Opinion
Argued March 14, 1906
Decided March 27, 1906
Benjamin F. Tracy and Frederick A. Card for appellants. H. Aplington for respondent. Frank W. Hackett for Smithsonian Institution, intervening.
This is an action of ejectment brought by the plaintiffs to recover three-sevenths of the property described in the complaint, each claiming to be the owner of an undivided one-seventh thereof.
Michael O'Donaghue died in the city of New York on the 8th day of April, 1860, seized and possessed of the property in question, leaving a last will and testament with three codicils, all of which were duly admitted to probate in the county of New York. He left him surviving a widow, and the plaintiffs and five other children, one of whom subsequently died.
In September, 1869, an action was commenced by John T. O'Donaghue, one of the children of the testator, for a partition of the real property of which his father died seized, making his mother, the widow of such testator, as executrix and individually, a party defendant together with his brothers and sisters, including the plaintiffs, who were then infants. In that action the plaintiffs in this action appeared by their guardians ad litem, who interposed the usual answer submitting their interests to the care of the court. This action resulted in a judgment for a sale of the premises, upon the ground that they were so situated that actual partition could not be had; and upon such sale they were struck off to Thomas G. Hodgkins, who subsequently, in May, 1871, conveyed the same to Edward Smith, who subsequently died, leaving a last will and testament, devising the same to the defendants herein. The plaintiffs contend that the sale of the premises under the partition judgment was in violation of the provisions of the statute, to the effect that no real estate, or term for years, shall be sold, leased or disposed of in any manner against the provisions of any last will, or of any conveyance, by which such estate or term was devised or granted to such infants. (2 R.S. 195, § 176.) This contention is controverted by the defendants, who, among other defenses, set up that the judgment in the partition action is res adjudicata and a bar to the rights of the plaintiffs to recover in this action.
The will of Michael O'Donaghue contains provisions for an annuity to be given to his widow during life, bequeaths a number of legacies to other persons, which are made a charge upon his real estate in case the personalty should prove insufficient, and then by the eighth clause he provides as follows: "I give, devise and bequeath to my executors all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of whatsoever kind and wheresoever situate upon the trusts nevertheless and for the purposes and intents and with the powers following, that is to say: Upon trusts to sell all my real estate or any part thereof at such time or times and upon such terms at public or private sale, for cash or upon credit, with security by mortgage as to my executors shall seem prudent, it being my intention that my real estate shall be deemed converted into personalty from the time of my decease, and to pay all expenses of such sale and all mortgages and encumbrances on my real estate, and to invest my personal estate and the proceeds of my real estate or so much thereof as shall remain after satisfying the mortgages and encumbrances thereon on bond and mortgage or in the public stocks of the United States or of the State of New York, or of the City of New York, and to receive the rents and profits of my real estate until the same shall be sold, and also to receive the interest, dividends and income of my personal estate and of the proceeds of my real estate, and to divide my said personal estate and the proceeds of my real estate into eight equal shares, and to apply the interest, issues and income thereof severally to the use of my eight children, one share for each, during his or her minority; and upon each of my said children attaining lawful age, to pay over to such child his or her share of my said estate."
He then provides for the disposition of the share of any child who should die before attaining majority, and by the ninth clause provides: "I further authorize and empower my executors whenever any of my children shall attain lawful age or die under lawful age to make partition of my real estate and to allot and set apart to such child so attaining lawful age or to his or her descendants or surviving brothers and sisters or their descendants if such child die under lawful age his or her equal share of my estate."
By a codicil dated the 23d day of January, 1860, he provided: "Whereas, by my said will I have directed the sale of all my real estate in the City of New York. I now revoke said direction and authorize my executors to sell only my lands and premises known as Number one hundred and twenty Broome Street front and rear, number Ninety-one Cherry Street and Number one hundred and Ninety-one Elm Street, all in the City of New York, the proceeds of which sales shall be applied to the payment of mortgages on my other real estate. I do not intend by this change to alter the beneficial interest in said lands or the trusts and devises contained in the eighth clause of my said will, but design that the said lands not sold and the income thereof shall be held by my executors under the same trusts, provided in said clause in relation to the proceeds, of said lands, in case of sale." And then, after inserting some provisions not material to the question under consideration, he finally concludes with these words: "In all other respects I ratify and confirm my said will." The other codicils pertain to the appointment of executors, and do not require consideration.
