Wttthaus v. Schack

38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 590
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 590 (Wttthaus v. Schack) 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
Wttthaus v. Schack, 38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 590 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinion

Daniels, J.:

The plaintiff joined her husband in a deed executed on the 23d day of December, 1876, conveying real estate owned by him to the defendant, for the purpose of selling the same and applying the moneys realized from the sales to pay off and satisfy claims and demands mentioned in the deed and owing by the plaintiff’s husband. He died on the 19th of March, 1877, and in the following month of April it was alleged by her that she first discovered that the deed included lands in the city of New York, south of Fifty-ninth street.

And she commenced this action 'to vacate and set aside the deed so far as it included her dower rights, or interests in such lands, on the ground that she had assented only to the execution of such a conveyance of lands owned by her husband as were north of Fifty-ninth street, and that she had been deceived into the execution of the deed by the representation that it contained only such land. The action was tried upon proof substantially sustaining her allegations, and an interlocutory judgment was thereupon entered setting aside and annulling the deed so far as it affected the plaintiff’s dower right in lands south of Fifty-ninth street. And the judgment .after establishing her title as dowress in such lands directed an accounting of the rents and profits of the premises, and adjudged that she was entitled to receive her proportion of the same. And this judgment on appeal, after being modified was affirmed. Neither upon the trial nor the hearing of the appeal was it objected that such a recovery could not be had by her in this action, or in any other not in form brought for the recovery of the plaintiff’s dower. And because of that circumstance and the decision of the Court of Appeals in Kyle v. Kyle (67 N. Y., 400), the motion has been made for the re-argument of the appeal from the interlocutory judgment. [592]*592But nothing contained in that case will probably require such a re-argument for the purpose of adjusting and determining the legal and equitable rights of these parties. For the direction given for the accounting of the rents and profits appears to have been entirely proper as to the real estate sold by the defendant, in which the plaintiff under this decision has been held entitled to her dower. For as to that the decision of the case just referred to does not affect the rights or liabilities of the parties. It was there held that ■ the widow was not entitled to recover the rents and profits of the land in which she might be entitled to dower as a distinct or independent cause of action, but only as an incident to the recovery of her dower in the- property. This ruling was made upon the manifest effect of the provisions of the statute declaring that whenever a widow should recover her dower in lands she should also be entitled to recover damages for the withholding of such dower. (2 B. S. [6th ed.] 1122, § 19.) And this provision has since been embodied in section 1600 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The statute also further provided that the plaintiff recovering judgment in ejectment in any, of the cases in which the action might be maintained should be entitled to recover damages against the defendant for the rents and profits of the premises recovered. (3 B. S. [6th ed.], 577, § 39.) But these provisions of the statutes manifestly relate to actions in which the widow may recover the land itself so far as it may be subject to her right of dower, and do not therefore wholly include an action of the nature of the present suit. For this action not only included lands still held by the defendant, in which, upon setting aside so much of the deed as affected her dower interests, she would be entitled to recover her dower, but' in addition to such lands those that were sold by him to purchasers in good faith under the authority of the deed in which the plaintiff herself had joined. As. to the latter class of lands she could not recover her dower in the lands themselves under the provisions of these statutes, for the property had passed into the hands of purchasers,'having no notice- or information of her rights, and therefore would be held by them discharged of all her claims as dowress. This would necessarily follow from the authority contained in the deed executed by herself and her husband to the defendant, for it in terms empowered him to sell and convey the property, and so far as he did so under its. [593]*593authority, before that was legally questioned or assailed, the title of the purchaser would be good. But she would not necessarily, by that circumstance, be deprived of her interest in the fund realized from the sale as the substitute for the principal, after the deed had been so far vacated and annulled as to exclude from it her dower right in the property south of Fifty-ninth street. From that time certainly the defendant would hold the proceeds obtained from the sale of the plaintiff’s dower interest as a trustee for her benefit, for they were to that extent the substitute of her interest in the estate or property sold. And where that may appear to be the character of the fund in the hands of the defendant, it may be reached by a proper action, for that purpose, brought in this court as a court of equity. The fund itself is capable of being clearly and distinctly traced, and so far as it may have been obtained by selling and conveying the right which 'the plaintiff has now maintained to dower in this property, she is equitably entitled to recover it. Upon this subject “it has been well remarked that the receiving of money which consistently with conscience cannot be retained, is in equity sufficient to raise a trust in favor of the party for whom or on whose account it was received. And, therefore, whenever any interest arises the true question is not whether money has been received by a party of which he could not have compelled a payment, but whether he can now with a safe conscience ex aequo et iono retain it.” (2 Story’s Eq. Jur. [12th ed.], §§ 1255-62.)

So far as the property described in the deed was sold by the defendant under its authority and the proceeds were received by him, a proper case for a suit in equity was presented, and neither the statutes nor the construction placed upon them in Kyle v. Kyle (supra), have divested the court of its jurisdiction over such an equitable action. For neither this authority nor the*statute has in any form attempted to abridge the jurisdiction of this court, as ai court of equity over .controversies concerning funds of this general'character. It was clearly its proper province to entertain jurisdiction over the action to vacate and. annul the deed executed by the plaintiff so far as it included her dower interest in property south of Fifty-ninth street. And having jurisdiction over that subject, as well as over the general subject of trusts, it was the duty of the court to proceed, certainly so far as might be necessary, to secure [594]*594an accounting of this fund, and the distribution and payme'nt of the plaintiff’s portion of it to her. These were both proper subjects of equitable jurisdiction, and to that extent the interlocutory judgment heretofore affirmed, may still be held to have properly proceeded," and if any further or more explicit directions are required to be given, that can be done by an order expressly declaring the extent and limits of such an accounting. And that will include all except the remaining parcels of real estate still held by the defendant and known as 404 and 406 Fourth avenue in the city of New York. The motion for the re-argument of the appeal from the interlocutory judgment may therefore very well be denied.

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

Related

Kyle v. . Kyle
67 N.Y. 400 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wttthaus-v-schack-nysupct-1884.