This is an appeal from a judgment of the Special Term adjudging plaintiff to be the owner of an undivided one-half of premises 683 East Two Hundred and Thirty-sixth street, and decreeing that defendant Hattie E. Rodgers execute and deliver to plaintiff a quitclaim deed therefor. The complaint alleges that prior to the 17th of November, 1904, Fred A. Rodgers and the plaintiff agreed to purchase the premises in question and erect a building thereon with the understanding that while the title was to be taken in the name of Fred A. Rodgers and his mother, Sarah A. Smith, the latter was to hold the title to one-half of the property in question in trust for the.plaintiff. It is also alleged that the plaintiff was to contribute one-half of the purchase price and Fred
The answer is a general denial, with the affirmative defense that the alleged agreement was within the Statute of'Frauds. The learned court has found substantially all the allegations "of the complaint to be true, to wit, the agreement between Rodgers and the plaintiff to buy the property and erect a
The witness then testifies that he further told the defendant of his conversation with her mother, in which she agreed to make a will, devising a one-half interest in the real property to the plaintiff. In short, the plaintiff’s case, in which he endeavors to establish his interest in one-half of this property, and to explain the reason why the conveyance was made to Mrs. Smith, is made up mostly of conversations testified to by this witness with Mrs. Smith and her son, Rodgers, both of whom are 'dead, and of conversations with the defendant, who says she never had such conversations with the witness.
In short, as against numerous checks showing that Mrs. Smith and Rodgers paid the carrying charges of the house, we have only the statement of the plaintiff that he paid one-half thereof. It would have been a simple matter for him to get a transcript of his account from his bank, showing that he had drawn checks on the dates in question for an amount equal to one-half of the .taxes or other charges, but he made no attempt to support his oral testimony by any documentary evidence of this kind. I, therefore, think that the plaintiff failed to show satisfactorily that he had paid the charges referred to.
On the other hand, the defendant explains why she executed the deed of one-half the property to her mother. She states that her brother was about to- be married, and that she was keeping company at the time, and her mother thought that she was going to be married, and that was the reason why her mother wanted her to reconvey the one-half interest to her, and it was for that reason that she made the conveyance to her mother. It seems to me that the plaintiff’s case rests upon the most unsubstantial foundation, and that this defendant should not be divested of this title, except upon evidence that is clear and convincing. Furthermore, the plaintiff seeks to recover upon the ground that the conveyance to Mrs. Smith was made in trust for his benefit to be held by Mrs.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Page, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs. Order to be settled on notice.
