
    Ruth A. Johnstone, Resp't, v. Eugene F. O'Connor, App'lt.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, Second Department,
    
    
      Filed December 12, 1892.)
    
    Trustee—Fraud—Parties.
    The complaint in this action alleged the death of the father of the parties, leaving a widow and five children; that defendant commenced a partition and selected the attorney to appear for plaintiff, her sister and mother. On the sale he bought iii the property for much less than it was worth and induced them to agree to his taking title in his own name by promising to give them their just share of its actual value and to give the mother a gross sum in lieu of dower; that he has since refused to do so; that the sister died leaving a will giving all her property to plaintiff, and the mother has died and that defendant is her administrator, and asked that plaintiff recover her share of the property and her share of the right of dower of her mother. Hell, that the complaint stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that the other children were not necessary parties.
    Appeal from interlocutory judgment overruling demurrer to complaint.
    
      Edward G. Boardman, for app’lt;
    
      Wm. D. Feeder, for resp’t.
   Barnard, P. J.

The facts set forth in the complaint affect the parties to the suit only and need no other parties to render a complete judgment. Owen O’Connor died in 1883, leaving a large and valuable real estate, and leaving a widow and five children. The plaintiff and her sister Mary and"the defendant were three of the children. The defendant commenced a partition action against his mother and sister and the plaintiff; and Mary, his sister, and the mother of all the children, left their interests to be looked after by the defendant. He selected his clerk to appear for them. At the sale the defendant bought in the property for $462,250 less than it was worth. The purchase was made by defendant acting for the heirs, and after the purchase was made he requested the plaintiff and his sister Mary to consent that he, the defendant, might take title and that they should receive from him their just share of the actual value of said property. The defendant, by reason of his assurance m respect to the land, took a title and has ever since refused to carry out the agreement with his two sisters. Mary, plaintiff’s sister, is dead, and has by will duly proven given all her estate to the plaintiff, real and personal. After her death the defendant agreed to account to the plaintiff for her share in the actual value of the property in her own right and in that of her deceased sister. The defendant is the administrator of his deceased mother and the complaint alleges that the defendant agreed with her, when the property was bid in, that he would allow her a gross sum in lieu of dower estimated on the real value of the property. The plaintiff asks to recover her share of this right of dower of her mother. Assuming the facts stated to be true, the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment that the defendant account to her for the rents and profits of two-fifths of the real estate and that the defendant be decreed to sell the land over or that he hold two-fifths as trustee for the plaintiff. She is also entitled on the face of the complaint to a judgment for her share of her mother’s dower right against the defendant, who is alleged to be the administrator of his mother. It does not appear that the plaintiff's right in the realty affects the other children and her claim on her mother’s account is individual and not joint and she may maintain a separate action for her share.

The order overruling defendant’s demurrer to the complaint is,, therefore, affirmed, with costs.

Dykman, J., concurs; Pratt, J., not sitting.  