Court Opinion

ID: 6220518
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-10 19:38:34.143014+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:17.935984
License: Public Domain

Judgment affirmed, with costs on opinion of Special Term.
The opinion of the Special Term was as follows :
Patterson, J.:
The question in this case relates to the sufficiency of the power of sale pursuant to which the plaintiff claims she can convey a title in fee simple to the premises referred to in the complaint. It is understood that both parties desire to complete the contract, specific performance of which is sought in this action; but the defendant questions the ability of the plaintiff to give a valid title. If this power, namely, that contained in the second clause of Dr. M’Cready’s will, is to be considered as a simple power in trust and one limited and restricted to the power of paying debts, legacies, or for distribution, it might be regarded as insufficient to authorize the conveyance tendered by the plaintiff, when the eighth clause of the will is taken into consideration, from which clause it may be successfully argued that the absolute power of alienation is suspended during four minorities, and hence that the power of sale, being in aid of a per*530petuity, cannot be supported, and that a conveyance pursuant' to it would not clothe the purchaser of t the land with a valid title. But it would seem that this power is one of the character to be exercised when “ in ihe judgment of the donee the prudent or profitable management of the property required its exchange into some safer or more remunerative investment,” and it is one that could be exercised or omitted at the discretion of the donee; and it seems to me, taking the whole scope and purpose of the testator’s will into consideration, that it was the intent of the testator by the power contained in the second clause of the will to grant to the executrix and trustee a complete power of disposition of all the testator’s real estate in her discretion. If we examine critically this second clause of the will, we ascertain that the power of sale is associated with the widest latitude of management and control of the whole estate. ¥e find that it is a power created at the beginning of the instrument before any dispository provision is mentioned; that it stands separate from any other provisions of the will, and that it is not by necessary construction made inseparable from the trust which is created in the residuum of the estate. This clause confers not only a power -of sale, but in terms an “ authority to mortgage, sell or otherwise ■dispose of any and all real estate of which I may die seized, either ;at public or private sale, and to give good and sufficient deed or «deeds for the proper conveyance of the same.” There is no limit to this discretionary power; it may be exercised for any legitimate purpose satisfactory to the executrix; standing by itself it neither promotes nor otherwise affects the establishment of the trust, whether the land is converted into money or kept- in specie or a division is made or not. In the case of Benedict v. Webb (98 N. Y. 460) it was held that under the terms of the will the power could not be executed as a separate and independent provision, and that as it could be exercised only in furtherance of the establishment of a void trust, it could not be upheld. But that does not seem to me to be the effect of this power when we come to consider other provisions of the will. The intention of the testator in the creation of this power must be ascertained, and, of course, when ascertained, is to control; and I think it is clear, from other provisions of the will, that this was a general power of safe, embracing the widest power of disposition that could be granted to the discretion of an executor *531or trustee; for it is associated with an authority to mortgage, sell or otherwise dispose of the testator’s land. The words ■“ otherwise dispose of ” are somewhat vague; but they certainly have some meaning, and were employed with some intention. I have suggested that this power of sale, standing alone, has great significance as indicative of the testator’s intention, and a study of this will will further disclose that the testator meant it to be operative independently. Coming to the examination of the sixth clause, we ascertain precisely what the scheme of the testator was with respect to the creation of the trust which is claimed to be invalid. It is obvious that the testator’s intention was to grant another power with reference to the sale of the land for the purpose of constituting the alleged invalid trust, and that, therefore, he has conferred two powers of sale; and the fair inference is that the one, the first power, was a general power of disposition, by the exercise of which the executrix and trustee could by deed convey good title, and that if she did not exercise that power the additional and implied power contained in the sixth clause was to be exercised for the purpose of the constitution of -the trust referred to in the sixth clause. It will be observed that by the provisions of the will last referred to, the executrix is required to invest all the real estate, as well as other ^property of the testator, in certain specified securities qí a particular character. Of course that could not be done without disposing of the real estate, and this clause operates as an equitable 'conversion of the realty into personalty for the purposes of the trust, and an implied power of sale, therefore, exists. "Whether the purposes of the trust are valid or invalid does not affect the question of the intention of the testator in making this provision of his will; but the provision itself shows that there must have been in his mind a distinction between the two powers, and that he did not intend the first, a general power, to be cut down simply to the purposes of the creation of the trust. It seems to me, therefore, that this power "contained in the second clause is independent of the power in trust, and that it is unnecessary to consider the question of the invalidity of the trust; for if the trust is void the estate would pass to the heirs at law of the testator subject to the execution of the power contained in the second clause; and it may well be that this power was intended to facilitate a division of the testator’s estate irrespec*532tive of the trust if for any reason that trust could not be constituted lawfully. 1 think the power can be upheld, and that such construction should be given to it as would uphold it according to the intention of the testator; and if this construction is right, the defendant can acquire a good title by the conveyance tendered.