It will be observed that, by the provisions of the will, it was the intention of the testator to convert into personalty all of his real estate and that the power of sale given to the executors was for this purpose. It was this imperative power that he revoked by his codicil, except as to the three parcels therein specifically described, and as to those he continued the imperative power to sell and to apply the proceeds in the payment of the mortgages upon the other real estate owned by him. But in revoking the power to sell the whole, and limiting it to the three parcels specified, he expressly states that he does not intend to alter the beneficial interests of his children in the land or the trust contained in the eighth clause of his will, but in express terms he ratifies and confirms the same. We, therefore, have the trust provided for by the will remaining undisturbed by the codicil, and by it the personal estate and the proceeds of the real estate are divided into eight equal shares, being the number of children that he then had living, with explicit directions to apply the interest, issue and income thereof severally to the use of such children, one share for each during his or her minority, and then upon each child attaining lawful age, to pay over to such child his or her equal share of his said estate, and then, in order to enable the executors to carry out his will, with reference to paying over to each child, as he or she attains lawful age, he further expressly provides that they may make partition of his real estate and allot and set apart to each child or to his or her descendants the share of the trust estate designed for such child.
The will contains no other limitation of the power to sell.
The testator died seized of a large quantity of real estate. It is said that there were sixteen parcels in the city of New York and some elsewhere. Apparently, he had little personal estate and, therefore, charged the legacies given by his will upon the real estate. Some of his real estate was incumbered with mortgages and, therefore, he found it necessary, in order to pay up the mortgages, to imperatively require the sale of certain of his real estate. It is, thus, apparent that, in providing for the payment over to a child on his arriving at his majority of his share of the estate, he contemplated the payment to be made out of the real estate or the proceeds thereof. The trust created, as we have seen, is several, for the benefit of each child and terminates as to each child when it arrives at age.
It is contended that, by the codicil, the testator only intended to revoke the imperative power of sale, leaving with the executors a discretionary power to be exercised when necessity required; however that may be, we shall assume for the purposes of this case that the power of sale given to the executors by the eighth clause of the will, whether imperative or discretionary, was absolutely revoked. What then was the situation? All of the testator's children were minors. The trust created included the real estate without a power of sale, which continued until one of his children became of age, at which time the trust terminated as to such child and the executors were required to pay over to such child its share; and on the happening of that event the testator, doubtless for the purpose of enabling the executors to perform his requirement in that regard, authorized them to make partition of his real estate. The power to partition necessarily carries with it the power to sell where the real estate is so situated that actual partition cannot be had, and the power given to the executors to partition devolves upon the court if, for any reason, they are disqualified, unable or refuse to act.
The partition action, to which we have alluded, was not brought until ten years after the testator's death. At that time four of his children had become of lawful age and one had died. The four adult children were entitled to have their shares of the estate paid over to them and the trust, as to them, terminated. The executors, at that time, consisted of only the widow and the testator's eldest son, who was a party interested and entitled to his one-seventh share of the trust estate. The widow had not seen fit to move in the matter. The adults naturally wanted their estate. It was under these circumstances that John T. O'Donaghue, one of the executors, instituted the action, bringing all of the interested parties before the court. It appears to us that the action was not only authorized, but at that time there was no provision in the will that further postponed the power of sale.
