Court Opinion

ID: 5212746
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:16:16.420806+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:23.758422
License: Public Domain

Woodward, J.:
■ The plaintiff brings this action to recover $150 deposited on entering into a contract with the defendants for the purchase of certain real estate in the borough of Brooklyn, together with $100 for expenses in examining title, and $300 for other damages, the latter claim having been dropped from consideration at the trial. The parties have agreed that on the 21st day of September, 1908, a *581written contract was entered into between them for the purchase and. sale of the premises JNo. 537 Yan Siclen avenue, Brooklyn ; that the time for closing title, after several adjournments, was fixed for October 17, 1908; that the defendants were willing to give title at that time, and that the plaintiff was at all times ready and willing to carry out the contract on his part, but that the latter objected and refused to take title to said premises on the ground of certain defects in said title ; that the defect or defects in said title urged by the plaintiff are as stated in paragraph 7 of the complaint, to the effect that the defendants were unable to delivers good title because of the fact that they derived title to the premises from a conveyanee by one Elsie A. Yan Siclen, as executrix and trustee under the will of Jacob T. Yan Siclen, deceased; that the said will made the said Elsie A. Yan Siclen executrix and Albert W. Yan Siclen and William Schenck Yan Siclen executors and trustees; that the said Elsie A. Yan Siclen became the beneficiary during her lifetime, or until her remarriage, with a remainder over to the only child of the testator; that the said Elsie A. Yan Siclen qualified as executrix and trustee, but that the two others did not qualify, but renounced, no others being substituted; that the said Elsie A. Yan Siclen, as sole acting executrix and trustee as aforesaid, and under the power of sale given to the executors and trustees under the will, conveyed to one of the defendants’ grantors, without securing the consent of the Supreme Court, and without the concurrence of substituted trustees, and that defendants refused to cure the defect when their attention was called thereto.
, The parties admit the formal matters, such as the chain of title, the original ownership, the will of such owner, the survival of the parties who were to be beneficiaries under the will, etc., and the only question, on the merits, was whether the conveyance by Elsie A. Yan Siclen, as executrix and trustee, without the concurrence of the two remaining executors named in the will, or a substitution for them, operated to give a merchantable title to the defendants’ predecessor in title. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, no evidence having been produced, except as to the services rendered in connection with the search of title, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to show that the title was unmarketable, and on the further ground that “ it now *582appears that a question of title was involved, and that this court has no jurisdiction to determine such questions.” The- learned court reserved decision, and subsequently gave judgment for the defendants, dismissing the complaint, with costs, on the theory, as indicated by an opinion handed down, that the case was one .governed by section 184 of the Municipal Court Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 580). The plaintiff appeals from this judgment.
It is not claimed that the defendants acted under the provisions of section 179 of the Municipal Court Act; no question of the jurisdiction of the court was raised until at the close of the trial. Section 2 of the act in question provides that the Municipal Court cannot take cognizance of any civil actions “ where the title to real property comes in question as prescribed in title four of this act.” The word “ prescribe ” lias a well-defined meaning; it is “ to lay down authoritatively as a guide, direction or rule; to impose as a peremptory order; to dictate ; to point; to direct.” (22 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 1179.) Section 179 (tit. 4) of the act provides that the defendant may answer and show facts indicating that the title to real estate is involved, whereupon, by the provisions of section 180, the defendant is called upon to file a bond, which secures to the plaintiff, under subsequent sections, the right to bring his action in the Supreme Court. Then section 183 steps in and provides that if this bond is not given to the court “it has jurisdiction of the action, and must proceed therein, and the defendant is precluded in his defense from drawing the title in question.” It thus appears that the court is not without jurisdiction in such actions; it is only limited under the conditions prescribed, and the defendants here are not questioning the title in any way. But section 184 makes a further provision, that if “ it appears upon the trial, from the plaintiff’s own showing, that the title to real property is in question, and the title is disputed by the defendant, the court must dismiss the complaint, with costs, and render judgment against the plaintiff accordingly.” It is a fundamental rule of construction that all words of a statute are to be considered and given effect, within reason, and when the statute limits jurisdiction to matters “ as prescribed ” elsewhere, and we find words at the point mentioned which have a well-defined meaning, we are not free to pass them