We have no difficulty in adopting the finding of the court at special term that the deed from the plaintiff to her husband, bearing date January 13, 1885, was not delivered until June 28, 1889. The testimony that/both parties gave before the-referee in supplementary proceedings is much more reliable than that given under the pressure of the situation at the time this-action was tried, and is much more consistent with reason, and the mode in which their business was done. Before the referee,, both testified that the deed was not delivered in 1885, and the plaintiff gave her reasons for retaining it. It is not at all probable that the statement of both was misunderstood, or inaccurately taken down; and it can hardly be supposed that they both deliberately, and without reason, then testified falsely, and now, for the first time, tell the truth, as to the transaction. If the deed was delivered in 1889, it was not a void conveyance. The disability which existed in 1885 had been removed by chapter 537, Laws-1887, and the conveyance operated between herself and her husband in the same manner that it would between herself and one-not related to her. It does not depend for its validity upon the-ratification of the agreement to convey made in 1885, or upon any ratification whatever, but it is in itself a new and executed contract, sufficient in form and manner of execution to convey real estate, and surely it is a matter of no importance when it was drawn up or executed. It was delivered in 1889, at a time when such an instrument was operative between them, and hence it cannot be set aside as void. It is claimed by the plaintiff’s counsel' that, notwithstanding the act of 1887, the disability against a married woman’s contracting with her husband still continued.. It may be that such statute did not enlarge the power of a wife to make with her husband an executory contract to convey, bnt the question here is not whether her contract to convey could be enforced in 1889, but whether the conveyance which she then made-was a void one. Certainly, at that date, all the disabilities that formerly rendered such a conveyance void had been removed, and therefore the title to her premises had been lawfully transferred to her husband, and he was in a position to lawfully convey or mortgage the same.
Reynolds v. City National Bank
24 N.Y.S. 1134 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
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