Was the partition judgment res adjudicata and a bar? We think it was. We shall not attempt to review the discussion of this question which took place in the case of O'Donoghue v. Boies ( 159 N.Y. 87) or allude to the authorities there considered, for, assuming the rule to be as claimed by the appellants, that the court must not only acquire jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter, but in partition cases must also have statutory authority to award the judgment entered, the question still remains for determination as to whether the court did have such jurisdiction and power. That the court did acquire jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter is not questioned, except as to the infant Margaret Ann, whose case we shall consider farther on. But it is contended that the court had no jurisdiction to order a sale of the real estate in contravention of the provisions of the last will and testament by which the estate was created. That depends upon the provisions of the will and the interpretation that should be given to it. The statute has authorized the court to sell when the real estate is so situated that partition cannot be had. All of these plaintiffs were infant defendants in that action and appeared by their guardian ad litem who put in the usual answer submitting their rights and interests in the premises to the protection of the court. The duty then devolved upon the court of not only determining the nature and character of their estates, but also of protecting their interests therein. The court was required to ascertain the facts from the provisions of the will and determine whether or not a sale was prohibited or longer postponed, and having determined these questions it had the power to order judgment in accordance therewith. It was like an issue triable in the case, and if the court erred in the determination of the questions the error could be corrected by an appeal, but otherwise the judgment entered became final and conclusive upon the parties and cannot, in the absence of fraud, be questioned collaterally.
There is still another answer to the appellants' contention herein, and that is, that the provisions of the statute prohibiting the sale of the real estate of infants in contravention of a will or deed under which their estate is created, has no application where there are adult tenants in common who have an immediate right to the possession of their share. A tenant in common cannot, by his deed or will, impair or postpone the rights of his co-tenants to have and fully enjoy their shares of the real estate. He cannot, by a devise or grant to his children, or other persons, postpone the power of alienation during two lives or for any other period and thereby prevent a partition or a sale, where the property is so situated that the court would be required to order a sale, and thus prevent his co-tenants from having the remedy given them by the statute. If all the tenants in common derive their estate through the same will or deed, and if, under the instrument, when one becomes of age he is entitled to have his share, he may maintain partition and have a sale, if necessary, for it no longer would be in contravention of the instrument, but in accordance with its provision, giving to him the immediate right to possess his share. It is only where the tenants in common derive their estate through a deed or will, where all are infants or in which the right of division and possession of the adult, as well as the infant, tenants in common are postponed until the happening of a specified event, that the statute applies.
It is true that, under the provisions of the law of 1785 (Ch. 39), it is provided that no division or sale shall be made contrary to the intention of any testator, as expressed in his last will and testament. But, upon the revision of the statutes in 1813, the prohibition referred to was eliminated from the chapter on partition and inserted in the statute authorizing a sale of lands of infants. (2 R.S. 195, § 176; 2 R.S. 315.) And so it remains under the Code. (Code Civ. Pro. §§ 1564, 2357.) Under the Revised Statutes no one but adults could institute an action for partition. Infants, therefore, could not, through their guardian, institute an action and thus evade the prohibited provision, as was attempted in the case of Muller v. Struppman (6 Abb. N.C. 343).
We are aware that the legislature, in recent years, have given the infants the right to institute partition, upon first obtaining leave of the court showing that they will be benefited thereby; but this leave should only be granted in a clear case upon showing a necessity therefor, and in cases where the prohibition of the statute does not apply.
The appeal taken by Margaret Ann O'Donoghue brings up for review the question as to whether the court in the partition action obtained jurisdiction, so far as she was concerned. She was, at that time, an infant under fourteen years of age. The affidavit, attached to the judgment roll, of Alice V. Leavitt is to the effect that on the 5th day of October, 1869, she served the summons upon the defendant Margaret Ann O'Donaghue and on Mother Borgie, with whom the said Margaret resided, by delivering to each of them a copy of said summons and at the same time showing to each of them the original; that the service was made at the Academy of Visitation, where they resided, and that she was acquainted with the defendant Margaret and knew her to be one of the defendants.
