
    (72 Hun, 452.)
    KINYON et al. v. KINYON.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department.
    October 20, 1893.)
    1. Advancements—Issues Presented by Pleadings and Proofs.
    In an action to determine the validity of an agreement executed by defendant the complaint alleged that the father of the parties to the action conveyed a farm to defendant “as an advancement,” whereupon defendant executed the agreement, stating that in consideration of the deed “I do hereby renounce, release, give up, and set over unto my said father all my right, title, interest, claim, and demand whatsoever in and to” the father’s estate; that in a proceeding by one of the plaintiffs for a settlement of his accounts as administrator of his father he claimed that the agreement barred defendant’s interest in the estate, but that defendant was permitted to file an answer alleging, that the agreement was void; that the surrogate decided that he could not pass on that question, and adjourned the accounting until it could be determined by the proper tribunal. On the trial of the action evidence aliunde the deed and agreement was given, to the effect that it was understood between defendant and the father that the transaction was to be in full of defendant’s share in the father’s estate. It was also shown that the father had conveyed a farm to each of his other children, (plaintiffs,) and that a proposition was made in his lifetime to divide the residue of his estate among plaintiffs. Held, that under the pleadings and proofs the agreement should have been considered as evidence of an advancement to defendant in full of his prospective interest in his father’s estate, and the trial court erred in considering its validity and effect merely as a transfer of such interest.
    
      2. Assignment—Expectancy in Ancestor’s Estate.
    An assignment by an heir of his expectancy in his ancestor’s estate, if made bona fide and for a valuable consideration, is valid, and enforceable in equity after the ancestor’s death; and the fact that the assignment is made to the ancestor himself is not conclusive against its effect
    Appeal from special term, Niagara county.
    Action by Charles Kinyon and others against Albert Kinyon. From a judgment entered on the findings and decision of the court, plaintiffs appeal.
    Reversed.
    Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and LEWIS, HAIGHT, and BRADLEY, JJ.
    D. Millar, for appellants.
    G. D. Judson, for respondent.
   DWIGHT, P. J.

The four individual parties to the action are the four sons and sole heirs at law and next of kin of John Kinyon, Sr., deceased, and one of the brothers is also joined as plaintiff in his representative capacity as administrator of his -father’s estate. The complaint alleged the execution and delivery by the father, in his lifetime, to the defendant, of a deed of a farm of 91 acres of land “as an advancement,” and the execution and delivery thereupon and in consideration thereof by the defendant to his father of an instrument in writing, under seal, which, after stating the fact of the deed above mentioned, proceeded in the following terms: ‘Now, therefore, in consideration of such conveyance being made and delivered to me as aforesaid, I do hereby renounce, release, give up, and set over unto my said father all my right, title, interest, claim, and demand whatsoever in and to all and every part, parcel, or share in and to his real and personal estate which I may or will have at or upon his death, in expectancy, by reason of being a devisee or legatee under any will he has- made, or by reason of being one of his next of kin, excepting the lands hereinabove referred to as conveyed to me by him this day.” The complaint further alleges that in proceedings instituted in the surrogate’s court of the proper county, by the plaintiff Charles Kinyon, as administrator of his father’s estate, for the settlement of his account as such administrator, he set up the execution and delivery by the intestate of the deed above mentioned to the defendant, and the execution and delivery of the release aforesaid in consideration thereof, and alleged that by such release the defendant did renounce, release, and give up all his right, title, and interest in and to the estate of the deceased, and his right to share therein, and that by reason thereof he was not entitled to any share of or interest in the distribution of said estate; “that thereupon, notwithstanding such release, the defendant was permitted to intervene upon such accounting, and that he filed an ■ answer contesting said account in so far only as the same related to the accounting aforesaid, and, among other things therein alleged that the said alleged release was void, and of no legal force and effect, * * * and that he, the said Albert Kinyon, was entitled to an equal distributive share of the said decedent’s estate, viz. the one-fourth part thereof,” and that he asked that a decree be made accordingly. The complaint further alleges that when the issues thus joined came up to be heard by the surrogate he held and decided that he had no jurisdiction to determine the validity or invalidity of the release, and that the account of the administrator could not be judicially settled, nor any part of the estate distributed, until the question of the validity or invalidity .of the release should be determined in the proper tribunal; and that the surrogate thereupon made and entered an order to that effect, and adjourned the accounting, which the plaintiffs are informed and believe will be further adjourned or held open pending the determination of this action. On the trial of this action, evidence aliunde the deed and agreement was given by the plaintiffs, under objection of the defendant, tending to show that at the time of the execution of the papers it was understood and agreed between the deceased and the defendant that the effect of the transaction as a whole was to bar and prevent him from ever thereafter claiming any share of or interest in his father’s estate. It was also shown that the father had before that time deeded farms to two of his sons, and that he did on this occasion deed a farm to the other of his sons aside from the defendant; and that at the same time there was proposed and some steps were taken towards a division then and there of the certain moneys and securities, which was all the property the father then had undisposed of, between the three brothers other than the defendant; but that, on the father manifesting reluctance to strip himself entirely of the last of his possessions, final division of the personal property was abandoned. The result was that on the death of the father, not long after, there was of his estate about the sum of $3,000 in personal property to be distributed among such of his sons as were entitled thereto, and it was upon the return of a citation for the settlement of the accounts of the administrator, with a view to such distribution, that the controversy arose before the surrogate which has resulted in this action.

