Town of Ansonia v. Cooper

30 A. 760, 64 Conn. 536, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 9, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 30 A. 760 (Town of Ansonia v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Ansonia v. Cooper, 30 A. 760, 64 Conn. 536, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 53 (Colo. 1894).

Opinion

Andrews, C. J.

In September, 1891, the town of Ansonia preferred its application to the Superior Court in New Haven county for the appointment of a committee to appraise certain lands in that town, taken for the site of a school-house. The application was duly served and returned to that court, a committee was appointed who appraised the said land at the value of $625, and made report of their doings to the court. • The report was accepted and the money paid into court, and is now in the hands of the clerk of the court.

Since the commencement of the proceedings other parties have been cited in, viz: Henry G-. Ailing and Lewis E. Cooper of Ansonia, and Elizabeth Downs of Huntington, each of whom claimed or appeared to have some interest in the said sum of money.

The court, in its order accepting the report of the appraisers, decreed that the said Henry G. Ailing, Louis E. Cooper and Elizabeth Downs, interplead with each other as to which of them is legally or equitably entitled to said sum of money. The only controversy, in respect to the money is now between Elizabeth Downs on the one side and Henry G. Ailing on the other. Pursuant to the order of the court requiring the parties to interplead, the said Elizabeth Downs set forth her claims at large; and the said Henry G. Ailing made answer thereto and set forth his claims, and later an amended and substituted answer and claims, to which said Downs demurred. The court sustained that demurrer and Ailing has appealed.

The facts, somewhat condensed from the record, are as follows:—

Charles Cooper, the elder, was in his lifetime and at his death the owner in fee and in possession of the land described in the said application and of other adjacent land, all of the value of $2,500. He was also the possessor of personal property to the value of $10,000. By his will he devised the residue of his estate, real and personal, to his wife Elizabeth Cooper, for her life, and the remainder to his four sons, Alfred Cooper, Charles Cooper, William Cooper and [541]*541Henry Cooper, to be theirs absolutely in equal shares. The land in question came to said Elizabeth Cooper by virtue of said will. The said Charles Cooper died about March 20th, 1876. On the 31st day of July, 1880, the said Elizabeth Cooper conveyed all said lands by a warranty deed to Henry and Augusta Rolf, and received therefor the sum of $2,500, which was its full value including the fee as well as the life estate. That deed was immediately put on record, the grantees entered into possession, and they and their grantees have ever since kept the possession thereof to the time the condemnation proceedings were completed. By sundry conveyances the title and interest conveyed by the said deed of Mrs. Elizabeth Cooper has come to and is now vested in Henry G. Ailing who purchased in 1886, subsequent to the agreement between the four sons of Mrs. Cooper below stated. Mrs. Cooper died in 1885 leaving no property of her own of any kind. Of the $2,500 which she received for the said land, she had expended $1,300 in her necessary support. The balance, $1,200, she had in her possession at her death. After the commencement of the condemnation proceedings Alfred Cooper assigned to the said Elizabeth Downs all his interest in the money that might be awarded thereby. She has no other title thereto than by said assignment.

Upon the decease of the said Elizabeth Cooper it was verbally agreed by and between Alfred Cooper, Charles Cooper, William Cooper and Henry Cooper, they being of full age, and being the only parties entitled to the property and estate devised to them under the will of the said Charles Cooper, deceased, that they would pay all the debts and funeral expenses from and out of the said $1,200, and would thereupon divide among themselves in equal portions the balance of said sum of $1,200, and would divide among themselves in equal portions the personal property owned by the said Charles Cooper at the time of his decease, and valued at the sum of $10,000 ; and upon such payment and such division being made that they would consider the amount so divided and received as a full, final and complete distribution and settlement of any and all rights, titles and [542]*542interests, claims and demands which they, or either of them were entitled to receive under and by virtue of the provisions of the last will of the said Charles Cooper.

The money that was thus agreed to be divided among said parties was the' property, or the proceeds of property, which was owned by the said Charles Cooper at the time of his decease; and no part thereof was the property or estate, or interest therein, of the said Elizabeth Cooper. Pursuant to their said agreement the said Alfred Cooper, Charles Cooper, William Cooper and Henry Cooper, paid all the debts of the said Elizabeth Cooper, and all her funeral expenses, which amounted to the sum of $200; and after making such payment they thereupon divided among themselves in equal portions the sum of $1,000, in cash, that being the balance of the money received by the said Elizabeth Cooper upon the sale of the fee of the said real estate, as above described, and which remained in her hands at the time of her decease, after paying the said debts and funeral expenses; and they also divided among themselves at said time, in equal portions, said personal property amounting to the sum of $10,000; and each and all of said parties received said money and said personal property as and for the portion or share which they were entitled to receive under the said will of the said Charles Cooper; and all of said parties have ever since retained said money and said property, and have ever since considered the same as a full, final and complete settlement of all rights or interests which were devised to them under the last will of the said Charles Cooper; and they especially received said sum of $1,000 in cash, in lieu and in place of the real estate, the fee of which had been devised to them by the said Charles Cooper, but which had been sold by the said Elizabeth Cooper in the manner before described ; and said parties intended b}1, this division of said money among themselves to ratify and confirm the sale of said real estate by the said Elizabeth Cooper ; and in pursuance of such intention and agreement the said William Cooper, Charles Cooper and Henry Cooper, have each executed and delivered to the said Henry G. Ailing, deeds of [543]*543all their rights, titles and interests in and to the premises herein described, without the payment of any money therefor.

The said Alfred Cooper knew when he made said agreement and received said money that the amount he received under and pursuant to the said agreement was the money which the said Elizabeth Cooper received from the sale of the said real estate conveyed by her, the said Elizabeth Cooper, as aforesaid, and he had full knowledge that the said real estate had been sold and conveyed by full warranty deed, and that the said Henry G. Ailing was then in the possession of said land claiming .title thereto by virtue of the deed which had been given by the said Elizabeth Cooper as aforesaid.

These facts, being admitted by the demurrer, must for the purposes of the present discussion be taken as proved and found by the court. Charles Cooper, William Cooper and Henry Cooper, may be laid out of the case. They have each released to Mr. Ailing. The rights of Elizabeth Downs are just the same as, and no greater than, the rights of Alfred Cooper. Her assignment from him was since the commencement of the condemnation proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A. 760, 64 Conn. 536, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-ansonia-v-cooper-conn-1894.