Armour v. Murray
Armour v. Murray
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants agreed to convey to the plaintiff a house and lot of land in Hudson county by warranty deed conveying the fee-simple, free from all encumbrances, excepting one not necessary now to be mentioned. Pursuant to the terms of the agreement plaintiff made a payment to the defendants on account of the purchase-money, and before the time fixed for passing title she incurred expense in making a search. Defendants tendered a deed purporting to convey said lands, which deed plaintiff refused to accept, claiming that it would not vest in her an absolute title in fee-simple for the reason that the title was subject to an outstanding trust that was not extinguished by the deed tendered. The present action was brought to recover the deposit made by the plaintiff upon the signing of the agreement, and also the money she expended for searching the title. The trial judge held she was not entitled to recover, on the ground that the deed tendered was sufficient to convey a good title.
The defendants (all of whom are admitted to have joined in the deed referred to) are Sarah Murray and her four surviving children, James, Daniel, Annie and John. Their in
It would seem (although the state of the case is obscure upon these points) that Thomas Murray, one of the grantors, is dead, leaving Sarah Murray, one of the defendants, his widow; that-Mary Murray, the trustee, and her sister Sarah have died unmarried and intestate, and that the defendants James, John and Daniel Murray and Annie Murray McGhee, are the, .sole surviving children of Thomas and Sarah, the grantors, and are all of full age.
It is admitted by the appellant that upon the death of Mary Murray, the trustee, her legal estate descended to her heirs at the common law, and that her beneficial estate and that of her sister Sarah (if vested in them) descended to the brothers and sister (all of whom joined in the deed that was tendered), and that the sole question raised below, and now to be determined on appeal, is whether a conveyance by Sarah Murray, the life tenant, and by the other defendants, including, as they did, all the beneficiaries of the trust and the heirs of the deceased trustee, will pass a marketable title to the lands in question.
The trial judge was of the opinion that the word “heirs,” where used in the trust clause, is a word of limitation, and not of purchase, so that the beneficiaries therein named took a vested and not a contingent interest, and that although under the language of the deed no power was given to make conveyance until, the death of Sarah Murray, the mother, yet that
It is argued by counsel for the appellant that since the trust deed contemplated a sale of land to be-made at the death of Sarah, the mother, and a distribution of the proceeds as personal property, the land is to be treated as converted into personalty as of that time, so that the word “heirs” in the connection in which it was used cannot be deemed a word of limitation, but is a description of the person to whom the inoney is to be paid. The trust deed, however, contains no imperative requirement that the land shall be sold, as in Crane v. Bolles, 4 Dick. Ch. Rep. 373, but only an authority to sell without express direction. Therefore the-land retains its character as land until actually sold. Cook’s Executor v. Cook’s Administrator, 5 C. E. Gr. 375; Condit v. Bigalow, 19 Dick. Ch. Rep. 504. The devise over after the life interest of Sarah Murray, the mother, is in effect to Mary, Annie and Sarah, the daughters, subject to charges of $200 each in favor of the sons James,. John and Daniel. The power of sale after the death of the mother was conferred for the purpose of raising the sums payable to the sons “and to their heirs and assigns.” We agree with the trial judge that in this context the word “heirs,” while not strictly appropriate as applied to personalty, is intended as a word of limitation and not of purchase. The rule in Shelley’s case applies, it not having been abolished in this state except with respect to estates created by will.
• It results that by the trust deed vested interests passed to the sons as well as to the daughters of the grantors, enjoyment alone being postponed until after the death of the mother. The time of the exercise of the power of sale is a matter that may be waived by all the persons entitled, they having vested interests and being sui juris, and their deed of conveyance made to the plaintiff herein amounts to a consent to a present sale. Indeed, as we think, the making of any sale by the trustee might be waived by the beneficiaries, they being the only parties for whose benefit the power of sale is conferred.
The present case differs materially from Isham v. Delaware,
We agree with the view of the trial judge that the deed tendered would have operated to extinguish the trust and to convey an absolute title in fee-simple to the appellant.
The judgment under review should therefore be affirmed, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.