38 A.D. 174 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
■ The only question presented below or here is whether the complaint states one or three causes of action — if the latter, then the Special Term was right in requiring that they should be separately stated and numbered. (Code Civ. Proc. § 483.)
The complaint avers the marriage of Anne Maria Hunt with the defendant Byram L. Winters on the 25th of September, 1894, and that thereafter in the same year, and on the eighteenth of October, she made her will, giving the bulk of her property to him; that on the 20th of October, 1896, she conveyed to him all her real estate, and that subsequent to the marriage she also passed to him, by a bill of sale, the chief part of her personal property. The complaint further alleges that Anne M. Hunt was an aged woman, of about seventy years, in poor.health and of unsound mind, and was very rich; that the defendant Winters was a young lawyer, about thirty-five years old, and that “ the said Byram L. Winters, before and. at the time of his said marriage with the said Anne Maria Hunt, and before and at the time of the execution of the said will and the said deed and the said contract or bill of sale of the said personal property of his wife, knew of her enfeebled physical and mental condition, and that she was susceptible or liable to be easily influenced and deceived, and knowing the large amount of property owned by her, and coiitriving and intending, by taking advantage of her weakened physical infirmities and credulity, to get from her all of her property, induced ■or persuaded her to marry him, and then, as her counselor and legal adviser, by fraud and undue influence, and knowing her to be of unsound mind,” procured from her all her property by three separate instruments, the will, the deed and the'bill of sale obtained at different times, and which, in the' prayer for relief, the plaintiff separately asks shall be set aside and held to be void.
To the circumstance of asking for separate relief as to each of these instruments may be attributed the error into which the learned judge at Special Term fell in construing the complaint as alleging three causes of action, when, in fact, there was but one alleged, namely, that by fraud and undue influence the defendant had
The precise question here involved was presented to this court in Thomas v. Thomas (9 App. Div. 487), where a demurrer was interposed to a complaint in an action brought to set aside a deed, and a bill of sale executed in furtherance of an alleged design to obtain property by fraud and undue influence, and it was therein held that such a complaint set forth but a single cause of action. (See, also, Zoccolo v. Stern, 25 Misc. Rep. 246.)
The order appealed from should be re,versed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Patterson, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.