2 N.Y.S. 496 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
The plaintiff and the defendant are the sons of Ephraim Wheeler, who died intestate in 1881, the owner of the premises described in the complaint, containing 43 acres. In 1875, the deceased, by an instrument in writing, agreed to sell and convey the said lands to the plaintiff. The premises were incumbered by two mortgages, amounting in the aggregate to $2,034; which the plaintiff agreed to pay and discharge, and save the vendor harmless therefrom. On such payment being made, 30 acres of the entire parcel was to be conveyed to the plaintiff by the warranty deed. As a further consideration, the plaintiff was to pay to his father annually $63, called in the contract “interest money,” on the estimated value of the remaining 13 acres, and also support and maintain his father and mother during their natural lives, and, on the death of the survivor of them, he was to have the title to the last-mentioned parcel. The contract contains some other provisions of minor importance, which it is unnecessary to mention in disposing of the question arising on this appeal. After the contract was executed, and on the 2.1st day of December, 1877, the deceased, with the consent of the plaintiff, borrowed $1,600 for the purpose of paying and discharging the said incumbrances; and, to secure the lender, he executed to him a mortgage on all the premises, and the money was applied in discharging such incumbrances. The contract contained a provision which clearly indicates that funds for the payment of the existing incumbrances might be raised in this manner, and the new debt or obligation should be substituted in place of the original indebtedness, and be paid by the plaintiff. The mother of the plaintiff died prior to the commencement of this action. The deceased left children and grandchildren, other than parties to this suit, all of whom, except the defendant, have executed a conveyance of the premises to the plaintiff; the defendant’s share, as heir at law, being one-eighth of his father’s estate. This action is to compel the defendant to execute a conveyance of his title to the premises to the plaintiff, who claims that he is entitled to the same by the terms of the con- ' tract of sale. The judgment requires the defendant, as one of the heirs at law of the deceased, to execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the plaintiff a conveyance of the premises described in the complaint, and contains no other provision. The loan of $1,600, secured by the mortgage already mentioned, remains unpaid. Before the commencement of this action the mortgagee commenced an action to foreclose the mortgage, and the plaintiff herein was made a defendant therein; and on the 7th day of January, 1885, a judgment was entered in the usual form, and the amount due and unpaid was adjudged to be $1,741.06, and the costs were taxed at $107.28. Ho personal representatives have been appointed to administer the estate of the deceased. Before the commencement of this action, the plaintiff-paid the cost and interest on the decree; and it was conceded on the trial that there was due thereon the sum of $1,772, and that the defendant was the assignee and the owner of the same, by purchase thereof from the mortgagee. The defendant contends that the plaintiff had not performed the agreement on his part, and was not entitled to a deed by the terms and conditions of the contract of sale, and that the incumbrance created by the mortgage last executed remained unpaid, which the plaintiff had promised to pay and discharge as a condition to his right to a deed of the premises, and that the judgment should be reversed for the reason no provision was made for the payment of the decree before or at the time of the delivery of the deed which he is required to execute.
It is not disputed but that at the time the contract was entered into there were two mortgages on the property, both made by Ephraim Wheeler, one for $1,527.62, and the other for $57.24, and that he was personally liable for the debts secured by the mortgages. The contract of sale provided, in
Some other questions remain for examination. The purchase of the decree by the defendant was on the 4th day of August, 1886. The case states, as a fact, that thereafter, and on the 3d day of September, 1886, one John Shepard, on behalf of the plaintiff, tendered to the defendant the sum of $1,772, the amount due on the decree, and demanded on behalf of the plaintiff a transfer of the mortgage or decree to the said Shepard; and the defendant,refused to accept the money, and transfer the mortgage, but said that he was ready and willing to accept the money, and satisfy the mortgage, and the plaintiff declined to pay up the decree without the same was assigned as demanded. The time this aclioh was commenced is not specifically stated; but it is quite certain, from an inspection of the record, that it was before the defendant purchased the decree, as no reference is made to that circumstance, or to the tender either in the complaint or in the answer; but, in the other case, now on appeal, and to the record of which reference has been made, it distinctly appears that this action was commenced before the defendant purchased the decree. If a tender was made after the action was commenced, it did not have the effect of discharging the premises from the mortgage lien, as the same was not in full compliance with the provisions of the Code relative to making tender after action commenced. Sections 731-733. If, in fact, it was made before the action was commenced, then it was of no avail to the plaintiff for any
The trial court made a general finding that the plaintiff had performed the contract of sale in full on his part. If this finding is sustained by competent evidence, except as to the omission to pay the decree, then the decree may be modified so as to cure the error which we have pointed out, and fully protect the rights of the parties. The plaintiff did not pay directly to the deceased the sum of $65 annually, as stipulated in the contract to be paid, upon the performance of which he was entitled to a deed of the 13 acres, after the deatli of his father and mother; but the evidence tended to prove that the plaintiff paid a sum equal to that amount on debts owing by his father at his request, and in lieu of the sum stipulated to be paid annually. Upon the issue whether the plaintiff had fully performed his contract to support his fattier and mother, he was examined as a witness in his own behalf, and testified, in substance, that he did supply them with provisions and clothing and everything they needed up to the time of their death, and furnished them with everything they called for or needed. This evidence was objected to by the defendant on the ground that the plaintiff was an incompetent witness to testify on that subject under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the same was overruled, and the defendant excepted. We think the plaintiff was an incompetent witness on that issue; but we are also of the opinion, in view of the nature of the covenant for support and maintenance, that it was for the defendant to show, in an action between these parties for the enforcement of a contract by the defendant, as one of the heirs at law of the deceased vendor, that the covenant had not been kept; and until the contrary was made to appear it is a fair legal presumption that the same had been performed to the satisfaction of the persons entitled to their support from the plaintiff There is not the least hint in all the case that the plaintiff did not properly care for his father and mother, as it was not necessary for the plaintiff to make any proof on that subject. The reception of his evidence, although erroneous, does not present a sufficient ground for reversing the judgment. The trial judge has not found, nor was he requested to find, that the plaintiff agreed, in any subsequent arrangement between himself and his father, to pay the debts which his father owed the defendant, and which had' passed into a judgment. We have carefully examined all- the evidence, and are clearly of the opinion that it is insufficient to support such a conclusion. The former suit between these parties does not constitute a bar to granting relief in this action, for the reason, by the stipulation made on this trial, the judgment in the former action was to be treated as a judgment of nonsuit only. The judgment should be