199 A.D. 688 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
On June 26, 1905, Amelia Hines, the mother of the plaintiff Peter Hines and of the defendant Christian Hines, executed, acknowledged and delivered to her son, the defendant Christian, a full covenant warranty deed conveying to him certain.
On March 10, 1911, the said Amelia Hines died, leaving a last will and testament dated November 28, 1904, in and by which, after providing for a legacy of $100 to a third son, Arnold, she devised all the residue of her estate to her sons Peter, the plaintiff, and Christian, the defendant, in equal shares.
On August 20, 1920, fifteen years after the date of the deed and nearly nine years after the death of his mother, the plaintiff Peter began this action against his brother Christian and Celene, the wife of Christian, alleging that the deed of 1905 was given by his mother as security for money due Christian upon certain promissory notes held by him, upon an oral agreement between the mother and her son that he was to hold the property in trust, collecting the rents and profits thereof, out of which he was to pay taxes and assessments and all charges for “ up-keep,” and to pay any surplus to his mother, but that in the event of the sale of the property he should reimburse himself for the money due him upon the notes, paying over any surplus of the proceeds of sale to his mother. Plaintiff alleges that thereafter, in 1915, Christian borrowed money on bond and mortgage on the property; that in 1919 he sold part of the premises, and that prior to the commencement of the action the alleged purpose of the deed in 1905 had been completed, and that Christian had reimbursed himself for the indebtedness to secure which the deed was given. Plaintiff avers that he is the owner of and entitled to the immediate possession of one-half of the premises, title to which remains in defendant Christian subject to the dower right of defendant Celene, the wife of Christian. He alleges demand for a conveyance and an accounting, and refusal by Christian, and prays for judgment declaring that the deed of 1905 was a mortgage, that an accounting be had, that it be decreed that plaintiff Peter and defendant Christian are each seized of one-half of the premises, and that a partition and sale be had. The defendant Christian answered denying the allegations in the complaint.
The witness thereupon testified that her mother-in-law said in her presence that she had signed the house to Christian to protect him, but that the deed was not to go on record for a certain time, until she sold other property owned by her, and then, if she did not pay him moneys due him on notes held by him, the deed was to go on record to protect him; if he sold the property he should take what belonged to him and what was left was to be divided between Christian and Peter, the husband of the witness. Subsequently the same witness, Minnie Hines, testified over like objection, ruling and exception, that on two occasions she accompanied her mother-in-law to the tax office to pay taxes on the property.
The plaintiff Peter Hines, called as a witness in his own behalf, was asked to relate conversations between his mother, his brother the defendant and himself, at which conversations the wife of the plaintiff was said to have been present. Objection was made under section 829 of the Code, which was overruled by the learned trial justice, to which defendants duly excepted, and the witness related the conversation substantially as testified to by his wife, the preceding witness.
Later in his testimony the plaintiff was asked by his counsel concerning the sale of the Lafayette avenue property by his mother in her lifetime, and over like objection to his competency to testify under section 829 of the Code, which was overruled and exception taken, he testified that his mother received the proceeds of sale of the Lafayette avenue property, that “ she deposited it in the bank or paid off the debts to my brother as security, whatever was to be done. Q. Did she pay off the debt to you out of that money? A. Yes, sir.”
Upon this evidence the Special Term found that the conversations took place as testified to by plaintiff and his wife Minnie, and that the deed to defendant Christian, absolute o-n its face, was simply given as security for the outstanding indebtedness; decreed the deed to be a mortgage; that plaintiff Peter was seized in fee simple and entitled to one-half of that portion of the premises title to which remained in defendant Christian “ subject to the inchoate right of dbwer of his wife Minnie Hines.” The court also decreed that defendant Christian was seized of the remaining one-half of the property subject to the dower right of his wife, the defendant Celene, and directed partition and sale of the property and an accounting by defendant Christian.
The appellant insists that the learned trial justice erred in admitting the testimony of the witness Minnie Hines as to the conversations between the deceased mother-in-law and plaintiff and defendant over defendant’s objection that such testimony was barred by section 829 of the Code. He cites Matter of Eno (196 App. Div. 131), where Mr. Justice Page, writing for this court in the First Department, said (at p. 156): “ Edith Eno, the wife of Henry Lane Eno, was allowed over the proponents’ objection and exception to testify to a conversation at a luncheon in Amos F. Eno’s house in which said Eno participated, and to testify to statements then made by Amos F. Eno. The objection made was that the witness was incompetent to testify to personal transactions with the deceased by reason of the inhibition of section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Her husband, Henry Lane Eno, was a nephew and one of the heirs-at-law of Amos F. Eno. If the contestants were successful in this proceeding and the probate of the will refused, her husband would take, in case of intestacy or under the will offered for probate by the contestants, a very large interest in the testator’s realty and she would have an inchoate dower interest in the land thus acquired. It is well settled that an inchoate right of dower in lands is a subsisting and valuable interest.’ (Simar v. Canaday, 53 N. Y. 298, 304.) The witness had an interest
The cases cited seem to dispose of respondent’s contention that, because the conversations testified to were between deceased and her two sons, or, as respondent asserts, between the two sons in presence of the deceased, the mother participating in the conversations, the transaction was not a personal transaction between the witness Minnie Hines and the deceased person. Plaintiff set out to prove an agreement between the deceased mother and his brother, the defendant, by which the deed to the latter, absolute upon its face, was simply a mortgage to secure an existing debt. And the witness was allowed^ to testify to the statements of the mother to her two sons in support of plaintiff’s contention. I think this was clearly inadmissible. The same reasoning applies to the admission of the testimony by plaintiff’s wife as to her journey to the tax office with deceased. And the trial court permitted the plaintiff, examined as a witness in his own behalf, to testify to the declarations made by his deceased mother at the conversations testified to by his wife.
I think the admission of this incompetent evidence compels the reversal of the judgment.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.
Blackmab, P. J., Rich, Kelbt and Young, JJ., concur.
Interlocutory judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.