Citation Numbers: 12 Misc. 171, 33 N.Y.S. 5, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 506
Judges: Hebbick
Filed Date: 4/15/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On the 1st day of March, 1856, William Smith, of the city and county of Albany, in this state, executed and delivered to Otis Allen a deed of all the property, both real and personal, which had theretofore been assigned to him by one Thomas S. Bleecker, in trust, to pay the debts of Thomas S. Bleecker, the expenses attending the execution of the trust, the necessary repairs to buildings and fixtures, the insurance, and also the assessments and taxes, after the payment of which the income of such estate was to be paid to the said Thomas S. Bleecker during his natural life; upon
The plaintiff herein subsequently became the trustee and successor of the said Otis Allen under such trust deed.
On the 14th day of February, 1895, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendants for the sale to them of a certain house and lot, situated in the city of Albany, which house and lot had been acquired by one of the predecessors of said plaintiff as trustee under said trust deed, the same being purchased as a reinvestment of the surplus proceeds arising from a sale or sales of property belonging to the trust estate.
The defendants agreed to purchase such property, and pay
The court will not decree a specific performance upon the part of the vendee of a contract to purchase real estate where there is doubt of the ability of the vendor to convey a good marketable title to the property in question.
Every purchaser of real estate is entitled to a marketable title, free from incumbrances and defects, and he will not be compelled to take property the possession of which he may be compelled to defend by litigation. The title should be such that, if he wishes to sell, he may be reasonably sure that no flaw or doubt will arise to disturb its market value. Schriver v. Schriver, 86 N. Y. 575; Vought v. Williams, 120 id. 253; Irving v. Campbell, 121 id. 353.
In this case the power of sale is expressly granted to the trustee, but it is in terms confined to the property conveyed to the trustee; it is granted for a double purpose; paying debts and making investments; and that power seems to have been exercised already, it appearing in the plaintiff’s complaint that the property in question here was procured by an investment of the proceeds of a sale or sales of the trust property. There is no express authority for a sale of any after-acquired property.
The court will imply those powers which are necessary to carry out the purposes of the trust; no more. There are no purposes of the trust alleged in the plaintiff’s complaint, nor can I see any, in reading the trust deed, which render it necessary to sell the property in question here, neither do I think that the power to sell the property in question can be inferred from the power of sale expressly given in the trust deed.
It seems to me that instead of inferring from this the right to sell property in which the proceeds of such sales had been invested, that these words are rather a restriction upon the continued power to sell of the trustee, and that the grantor contemplated permanent investments to continue during the life of the trust estate.
The question at least is a serious one, not free from doubt, and one which cannot but affect the market value of the property in question, and the title offered to the defendants is, therefore, not one that a court of equity should compel them to accept.
The complaint should, therefore, be dismissed, with costs. Ordered accordingly.