Sweeney v. Schoneberger

14 Misc. 718
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Misc. 718 (Sweeney v. Schoneberger) 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
Sweeney v. Schoneberger, 14 Misc. 718 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Thomas, Official Referee.

The plaintiff in an action for waste is one of several remaindermen under a will by which a life estate was given to defendant and her husband, Adolph, who died in October, 1912. The five properties are in the borough of Brooklyn, and on four of them were mortgages, of which three were acquired by defendant in her husband’s lifetime. Three of the mortgages were on the properties when the life estate came into enjoyment, and one was given by her to the executors to secure money advanced by her to pay legacies. In 1917 defendant assigned three of the mortgages to Dexheimer, who has foreclosed two of them, while an action to foreclose the third is pending. At the time of the assignment there was interest due and unpaid on the mortgages and there were taxes on the properties they covered. The interest so assigned and interest later accruing entered into the judgment of the mortgages foreclosed and was paid together with the taxes out of the proceeds of sale in the manner stated in the findings, and in the unfinished foreclosure action the interest and taxes [719]*719are subject to similar payment. The two properties unaffected by the assignments are subject to taxes unpaid, and in the case of the one mortgaged there is a principal sum due of $4,000. Such a history shows waste on the part of the defendant, impairing the remainders and in ease of the properties foreclosed destroying them. It was the defendant’s duty to keep the property in reasonable repair in the interest of both herself and the remaindermen and to pay the interest on the mortgages and the taxes. The question has arisen whether the duty is absolute, or conditional on the adequacy of the property to produce income to meet the charges. The evidence shows that the property under fairly prudent and careful management had an earning value that would more than meet the expenses, and that it has even under defendant’s conduct of it been more than productive enough for the purpose. I cannot but conclude that the defendant in the present instance is bound to keep down the charges and to maintain the property. She has been in possession and control of the several improved urban houses and lots devoted to stores and living purposes, and although they have not complete or the best improvements, and are not in every particular of the size and arrangement that the most advantageous renting in the neighborhood demands, yet they have through a number of years produced a large gross income under the disadvantageous condition of her direction of them. The outlays for maintenance and charges have been much, and in addition some $4,000 of rent was in litigation, which was after judgment compromised for $2,300 on account of the precarious financial condition of the lessee and the greater part of that sum went out in payment of lawyers’ fees and expenses. Such an experience is peculiar, and although I have included the transaction in the account it partakes more of misfortune for the life tenant than a legitimate element of an accounting. The limitation [720]*720of the duty to pay charges and expenses to the rents produced by prudent management of the property or to its rental value has the support of some decisions of which Murch v. Smith Mfg. Co., 47 N. J. Eq. 193 (1890), is an exponent. There the payment of taxes and some repairs were involved, and it was found that the income had been sufficient. Hence the question of absolute liability was not involved. However, the duty of the life tenant was declared to be limited as above stated, and for authority there were cited 4 Kent Com. 75; Kensington v. Bouverie, 7 DeGex, M. & G. 134. In that case the owner of the fee settled the estate subject to an existing mortgage to his use for life with certain remainders, and created a power in the settlor to charge the settled estates with a sum not exceeding £20,000 and interest for the use of himself and his executors. The settlor executed the power and on the charge executed mortgages. At the settlor’s death his son, in whose favor an estate was settled, filed a bill to redeem the charge of £20,000. Questions then arose as to whether interest on the entire £20,000 charged by the life tenant in his favor should be charged upon the corpus of the estate and whether the life tenant intended to exonerate the estate from the burden of it. The settlor, it was held, was empowered to charge the £20,000 and the interest thereon on the estate, and that an account should be taken of the interest due thereon at the settlor’s death in excess of the rents of the estate. It was declared without referring to authorities that the law does not “ cast upon tenants for life .any obligation or duty to pay the interest upon charges affecting the inheritance beyond the amount of the rents.” In Kent’s Commentaries, page 75, it is said, “ the tenant is bound, in equity, to keep down the interest out of the rents and profits; but he is not chargeable with the incumbrance itself, .and he is not bound to extinguish it. The doctrine arises from a very reasonable rule in [721]*721equity, and applies between a tenant for life, and other parties having successive interests. Its object is to make every part of the ownership of a real estate bear ratable part of an incumbrance thereon, and to apportion the burden equitably between the parties in interest where there is a possession, * * * and if the incumbrancer neglects for years to collect his interest from the tenant for life, he may, notwithstanding, collect the arrears from the remaindermen; though the assets of the estate of the tenant for life would equitably be answerable to the remaindermen for his indemnity, and they remain answerable for arrears of interest accrued in his lifetime. The true principle on this subject is, that the tenant for life is to keep down the annual interest, even though it should exhaust the rents and profits; and the whole estate is to bear the charge of the principal, in just proportions.” The author seems to treat of the apportionment of the estate to the payment of the incumbrance rather than of the personal liability of the life tenant, although that is touched upon in the statement that his assets are liable for the interest the incumbrancer has neglected to collect during the life of the tenant. But the statement that the tenant for life is bound in equity, to keep down the interest out of the rents and profits ” indicates a limitation of liability. It should be inferred from the above quotation that when the commentator later states that a life tenant, as in the case of a tenant in dower, and by the curtesy, “ is bound to keep down ” interest, he is not writing of an unqualified liability. And so when he states that if the tenant for life, or for years * * * by neglect or wantonness, occasion any permanent waste, to the substance of the estate,” his view would seem to be that available rents or productiveness would enter into the question of neglect. There is no specific reference to the payment of taxes. Chancellor Kent wrote of the underlying principles of the law, which should have the first influence in [722]*722'decision in the absence of authoritative precedents or statutes. In Jones v. Sherrard, 22 N. C. 179 (decided in 1838), the question arose in partition under a statute peculiar to the state, and it was decided that “ the terre-tenant of land liable to encumbrance must take care that such encumbrance does not accumulate to the injury of those who are to come after him. But then in doing this, he is not bound to give anything for the relief of the land but what is derived from the land.

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

Related

In Re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Babcock
22 N.E. 263 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)
Hoolihan v. . Hoolihan
85 N.E. 1103 (New York Court of Appeals, 1908)
Jones v. Sherrard
22 N.C. 179 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1838)
In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Corbin
101 A.D. 25 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)
Hatch v. Morris
3 Edw. Ch. 313 (New York Court of Chancery, 1839)
In re the Estate of Menzie
6 Mills Surr. 134 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1907)
Abernethy v. Orton
71 P. 327 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1903)
Clark v. Middlesworth
82 Ind. 240 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Misc. 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeney-v-schoneberger-nysupct-1919.