16 N.Y.S. 721 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
On the 8th day of February, 1867, Stephen Eggleston, the defendant’s testator, executed and delivered to the plaintiff, Finton, a full covenant deed of three parcels of land in the town of Barrington, Yates county. One of these parcels contained 8 acres, 3 roods, and 31 rods, and is the lot about which this contention arises. After the delivery of the deed the plaintiff entered upon the eight-acre lot and cut and removed therefrom timber. One Samuel Thayer, claiming a life-tenancy in the lot, commenced an action in a justice’s court for damages for cutting and removing the timber. Finton interposed a ¡ilea of title to the premises, and the action was thereupon transferred to the supreme court, was tried, and resulted in a judgment of this court against Finton, adjudicating that Anna Maria Thayer was at the time of her death the owner in fee of the premises; that Samuel Thayer, as tenant by curtesy, was entitled to the possession thereof; and that the deed from Eggleston to Finton of the eight acres of land conveyed no title to Finton. An appeal was taken by Finton to the general term of the' supreme court from said judgment. That court reversed the judgment of the trial court, (37 Hun, 639, mem.,) and thereupon Thayer appealed to the court of appeals. That court reversed the judgment of the general term, and affirmed that of the trial court, (15 N. E. Rep. 615, 108 N. Y. 394,) thus establishing that the plaintiff’s grantor, Eggleston, did not have title to the eight-acre lot, and had no right to convey the same to the plaintiff, and judgment was recovered against the plaintiff for costs, which he paid, and thereupon presented to the defendant as executor, etc., a claim against the estate of Stephen Eggleston for the value of the eight acres of land, and for the costs and expenses of the
We think the special term correctly held that the cause of action accrued when it was adjudicated that the deed conveyed no title to the premises, and that the statute had not run against the claim. The judgment -was, prima facie evidence that the covenants in the deed to Finton were broken without proof of notice to the testator, Eggleston, of the pendency of action against Finton. Taylor v. Barnes, 69 N. Y. 433. The referee correctly decided that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of the land, witli interest. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff, however, if he sought to make the defendant liable for his costs and expenses in his efforts to defend his title, to prove that a timely notice of the commencement and pendency of the action against him was given to his grantor, with a request to him to assume the defense thereof. The appellant contends that the plaintiff failed to make proof of the service of such notice. Evidence was given upon the trial of the admissions of the grantor of notice to him of the pendency of the action of Thayer v. Finton. Without the evidence of Finton as to the service of the notices (which will be considered hereafter) the case was left in great doubt as to when the notice was served, at what stage of the litigation it was given, and also as to the purport of the notice. The plaintiff, George W. Finton, was called as a witness in his own behalf, and was permitted to give evidence that he caused to be prepared duplicate notices of Exhibits 7 and 8, printed in the case. They are formal notices to the deceased of the pendency of the action, and calling upon him to defend the same. That he went with the notices, at the time they bear date, to the residence of Stephen Eggleston, deceased, upon two occasions,-—first, with the duplicates of Exhibit 7, and afterwards with duplicates of Exhibit 8,—and that on neither occasion did he bring away with him the duplicate of the exhibit. This evidence of the plaintiff was objected to by the defendant on the ground that it was not competent evidence, under section 829 of the Code. The objection was overruled, and the defendant duly excepted, and the exhibits were offered and received in evidence. The witness Fred. Crosby testified that he accompanied Finton to the residence of the deceased on the occasion of the service of the last notice —Exhibit 8—in August, 1884, and that Finton delivered to Eggleston a paper, and stated to him that he was going to appeal the suit, and there was a notice for him; that Finton’s counsel had advised him to appeal, and he was going to do so. This witness had no knowledge of the contents of the paper served. The only evidence tending to prove the service of the first paper—Exhibit 7—was that given by the plaintiff. To entitle the plaintiff to recover his costs and disbursements it was incumbent upon him to establish that his grantor had notice of the action brought against him, and that he was requested to defend his title. This notice should have been served in time, so that the grantor could have control of the action if he so desired. A notice served after the action was pending in the court of appeals was undoubtedly too late. Eggleston .was under no obligations to assume the de