Wood v. . Rabe

96 N.Y. 414, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 511
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by143 cases

This text of 96 N.Y. 414 (Wood v. . Rabe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. . Rabe, 96 N.Y. 414, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 511 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The trial court found, in substance, that no agreement was ever made between the plaintiff and his mother, that the latter should use the judgment confessed by the plaintiff to her November 27, 1855, to redeem the premises from the sale on the S til well judgment for the plaintiff’s benefit, or that after such redemption she would convey the interest which" she should acquire thereby to the plaintiff on payment of her claims on the property. This finding, although among the findings of fact, must have been intended as a finding of law, and to embody the conclusion *421 reached by the General Term in its opinion on the first appeal, that the oral agreement to the effect stated in the finding, made between Mrs. Mulock and the plaintiff, did not in law or equity create any obligation, or, either separately or in connection with the other facts and circumstances, furnish any basis for equitable relief, for the reason that the agreement was void by the statute of frauds. Any other construction of the finding would make it inconsistent with the undisputed evidence. The proof is clear that the plaintiff confessed the judgment of November 27,1855, at the request of his mother and upon the advice of her attorney, his former guardian, to enable her to redeem from the sale on the Stilwell execution, for his benefit, and upon her promise to hold the interest acquired and re-invest him with his former estate in the land upon being paid her liens and advances.

There is a ‘moral aspect to this case which strongly appeals to the sentiment of equity and justice. The mother of the plaintiff has acquired the legal title to property devised to him by his grandfather, of the value of at least $10,000 for a consideration, including her own debt, not exceeding $3,200, of which property she was at the time in possession as life tenant under the same will, under an agreement made with the plaintiff when he was in great straits, by which she promised to hold the property for his benefit and re-convey to him on payment of her lien and advances, which agreement she subsequently repudiated. Moreover, when the agreement was made the plaintiff was a young man recently passed his majority, and he confessed the judgment not only at the solicitation of his mother, but under the advise of his mother’s legal adviser, his former guardian, upon the most solemn assurance of both that he might implicitly rely upon his mother’s promise to re-convey the property.

But neither courts of equity or law sit to enforce mere moral obligations, and the question to be determined is whether a court of equity in accordance with its established principles and jurisdiction, can compel a performance of this agreement, notwithstanding the statute of frauds which makes void oral con *422 tracts for the sale of lands (1 R. S. 135, § 8), and forbids the creation of any trust relating to lands, except trusts arising by implication and operation of law, unless by deed or conveyance in writing, subscribed by the party creating the trust or his duly authorized agent (§§ 6, I). The agreement proved was not in any ordinary sense an agreement for the sale of land, and does not, we think, properly come under the eighth section. It was rather an executory agreement on the one side to confess judgment, and on the other to acquire the title to the land by redemption under the statute and hold it on the trust to convey to the plaintiff upon the condition stated. In other words it created, so far as the words and the essential nature of the transaction could do so, an executory trust for the bene ft of the plaintiff.

But being oral, the trust was void within the sixth section of the statute, unless the transaction constituted a trust by implication or operation of law, and was therefore within the exception in the seventh section. It is not easy to ascertain from-the adjudged cases the exact scope of the exception in the S'tat. Car. 11, of trusts arising by “implication or construction of law,” or of the equivalent exception in our statute, of trusts arising by “ implication or operation of law.” It is not difficult to name trusts which unequivocally are trusts arising by implication or operation of law. Trusts arising from the presumed intention of the parties, indicated by their acts, although not expressly declared, and those arising from the application of some settled principle of equity to the situation, furnish many instances of implied or constructive trusts. Resulting trusts at common law arising from the payment of purchase money, or where the trust is not declared, or is declared only in part, or for any reason fails, are illustrations of the former class, and those arising by equitable construction independently of intention from dealings by trustees or quasi trustees with trust property furnish many examples of the latter.

But there is a large class of so-called constructive trusts, or trusts ex maleficio, where courts of equity treat the holder of *423 the legal title to land as a trustee, and, through the medium of an assumed trust, makes that title subservient to the circumvention of fraud and the attainment of justice. Trusts of this character are not, I assume, within the exception in the statute. If they were so considered, then wherever a court of equity acting upon its own principles, would, independently of the statute of frauds, separate the legal title and the beneficial interest, and fasten a trust upon the property to subserve the purposes of justice, no question under the statute would arise, for the obvious reason that the case was by its terms excepted from its.operatioh, and the statute would never be an obstacle to relief. (But see Davies v. Otty, 85 Beav. 208; Seichrist's Appeal, 66 Penn. St. 237.) So where a trust is sought to be established from the violation of an oral agreement purporting, to create a trust, and a court of equity upholds the trust and enforces specific performance, the trust is not an implied or constructive trust within the statute. (See Bellasis v. Compton, 2 Vern. 294.) The court in granting relief in case of an oral agreement proceeds upon the ground of fraud, actual or constructive, and enforces the agreement notwithstanding the statute, by reason of the special circumstances.

The plaintiff in this case seeks to fasten a trust upon the legal title of his mother to the property in question, by force of an oral agreement within the statute, in connection with the circumstances. It is important in determining the question arising in the case, to ascertain whether there was any consideration for the agreement between the plaintiff and bis mother, because neither a court of equity nor law enforces contracts, written or oral, in the absence of any legal or equitable consideration. "When the agreement of November 27, 1855, was made, the plaintiff had an interest in the land. It is true that his time for redemption had expired. He could not after the expiration of a year from the execution sale, by payment of the judgment, or in any other way by his own act alone, divest the purchaser of his right to a deed on the expiration of the fifteen months. But until the expiration of the fifteen months the title to land sold on execution remains *424 in the judgment debtor.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.Y. 414, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-rabe-ny-1884.