Reed & Van Wart v. Underhill

By the Court,

Brown, J.

This was an appeal from a decree of the surrogate of the county of Westchester, made upon the final settlement, and for the distribution of the estate of Isaiah Underhill, deceased. Its decision turns, exclusively, upon the legal effect of the deed from the respondent, Alfred Underhill and Emeline his wife, to Nathaniel Fisher, deceased, the appellant’s testator. Isaiah Underhill died seised of certain lands, situate in Yorktown, in the county of Westchester, the one-fifth part of the proceeds of the sales of which is the subject in controversy. He left a last will and testament duly executed and published, and therein devised the uses and profits of the land to his wife Patience, from the time of his decease until his youngest child should arrive at the age of twenty-one years; for the purpose of enabling her to educate and bring up his children. And if she failed to bring up and educate the children in a suitable manner, then his executors were empowered to let out the lands and apply the avails thereof to the education and maintenance of the children. And within six months after such youngest child should arrive at the age of twenty-one years, the executors were also empowered to sell the lands at public auction, and after making provision for the widow’s dower therein, the proceeds were t‘o be equally divided amongst his children, share and share alike. The will was duly proved, and letters testamentary thereon were issued to the executor, Oliver Cornell, who is one of the respondents. The *117lands have been sold in execution of the trust. Alfred Under-hill, the respondent, is one of the children, and the appellants are made parties to the proceedings before the surrogate, and claim his share under the deed before referred to

The authority given to the executors to sell is valid only as a power in trust; for it is not pretended that the event ever occurred which entitled them to the rents and profits, and thereby to the possession. The lands are not devised to the executors, to sell, but there is a mere naked power for that purpose. No estate, therefore, vested in the executors, but the estate descended to the heirs at law, subject to the execution of the power. The existence of an authority to convert real estate into money, impressed it with the character of personal property; and courts of equity will, for many purposes, regard it as such, unless the parties in interest elect to take it as land and not as money. The law is settled that, if money is directed by a will, or other instrument, to be laid out in land, or land is directed to be turned into money, the party entitled to the beneficial interest may, in either case, if he elects so to do, prevent any conversion of the property from its present state, and hold it as it is.” (2 Story's Eq. Jur. 111, 112, § 793. 1 Roper on Leg. 372. Rashleigh v. Master, 1 Ves. 201, note a. Wheldale v. Partridge, 8 Ves. 226. Kirkman v. Miles, 13 Id. 338.) Had all the children of Isaiah Underhill, deceased, elected to take the estate in lands, notwithstanding the power of sale in the will, their right to do so, even against the will of the executor, would have been clear and indisputable. And, that which all the cestuis que trust might do in respect to the whole of the trust property, one of them could do in respect to his undivided interest; so far, at least, as to transmit his share, by the usual and ordinary deed of conveyance to another. Alfred Underhill’s deed to Nathaniel Fisher, (which is a deed of bargain and sale for the consideration of two hundred dollars, and in which his wife joined,) must be deemed an election, so far as he could elect, to take the estate unchanged; and must have the effect to transmit such interest and estate as he had in the premises, to the grantee.

*118Upon strict legal principles, however, the claim of the appellants to the subject in controversy has a sure foundation, upon which it may stand. “ If a deed can not operate in the manner intended by the parties, the judges will endeavor to construe it in such a way that it shall operate in some other manner.” In accordance with this rule it has been determined that a deed, intended to operate as a lease and release, or as a bargain and sale, but which could not take effect in that manner, was to be held good as a covenant to stand seised. So a conveyance, void as a lease and release, because the releasor had only a term for years, was held to operate as a grant and assignment. (Cruise’s Dig. tit. 32, Deed, ch. 23, §§ 17,18.) This is a familiar principle, and is thus recognized by Lord Mansfield, in Goodtitle v. Bailey, (Cowp. 600.) “ The rules laid down in respect to the Construction of deeds are founded in law, reason and common sense; that they shall operate according to the intention of the parties, if by law they may; and if they can not operate in one form, they shall operate in that which by law will effectuate the intention.” Here is a guide we may safely follow. We are to ascertain from an examination of the instrument itself, the intention of the parties, and effectuate that intention, unless it conflicts with some rule of law. The deed was made and delivered on the 26th day of October, 1843, and the power of sale was executed in 1850. Until the time appointed by the will for the sale of the property, Alfred Underhill and the other children were not entitled to the possession, for the rents and profits were given either to the widow or to the executors. If, as he now claims, the deed operated only upon the lands, so long as they remained unsold, and did not attach upon the proceeds after the sale, it conveyed little or nothing, and the conveyance was an idle, unfruitful ceremony, or a fraud upon the grantee. The language of the deed is full and comprehensive, and forbids any such notion. It bargains and sells all the right, title, interest, estate, claim and demand in law and equity, as well in possession, as in expectancy, of the grantors, in the lands of which Isaiah Underhill died seised; and decribes them by metes and bounds. How the estate and title wMch Alfred Underhill had *119in the lands, was an estate in fee in the one-fifth part, Subject to the widow’s dower, and to the power of sale given to the executors by the will. And the interest, claim and demand which he had in and upon it, was the right to the one-fifth part of the proceeds, whenever the power was executed, and the estate converted into money. The language of the deed indicates the intention of the parties that this estate, title, interest, claim and demand, by whatever name it might be called, should pass to the grantee. The subject of the sale existed at the time, in the form of real estate; and I know of no more appropriate form of conveyance to a purchaser than that adopted by the parties, which was the ordinary deed of bargain and sale. “ A deed comprehends and passes the incident as well as the principal, though the latter only be mentioned. The legal effect of the instrument is the same in respect to both. The form in which such an effect is produced—-in. the one ease by expi*ess words, and in the other by implication—does-mot take from the conclusiveness of the effect.” (Pattison v. Hull, 9 Cowen, 754. Jackson v. Blodget, 5 Id. 202.) “ When any thing is granted all the means to attain it, and all the fruits and effects of it, are granted also, and_ shall pass, inclusive, together with the thing, by the grant of the thing itself, without the words cum per tinentiis.” (Sheppard’s Touch. 89, § 1.) The incidents necessary and appendant, will, in most cases, pass by the grant of the principal, without the word appurtenances. (Cruise’s Dig. tit. 32, Deed, ch. 23, § 42.) Lands by descent or devise are held by the heir, or devisee, subject to a power of sale by the executors, or administrators, in the event of the personal estate being insufficient to day the debts of the ancestor. This power exists for the period of three years, after the granting of letters testamentary, or of administration; and attaches to, and follows the estate in the hands of a purchaser, as well as in the hands of the heir or devisee. (2 R. S. [100,] § 1. Hyde v. Tanner, 1 Barb. S. C. R. 75.) The mortgagor of an estate in fee, has the legal title and the right to the possession, subject to have the estate converted into money, under the power of sale contained in the mortgage; yet who could entertain any doubt, *120that the grantee of an heir, or of a devisee, or of a mortgagor, would be entitled to the surplus proceeds of the estate, whenever it should be sold for the payment of the debts of the ancestor, under the provisions of the statute, or for the satisfaction of the mortgage debt, under the power of sale ?

[Kings General Term, October 6, 1851.

The present case is altogether too plain for doubt. The decree of the surrogate should be reversed; and the appellants are entitled to a decree for the one-fifth part of the real estate, being the share of Alfred Underhill therein, as ascertained by the surrogate, together with their costs to be paid by the respondent,

Alfred Underhill.

Morse, Barculo and Broten, Justices.]