Assuming—what is not questioned by any one of the parties hereto—that this action was properly brought in aid of the proceedings before the surrogate, the question here seems to us to be, what wras properly the scope of the action, and was the case considered and disposed of below in accordance therewith? The learned judge at special term seems to have restricted the scope of the action to a determination of the validity and effect, as a transfer, of the release or agreement executed by the defendant. In the opinion, which we find in the case, he intimates that no other question was presented by the pleadings, and that no other was tried before him. He seems disposed, moreover, in determining this question, to isolate the instrument from its surroundings, and construe it by its own terms as standing alone. Treated thus, the instrument is found to be an assignment or transfer of a mere expectancy, not coupled with any present interest; and it is held to be absolutely void in law, upon the authority of such cases as Jackson v. Wright, 14 Johns. 192; Jackson v. Hubble, 1 Cow. 613; Miller v. Emans, 19 N. Y. 384; and it was upon this, as a controlling conclusion of law, that the case was disposed of, not merely by a dismissal of the complaint, but by an affirmative adjudication that the defendant was entitled to a full, distributive share of the personal estate of his father “as one of his next of kin, the same as if said instrument had not been executed.” This conclusion ignores any equitable effect which might be given to the instrument in view of the other circumstances of the transaction, and, especially, rejects it as evidence of an advancement made to the defendant in full of his prospective interest in his father’s estate. These latter were, we think, aspects of the case which were fairly presented both by the pleadings and by the proofs, to which brief reference has been made above. That the mere expectancy of an heir to his ancestor’s estate may be assigned, and that such an assignment will be enforced in equity after the death of the ancestor, if made bona fide and for a valuable consideration, admits of no doubt. Quarles v. Quarles, 4 Mass. 680; Kenney v. Tucker, 8 Mass. 143; Power’s Appeal, 63 Pa. St. 443; Stover v. Eycleshimer, 46 Barb. 84, *42 N. Y, 620. And that the assignment or release in this case was made to the ancestor himself, and not to any person capable of taking after his death, is not conclusive against the effect of the instrument. The case of Power’s Appeal, supra, was one in which sons had received advancements from their father, and executed releases to him in full of their shares of his estate; and the court, by Bead, J., said:

“An heir or an expectant devisee or legatee may, in the lifetime of the intestate or testator, in equity sell or assign his expectant or contingent interest, whatever it may turn out to be upon the death of the person from whom it may come, which contract, if made upon a valuable consideration, a court of equity will enforce. If so, there can be no reason why a father should not make such a contract with a son which should entirely bar all his claim as an heir to any part of his parent’s estate.”

So, in this case before us, we think it was clearly within the scope of the action, as presented both by the pleadings and the proof, to determine whether such a contract was made between the deceased and the defendant which ought to be enforced in equity. This question was also, we think, fairly presented by the plaintiffs’ requests to find, and, without intimating any opinion as to what the finding in that respect should have been, we "are clearly of the opinion that the court erred in refusing to find thereon on the ground that the question was not before the court. For the error here indicated the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted.

-Judgment appealed from reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the final award of costs. All concur.  