61 N.Y.S. 521 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought for the purpose of setting aside a deed to certain real estate, and to permit the plaintiff to enforce a judgment against the property; it being alleged that the transfer of the real estate from Mary Bonnell to her daughter, Florence Bonnell, was fraudulent, and that it was made for the purpose of delaying and defeating the payment of the judgment held by the plaintiff against the defendant Mary Bonnell. Upon the trial of the action the - learned court at special term decided in favor of the defendants, the plaintiff filing exceptions, and appeal now comes to this court.
For some years prior to the beginning of this action the firm of Hornbeck & Bonnell had been borrowing money of the plaintiff on promissory notes, which had been renewed from time to time. Thomas J. Bonnell was the surviving partner, and the renewal of some of these notes was made by Mary Bonnell, payable to the order of Thomas J. Bonnell. On the 17th day of May, 1897, the firm in the meantime having become embarrassed, the plaintiff was the holder of two of the notes in question, which were past due, and an action was begun against Mary Bonnell and Thomas J. Bonnell to recover judgment upon these notes. An answer was served in behalf of the defendant Mary Bonnell, which was subsequently struck out as being a sham, and frivolous; and the plaintiff took judgment, which was duly entered of record, and an execution was issued and returned unsatisfied. In the meantime, and before the judgment was entered, the defendant Mary Bonnell executed a deed of the premises involved in this action, in which her daughter, Florence Bonnell, was named as the grantee, and a consideration of $4,006 was expressed. This deed was prepared pursuant to directions given by Clarence H. Bonnell, a son of Mary Bonnell, and a brother of Florence, and was given into his possession by the grantor, to be recorded in the office of the county clerk. The deed was duly recorded, but it appears from the record that Florence Bonnell, the grantee, was kept.in ignorance of the fact until the 30th day of June, 1897, when she was about to be examined in supplementary proceedings.
It is urged on this appeal that no title to the real estate described in the complaint passed from Mary Bonnell to Florence M. Bonnell prior to the recovering and docketing of the plaintiff’s judgment,. June 22, 1897, because there was no delivery of the deed to the grantee, nor acceptance of the deed by her. The court below found as a fact that the deed was duly executed and filed for record on
*524 “A deed may be delivered to a stranger, for the grantee named therein, without any special authority from the grantee to receive it for him. And, if the grantee assents to it afterwards, the deed is valid from the time of the original delivery.”
And the court adds:
“It is upon this principle that it has frequently been held that a delivery of a deed to the proper recording officer to be recorded, if intended to vest the title immediately or absolutely in the grantee, either as a trustee or otherwise, is a valid delivery, if not afterwards dissented from by the grantee.”
The only other material question in the case is the consideration. It is in evidence, and nowhere directly disputed, that, some years prior to Florence M. Bonnell coming of age, Mary Bonnell was with her mother, in New Jersey, during the latter’s last illness; that a package containing $4,000 in money was placed in the hands of Mary Bonnell in trust for her daughter when she should come of age; that Mary Bonnell brought this money home; that it was loaned by her to her husband, Thomas J. Bonnell, and by the latter dissipated in his business; that on the daughter, Florence M. Bonnell, reaching the age of 21 years, in 1892, the mother, being unable to pay over the trust fund, gave her note to the daughter, payable in one month from date, with interest; that this note remained unpaid up to the time of the executing of the deed in controversy; and that the consideration named in the deed was intended to protect the interest of the daughter in this trust fund represented by the note of Mary Bonnell. This story, lacking perhaps in some of the elements of probability, is supported by the evidence of three witnesses, and, as the court below aptly says, “is not expressly contradicted in any way, or weakened by cross-examination; nor, beyond the incidents of the relationship of the parties, and their interest in the controversy, is their testimony or general credibility impeached.” Under these circumstances, remembering that fraud is never to be presumed, but must be proven by the party alleging it, it would be an abuse of the appellate jurisdiction of this court to interfere with the judgment of the court below. There is no evidence of fraud in the record, as we find it; and the real estate in question having been properly transferred, for a good consideration, and the equity of redemption being no greater than the debt owed to the defendant Florence M. Bonnell, the plaintiff has no superior equities, and the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.