It will be observed that the proof of service does not show where the service was made further than that at the Academy of Visitation. Where the academy was located does not appear in the record of that action. Upon the trial of this action, however, evidence was given tending to show that it was located in the state of Virginia. We will assume, therefore, that the summons was served personally in that state. After such service it appears from the judgment roll in the partition action that the mother of Margaret Ann, with whom she lived when not away attending school, as her next friend, petitioned the court for the appointment of a guardian ad litem to protect her interests in the partition action. Thereupon she was appointed such guardian and gave the bond required by the statute, and then retained one Benjamin C. Wetmore, an attorney, who appeared in the action for Margaret Ann, and interposed an answer in which he submitted her rights and interests in the premises to the protection of the court. Under the provisions of section 448 of the Code of Procedure then in force it was provided that the provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to the partition of lands held by joint tenants or tenants in common shall apply to actions for such partition brought under the provisions of the Code, so far as the same can be so applied to the substance and subject-matter of the action without regard to its form. Under the Revised Statutes the action was commenced by a petition and notice but under the Code a summons and complaint were substituted in place of the petition and notice. The Revised Statutes then in force pertaining to partition provided that if any of the parties are unknown, or if either of the known parties were minors or of full age residing out of the state service could be made by publication, or "instead thereof, with respect to any known absent party such petition and notice may be served personally, out of this state, forty days previous to its presentation without publishing the same." (2 R.S. part 3. ch. 5, tit. 3, § 12.) Of course, the provisions of the Revised Statutes are only applicable in so far as they remain unaffected by the provisions of the Code. If the provision with reference to the service of known infant parties outside of the state is in conflict with the provisions of the Code with reference to the service of summons in partition actions, then that provision is no longer applicable, but our attention has been called to no provision of the Code then in force which prohibited such service. We, therefore, conclude that the summons and complaint having taken the place of the petition and notice, the service was regular, and that it gave the court jurisdiction. ( Gotendorf v. Goldschmidt, 83 N.Y. 110; Ingersoll v. Mangam, 84 N.Y. 622.)
In the latter case ANDREWS, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says: "Infants are deemed to be wards of the court, and when brought in by service of process the court will look after and protect their interests. But the court must first acquire jurisdiction before they are bound by its judgment. There is no invariable rule defining what legal proceedings constitute due process of law conferring jurisdiction upon a court to deal with and bind the property of infants. Notice in some form, actual or constructive, is essential, but the legislature may prescribe that such notice shall be given to the parent or guardian or other person as representing the infant, and proceedings in conformity with the statute in such cases will be valid and the infant will be bound. Under the Revised Statutes, in proceedings for partition of lands by petition, jurisdiction over the person and property of infants was acquired by the appointment of a guardian in the first instance upon notice to such infants or to their general guardian. Service of notice upon the infants was not indispensable to the exercise of the jurisdiction. (2 R.S. 317, § 2; Croghan v. Livingston, 17 N.Y. 218.) The provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to the partition of lands were, by section 448 of the Code of Procedure, made applicable to actions for partition so far as the same could be applied to the substance and subject-matter of the action without regard to form, and in Gotendorf v. Goldschmidt ( 83 N.Y. 110) it was held that under the provisions of the Revised Statutes and of the Code in force when that action was commenced, personal service of the summons upon an infant defendant, in an action for partition, was not essential to give the court jurisdiction."
The original affidavit of the service of the summons was defective by reason of the omission of the jurat of the commissioner of deeds before whom it was taken, but this was subsequently cured by another affidavit which, under an order of the court, was filed nunc pro tunc as of the 13th day of November, 1869. The provisions of section 116 of the Code of Procedure to the effect that, in an action for partition of real property, when an infant defendant resides out of the state, or is temporarily absent therefrom, the plaintiff may apply to the court in which the action is pending for an order designating some suitable person to be guardian of the infant defendant for the purposes of the action unless the infant defendant, or some one in his behalf within a number of days specified after the service of a copy of the order, shall procure the appointment of a guardian for the infant, has no application for the reason that the order appointing the guardian in this case was not made on the application of the plaintiff, but by the infant herself, through her mother and next friend.
The judgment, as to appellants William and James O'Donaghue, should be affirmed, and the order of the Appellate Division, as to the appeal of Margaret Ann O'Donaghue, should be affirmed, and judgment absolute ordered against her and in favor of the defendants upon her stipulation, with one bill of costs against all of the appellants.
CULLEN, Ch. J., VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT and CHASE, JJ., concur; GRAY and EDWARD T. BARTLETT, JJ., concur in result.
Judgment accordingly.