The theory that the plaintiff acquired the right to maintain this action as the assignee of the administrators of her deceased husband cannot be sustained, for the reason that such administrators never themselves acquired any right to the rent in question. It is rent /accruing for the year beginning January 25, 1900, and the lessor had been dead more than a year prior to that date.-. Unless the plaintiff’s claim, that she took this rent under the terms of the lease, can be sustained it passed with the title of the farm to the heirs of such lessor, and they alone could collect it. The administrators, as such, under the statute took no interest in it (Fay v. Holloran, 35 Barb. 295), and I understand that the plaintiff’s counsel does not now ui’ge any such claim upon us.
The averments in the complaint that, by the lease, this rent for the unexpired term was assigned to the plaintiff, and that, by its terms, upon the lessor’s death, she became the owner of this rent, can be considered as conclusions of law only. Ho provisions of the lease are given except those above cited, and the plaintiff’s rights, if any, are given by that provision. ...
. Does such a provision give to the wife a right of action for the rent in question ?
It cannot be construed as a gift to her of such rent, for the one sufficient reason, if for no other, that there is no delivery to her of the thing given, either actual or constructive. 3STo effort at a symAbolical delivery is attempted. - Her whole interest rests upon a mere ^promise, which becomes operative only after her husband’s death,
-- It cannot be deemed a trust created for her benefit, for the reason that it does not- assume to put the title to such rent in any person as Ntru'stee for her. The relation of the lessee is but that of a debtor *259for the rent as it accrues. The fund, upon which it is claimed a trust is impressed, was not in existence when the lease was executed. It could not come into existence until after the lessor’s death, and it might never come ■ into existence. No words importing a trust, or indicating that the lessee had any purpose of assuming such a position, appear in the lease.. As to so much of the rent as might accrue after the lessor’s death, the lessee agrees, as a debtor, to pay* it to the wife; but surely we cannot reasonably construe such lan-' guage as an undertaking on his part to be liable to account to her as a trustee for the same, nor as indicating an intent, on the part of either, that he should do so. It is to be noticed that there is no claim of any indebtedness from the husband to the wife, and, in cases of “ voluntary settlements or gifts, the court will not impute a trust where a trust was not, in fact, the thing contemplated.” (Young v. Young, 80 N. Y. 438.) And no exception to this rule is made in favor of a wife or children. (Id. 437.) (See, also, Sullivan v. Sullivan, 161 N. Y. 554, 558.)
Moreover, it is plain that this provision in the lease amounts to nothing more than an attempt to make a voluntary disposition of a' portion of the lessor’s property, for the benefit of his widow, after his death. Had the lease contained no provision as to the payment of rent, save that it be paid on the first of October annually, it would be payable to the lessor for the whole term. In the event of his death, all rent that accrued afterwards would be payable, under the statute, to his heirs. The provision in question seeks to change the statutory succession; to divert such rent from the heirs to the widow. It operates in no other way. The promise to pay the widow is not operative until after the death of the lessor, and she neither acquires any interest nor is there any that she can acquire until after such death. The lessor, during life, parts with nothing; on the contrary, he is to have the entire rent during that period. The promise, therefore, is clearly in the nature of a will, or a testamentary disposition (Matter of Diez, 50 N. Y. 88, 93; Gilman v. McArdle, 99 id. 452, 461), and hence is inoperative because not properly -executed.
Being inoperative on that account, of course no action can be maintained upon such promise. Hence the demurrer to her complaint should have been sustained.’ The interlocutory judgment *260must be reversed, with., costs, with leave to the plaintiff to amend upon the usual terms.'
All-concurred.