Court Opinion

ID: 7286610
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:28:07.113732+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:19:09.568301
License: Public Domain

The Chancellor.
The testator died on the fourth of July, 1830. On the twenty-ninth of May, 1832, the executor exhibited his final account for settlement and allowance, by which it appears that there remained in his hands a net balance of $397.68. By deed bearing date on the twenty-seventh of March, 1833, Nathan Park, for the consideration of $400, conveyed to Jonathan A. Park, the executor, a house and two lots of land, containing about sixteen acres. The deed itself does not specify the purpose of the trust, but it furnishes satisfactory evidence that it was taken by the grantee, not for his own benefit, but in trust for the estate of his testator. The conveyance is made to him, not in his individual, but in his representative capacity, by the name and description of Jonathan A. Park, executor of the last will and testament of John Bolason, deceased. The consideration is acknowledged to have been paid by him in his capacity of executor. The conveyance is to him “as executor aforesaid, or to his lawful representatives as such.” The *17habendum and tenendum clause describes his estate and interest in the same terms. The covenant is ‘‘with the said party of the second part, or with his lawful representatives, as executor aforesaid.” The warranty is unto “the said Jonathan A. Park, as executor aforesaid, or his lawful representatives.” As against the grantee, the terms of the conveyance afford satisfactory evidence that the land was held by him, not in his own right, but in trust for the estate of his testator. The evidence shows that the purchase money was paid with the funds of the estate. There is, consequently, a resulting trust in favor of the estate. The evidence demonstrates the special nature and purpose of the trust. By the will of the testator, the remainder of his estate was directed to bo invested in the purchase of a house and lot, suitable for the family, to belong to his wife during her widowhood, and on her death, to be sold and equally divided among the children. On the settlement of the estate, a year previous to the date of the deed, there was found in the hands of the executor a residue of 8397.68, within three dollars of the price paid for the land. On the purchase of the property, the widow entered into possession and continued in the enjoyment of it during her life. The grantee never claimed title to it in his own right, or for any other purpose. There was no other trust under the will for which the estate could have been hold by the executor, than that to which it was applied.
The deed, by its terms, conveys only an estate for life. The conveyance is to the grantee and his lawful representatives, not to his heirs. Littleton, § 1; 1 Sheppard’s Touch. 101-2; 4 Kent’s Com. 5; Kearney v. Macomb, 1 C. E. Green 189.
The application of the principle, that in a common law conveyance, the use of the word “heirs” is necessary to create an estate in fee, is not affected by the circumstance that the conveyance is made in trust, and that a less estate will not be sufficient to. satisfy the trust. The language of Chief Justice Kent, in Fisher v. Fields, 10 Johns. R. 505, is *18applicable only to wills or instruments other than common law conveyances, as the cases cited by him abundantly prove. But the fact that the land was conveyed in trust — that an estate for life would not be sufficient to satisfy the trust, the purpose of the trust being known to the grantor — affords strong evidence that it was the intention of the parties to convey an estate in fee. This intention is also evinced by the terms of the covenant of warranty, which is in favor of the grantee and his lawful representatives forever. These circumstances, in connection with the facts established by the evidence, that the price paid was a full consideration for the fee of the land, and that the cestui que trust was permitted to hold and enjoy the land for several years after the death of the grantee, when an estate for life would have ended, afford satisfactory proof that an estate in fee was intended to be conveyed. Where it is clearly the intention of the parties to convey the whole estate, equity will decree a conveyance of the fee. according to the intention of the parties, notwithstanding the want of words of inheritance in the grant. Higinbotham v. Burnet, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 184; Fisher v. Fields, 10 Johns. R. 495; Bradford v. The Union Bank, 13 How. 66; 1 Story's Eq. Jur., § 152.
Jonathan A. Park, the executor, to whom the legal title was conveyed, will be declared to have been seized of the land as trustee, for the purposes specified in the will; and the land will be disposed of, and the proceeds applied as though the trusts were expressed in the deed. The trustee having died without executing the power, the trust survives, and equity will decree its due execution by a sale of the estate for the specified trust. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., § 1061.
Jonathan P. Eolason, one of the legatees under the will of his father, of an equal share with the other children in the trust estate, has become the owner in his own right of a part of the land, having purchased the legal title from a part of the heirs of Jonathan A. Park, the grantee. But he cannot thereby defeat the equitable title of the cestuis que trust, for it is obvious from his answer that he purchased with *19knowledge of their equity, and that he acquired the legal title for the purpose of gaining an undue advantage over those having an equal interest with himself in the equitable estate.
There is another principle equally fatal to his exclusive title to the shares purchased by him. Where two or more persons having an interest in lands claim under an imperfect title, and one of them buys in the outstanding title, such purchase will enure to the common benefit, upon contribution made to repay the purchase money. “ Where,” says Chancellor Kent, “ two devisees are in possession under an imperfect title, derived from their common ancestor, it is not consistent with good faith, nor with the duty which the connection of the parties, as claimants of a common subject created, that' one of them should bo able, without the consent of the other, to buy in an outstanding title, and appropriate the whole subject to himself.” Van Horne v. Fondo, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 407; Rothwell v. Dewees, 2 Black's R. 618.
Hor can he claim any contribution for the price paid for the legal title from those interested with Him in the equitable estate. The title purchased by him has in no wise enured to the benefit of their estate.
The complainants are entitled to the relief prayed for, and it will be decreed accordingly.