning J or fV as a joint purchaser with the doctor, and obtaining by devise from the doctor, of §-, or another -¡V.

In 1838, some of the lots sold to third parties, were bought by Joseph Kissam at $525 per lot, and in 1841, some others at $350 per lot. Mr. Bleecker, the auctioneer, supposed these lots might have brought from $500 to $600 in 1336; three-fourths remaining on mortgage.

On the 6th of January, 1836, Joseph Kissam conveyed 42 of the lots held by him, to Samuel Kissam, and Samuel, at the same time, executed to him his bond and a mortgage on the same premises, conditioned for the payment of $20,000 with interest, on or before the 1st of May, 1843. On the same day, Joseph Kissam executed an instrument of that date, reciting, that Samuel had executed a mortgage to him, on property between 45th and 46th-streets, to secure the payment of $20,000 and interest, and covenanting with Mrs. Stuart that he held it for her sole and separate use, and that he would account with, and pay over to her, all moneys that he should receive on account of the mortgage — thus far conforming to the former de[275]*275claration of trust; but it also adds, what was not in the former, that he will assign the mortgage to such persons as she may designate in writing, and that in case of her death, he will account for the moneys or assign the mortgage, as she, by writing under her hand and seal, shall designate and appoint.

On the 4th of February, 1836, Mrs. Stuart, in pursuance of the provisions contained in the last declaration of trust, and by an instrument attached to or written on it, directed Joseph Kissam, in case of her death, to pay over to her husband, Robert Stuart, if he survived her, all moneys that might be due on the bond and mortgage described as within mentioned,” and at his request to assign them to him, and it states that this is executed “ by virtue of the provision contained in the within declaration of trust"

1st. Was the mortgage given by Dr. Kissam satisfied, and a new one substituted in its place, with the assent of Mrs. Stuart ? There are circumstances strongly tending to prove that this was so in fact. The old mortgage was in the possession of the Kissams at the time of the examination, and produced by them. This would not, of itself, indicate much, as Joseph Kissam was the trustee of Mrs. Stuart; but it is of great weight when it is also found that the first declaration of trust given by Mr. Kissam, was also in his possession, and canceled. That indicates strongly, that th'e trust, under which that mortgage had been held, was in some way, satisfied; and that on its satisfaction, Mrs. Stuart gave up the declaration of trust, and that the mortgage was then canceled.

The bill admits that Joseph Kissam became possessed of this declaration of trust; it says by some means ; it does not pretend — except by that insinuation, which amounts to nothing— that it was by any but fair means, and with Mrs. Stuart’s assent. It then, also states, that Joseph Kissam executed another declaration of trust, and caused it to be substituted and delivered to Mrs. Stuart, as thereinafter mentioned, in the place of the first declaration of trust. Thus admitting that in fact the second trust, which applied to the second mortgage only, was substituted for the first, which applied to the first mortgage only. [276]*276The most casual reading of the second declaration would show that it referred to a new mortgage, and so that the old one was no longer in force. The old one was by Daniel W. Kissam, jr. to Spencer D. Cotton, in April, 1833, on the whole farm. The new declaration of trust describes the mortgage to which it applies, as given by Samuel Kissam to Joseph Kissam; and as of even date with the declaration, viz. 6th January, 1836, so showing certainly, that it was new, and on premises between 45th and 46th streets. Daniel W. Kissam had been her physician, Spencer Cotton her trustee. Joseph Kissam was then her trustee ; the names must have been all as familiar to her as those of her own family. How then could she doubt that she was receiving a substituted security, even if her eyes only glanced over the names in the beginning of the declaration 1

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Bluebook (online)
11 Barb. 271, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuart-v-kissam-nysupct-1851.