Townshend v. Thomson

18 N.Y.S. 870

This text of 18 N.Y.S. 870 (Townshend v. Thomson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townshend v. Thomson, 18 N.Y.S. 870 (superctny 1892).

Opinion

Freedman, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment entered! upon the dismissal of the complaint at the trial. The action is brought by the plaintiff upon the claim that on June 1, 1887, she was seised of an estate in fee, and was lawfully in possession of the premises in suit, consisting of a lot on the southwest corner of 117th street and Eighth avenue, in the city of Mew York, and - that while plaintiff was in such lawful possession on that day the defendants unlawfully entered upon the premises, and ejected the plaintiff therefrom, and have ever since withheld possession from the plaintiff; wherefore plaintiff demands judgment that she recover possession, etc. The answer admits that the defendants at the time alleged were and still are in possession, and that they withheld and do withhold possession from plaintiff, and alleges that the defendants have been and are lawfully in possession, and denies the other allegations of the complaint. Upon the trial before & judge of this court and a jury, the substantial facts proved were as follows: The premises in question, with other property, were owned in 1835 by one Edward Price. His title is admitted by both parties to have been good. He became seised of the premises in 1827. In 1835 Edward Price conveyed the premises by deed to John Scudder, taking from Scudder a purchase-money mortgage thereon. In 1838 John Scudder conveyed to Ebenezer L. Williams. In 1843 Ebenezer L. Williams, while the owner of the premises, was adjudicated a bankrupt upon his own petition, under the act of 1841, and William. O. H. Waddell was duly appointed his assignee. "In 1845 a bill was filed by Edward Price to foreclose the purchase-money mortgage made by Scudder, and in 1846 a decree of foreclosure and sale was entered, the premises sold, and conveyed by deed of the master in chancery to Edward Price. But neither Williams nor Waddell was made a party to the foreclosure. In 1855-Edward Price died intestate, leaving him surviving, as his only children and heirs at law, Artemas M. Price, Edward H. Price, James 0. Price, Andrew J. Price, Julia Ann Coulter, and Sarah M. Coddington. In February, 1858, Artemas M. Price and Caroline, his wife, filed a bill against the other children and heirs at law of Edward Price for a partition of the premises in question, with others. Decree was entered, and the premises sold, but no conveyance was made. In December, 1858, for the purpose, as may be assumed, of clearing the record title, and foreclosing the rights of Williams’ assignee and the dower rights of Williams’ wife, a bill was filed by William Coulter, as administrator of Edward Price, against Bhoda Williams and William CH. Waddell, alleging the execution of the mortgage, that Waddell had become seised of the interest of Scudder in the premises, the previous foreclosure suit of Price against Scudder, and asking for a decree of foreclosure and sale. Waddell appeared in the action, and, on the consent in writing of his attorney, a decree of foreclosure and sale was entered, and the premises were sold thereunder, and bought by Julia Ann Coulter, and conveyed to her by the referee by deed dated January 28,1859. But this foreclosure and sale were not effectual for the purpose of divesting the title of Waddell as assignee of Williams, if any was left in him, because the suit had proceeded against him individually, and not in his representative character as assignee, and he had not appeared therein in his representative character. This has been decided-in London v. Townshend, 112 N. Y. 93, 19 N. E. Rep. 424. Julia Ann-Coulter, by various conveyances, acquired all the interest of all the other-heirs at law of Edward Price, and thereafter, viz., in April, 1863, she and her husband conveyed the premises in question to Timothy Donovan. In May, 1863, Donovan conveyed to Adams. In 1864 Adams conveyed to Whitbeck. In 1867 Whitbeck conveyed to Andrew. In 1868 Andrew and wife conveyed to William Thomson by deed dated March 9, 1868. William Thomson died, [872]*872seised of the premises in question, January 13, 1872, leaving, him surviving, his widow, Ellen L. Thomson, and John W. Thomson, William A. Thomson, and Ernest A. Thomson, his only children, who are defendants in this action, and who, upon the death of William Thomson, became, and still are, seised of all the right, title, and interest in the premises which the said William Thomson had in his lifetime. William Thomson paid all the taxes and assessments imposed upon the premises from the time of his purchase until his death, and his executors and the defendants have paid all taxes since that time. When the premises were sold and conveyed to Edward Price in 1846, under the decree of foreclosure and sale in Price v. Scudder, Price at once took possession under the master’s deed, .and maintained his possession continuously down to his death, in 1855, and his heirs and their grantees have continued in possession from that time down" to the present, unless the proof offered by the plaintiff established the contrary. The burden was upon the plaintiff to prove the allegations of her complaint,- and she Can recover only on the strength of her own title or of her own right to immediate possession.

The title claimed by the plaintiff rests (1) upon an instrument in the form of a conveyance by William C. H. Waddell, as assignee of Williams, to George Law, executed March 1, 1869; and (2) upon an instrument in the form of a quitclaim deed, executed by Law to the plaintiff in this action, January 10, 1873. Of these two instruments, that executed by Law was, under the evidence in the case, absolutely void,, under the statute, as against the defendants, because given while the property was in the possession of a person claiming under a title adverse to that of the grantor. Moreover, Waddell, as assignee, had no title or estate left in 1869 which he could convey, and no order of the court authorizing or directing him to convey could invest-him with a title or an estate, if he had none. He had divested himself of all title and estate he ever had 23 years before the attempted conveyance to Law. On February 8, 1845, he filed a report, as assignee, in which he reported that certain assets of Williams, among which the premises in question and some adjoining property, which may be styled the “Landon Property,” were enumerated, were, “in his opinion, of uncertain value, and ought to be disposed of at once, without incurring further expense or delay respecting them.” In due course of proceedings the premises in suit, including the Landon property, were thereafter sold by him, as assignee, at auction, March 23, 1846, for a small sum; and in his account of the assets and sales of property of Williams, which is in the custody of plaintiff’s attorney, the assignee charges himself with the amount, as received, on the sale of this property. There is a very great probability that the person who purchased at this sale subsequently conveyed his interest to Edward Price, who was then in possession of the premises under the sale on foreclosure in Price v. Scudder; but, at all events, Waddell, as assignee, was absolutely divested of all interest in or control of the property, and absolutely divested of the right to sell the same a second time. This being so, it is not necessary to determine whether the second sale, in 1869, was ■or was not produced by fraud practiced upon the court.

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Related

Landon v. . Townshend
19 N.E. 424 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.Y.S. 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townshend-v-thomson-superctny-1892.