6 N.Y.S. 75 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The action was in equity to establish title to certain real estate in the plaintiff, as receiver of the First National Bank of Dansville, under an alleged lost and unrecorded deed from James and Samuel D. Faulkner to the bank, and to have a subsequent recorded deed from James Faulkner, ■of his interest in the same real estate, to the defendant, Hyland, and the record thereof, declared null, void, and of no effect as against the bank and the receiver. Title in the alleged grantors of the bank, at the date of their supposed deed, was admitted; also, in effect, that, but for the alleged deed to the bank, title to an undivided six-tenths of the real estate was in James Faulkner at the date of ids deed to Hyland. It was also conceded, as Hyland himself testifies, that “ when this deed was delivered me I gave Mr. Faulkner no money, nor any obligation of any kind, nor agreement to pay money, nor surrendered any obligation to him. It was simply a voluntary act on his part to secure me for a pre-existing debt.” These admissions, we suppose, limited the material inquiry in this case to the single question whether the alleged prior unrecorded deed was in fact executed and delivered by the supposed grantors to the bank. If so, the subsequent deed by one of the same grantors to the defendant could be of no effect, except by virtue of the recording act; .and, under the admission of the defendant’s evidence quoted above, his deed was not within the benefit of that statute, because, though he were “a purchaser in good faith, ”—that is, without notice of the prior unrecorded deed,— he was not “a purchaser for a valuable consideration.” Proof of that fact •could hardly be more explicit or conclusive than that made by the evidence given by Hyland himself. His whole narrative of the antecedent and immediate circumstances of the transaction fully bears out the statement in which he sums up the character of the transaction itself, in the words, “It was simply a voluntary; act on his [Faulkner’s] part to secure me for a pre-existing debt. ” One who takes a conveyance, either in payment of or as security for a preexisting debt, is not a purchaser for a valuable consideration, within the meaning of the recording act. Weaver v. Barden, 49 N. Y. 286; Cary v. White, 52 N. Y. 138; Webster v. Van Steenbergh, 46 Barb. 211; Westbrook v. Gleason, 79 N. Y. 23, 28; Yowng v. Guy, 87 N. Y. 457, 462. To be such, he must part with value on the faith of the purchase. He must pay the purchase money or some part of it, or give security for its payment, or deliver something of value in consideration of the conveyance; or, if the transaction is by way of payment or security for a pre-existing indebtedness, he must surrender other securities which he holds for the same, or by express agreement extend the time of payment. The rule in this respect, under the recording act, is the •same as under the law-me'rchant in respect to the transfer of negotiable paper. Weaver v. Barden, supra. The transferee of such paper takes it discharged of equities in favor of the maker only when he takes it in good faith and for
The question whether the alleged deed was, in fact, executed and delivered was an issue of fact of which the affirmative was supported by the direct testimony of James Faulkner, one of the alleged grantors, the other being dead. Evidence was also received, under the objection of the defendant, of oral and written declarations of James Faulkner before his deed to Hyland, and when (if the deed to the bank had not already been executed and delivered) he was m possession of the property as owner, to the effect that title to the property was in the bank. All this evidence was substantially uncontradicted. The court is asked to hold that it did not constitute a fair preponderance of the competent and credible evidence in the case, on the ground that James Faulkner's testimony was unworthy of credit, and that his declarations were inadmissible against the defendant, Hyland. On the question of credit, attention is called to the motive of Faulkner to testify falsely,to the character of his testimony, and to his manner in testifying. All these were proper considerations to urge upon the attention of the trial court; and, if the case were one of closely-balanced evidence, might possibly justify the court of review in setting aside the finding of fact; but in this case, as has been said, the evidence in question is substantially uncontradicted, and the considerations urged against its credibility could be more thoroughly appreciated by the court which saw the witness and heard his testimony than by us, who see and hear him only through the imperfect medium of the printed page. The court below gave credit to his testimony, and the case is not one in which we feel justified in coming to an opposite conclusion.
The property in question was the building and lot in Dansville, occupied by the bank from its organization. It was the property of the two brothers, James and Samuel D. Faulkner, to whom the bank paid rent before the date of the alleged conveyance in or before 1876, after which time, as James testifies, the bank received the rent from the other tenants of the building. James Faulkner was cashier of the bank; his father, James, Sr., was president; and his brother, Samuel D., one of the directors. In 1876, the report of the cashier to the comptroller of the currency, attested by James Faulkner, Sr., and Samuel D. Faulkner, as directors, included the banking house among the assets of the bank, and all similar reports made after that date and before the suspension of the bank contained a similar entry. Samuel D. Faulkner died in 1878, and James, Sr., in 1884, after which the present James Faulkner became the president of the bank. Several of the reports and published statements of the character above mentioned were received in evidence, under the objection of the defendant, as were also declarations of James Faulkner made to the bank examiner in 1886 and 1887, before the execution of the deed to Hyland, to the effect that the deed in question had been executed to the bank. The last-mentioned declarations were received only as against the defendant James Faulkner, but we think all the evidence of the three classes mentioned was competent against Hyland, as declarations of a grantor while in possession of the property, before the conveyance to the defendant, and against his (the grantor’s) proprietary interest. Such declarations are held to be admissible against such grantor and all persons claiming under him. Chadwick v. Fonner, 69 N. Y. 404, and the cases cited; Waring v. Warren, 1 Johns. 340, The weight and probative effect of such declarations must, of course, depend
We think there was no error on the trial, in the admission of evidence, to the prejudice of the defendant. The judgment should be affirmed.
Barker, P. J., concurs.