over. It is only where “ the title is disputed by the defendant” that section 184 of the Munici*583pal Court Act has any bearing, and the whole purpose of the act appears to be to protect the defendant from being compelled to litigate his title in a court of limited jurisdiction at the behest of a plaintiff. Except in the cases where the defendant shows that the title is involved, and he gives a bond protecting the plaintiff, and the case provided for by section 184, the Municipal Court, aside from equitable jurisdiction, has jurisdiction in minor matters, and none of the facts appearing to limit the jurisdiction of the court, it was error to dismiss the complaint under the provisions of section 184 of the Municipal Court Act. The defendants do not dispute the title to real estate ; they do not bring it into question at all; they dispute the plaintiff’s claim for damages, not the title to real property. It is only when upon the plaintiff’s own showing the title to real property is in question,” “ and the title is disputed by the defendant,” that there is any right in the court to give judgment dismissing the complaint, and that condition is not found here. It is true the plaintiff asserts that the defendants were not prepared to deliver a merchantable title to the real estate in question, but that does not bring the case within the exclusion of the statute. The question of whether the defendants were able to give a 'marketable title on a particular date does not make the title to real property come in question ; it does not involve the defendant’s title. Title to real estate is generally defined to be “ the means whereby the owner of lands has the just possession of his property ” (28 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 232, and authorities cited in notes), and it is only where this just right of possession is to be disturbed by the judgment that there is any limitation on the jurisdiction of the court.' The title to real property does not come in question, in contemplation of the provisions of the Municipal Court Act unless it is to be affected by the judgment; unless the rights of the owner are disturbed by the adjudication. Ho judgment rendered by the court in this action would involve the defend-, ants’ rights as the owners of the real estate ; it would not in any wise interfere with “ the means whereby the owner of lands has the just possession of his property,” and it is only in such a case that the title is in question. The mere fact that the court was called upon to determine whether the defendants offered a merchantable title on a given date, as an incident in the decision of the present *584controversy, has no bearing upon the defendants’ right of possession in the premises; it does not bring their title in question within the meaning of the provisions limiting the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court. That court has jurisdiction of an action to recover damages for a breach of contract where the amount involved is no larger than is here demanded, and because it is called upon to determine whether the defendants offered a merchantable title on the Utli day of October, 1908, has no more to do with their title to real estate than would be the case if it was necessary to determine that John Smith owned some other jjiece of real property at that time. It is merely one fact in a chain of facts determining the right of the plaintiff to the damages -which lie seeks to recover, and is not within ■ the reason of the rule limiting the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court.
It is not essential to the plaintiff’s cause of action that the title offered should be absolutely bad. He is entitled to relief unless the defendants were able to give him a marketable title, which is a title free from reasonable doubt. (Lakey v. Kortright, 132 N. Y. 450, 455, and authorities there cited.) While the question is, perhaps, a close one, depending upon whether Mrs. Van Siclen acted in her capacity of sole surviving executrix or as a sole surviving trustee, she being the only beneficiary, we are of the opinion" that under the rule recognized and asserted in the case of Doscher v. Wyckoff (132 App. Div. 139) the conveyance made by Elsie A. Van Siclen, as executrix and trustee, operated to give a good title and to fulfill their contract. The power was given to the executors of the will of Jacob T. Van Siclen “ to sell and dispose of any real estate of which I may die seized, at such times as they may deem for the best interest of my estate, at either private or public sale, * * * hereby giving and granting untó my said executors, their survivor or survivors, successor or successors, all such power and authority as shall be necessary to carry out the provisions and requirements herein contained, and also full power and authority to execute, acknowledge and deliver all proper deeds and other instruments in writing in the law and under seal which may be necessary for the conveyance of my real estate or any part thereof,” etc. This power being given to the executors, their survivor or survivors, and Mrs. Van Siclen being the only executor, to qualify, the power of sale *585became vested in her, and her conveyance under the authority above cited was effectual. (See Taylor v. Morris, 1 N. Y. 341.)
As the learned Municipal Court did not pass upon the merits of the case it is necessary for a new tidal unless the parties should elect to settle. The judgment- appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred ; Hirschberg, P. J., concurred in result; Burr, J., read for affirmance.