Boyd v. Boyd

26 Misc. 679, 56 N.Y.S. 760
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 679 (Boyd v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. Boyd, 26 Misc. 679, 56 N.Y.S. 760 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Mattice, J.

In 1872 plaintiff became the owner and entered into possession of certain real estate. He has remained in possession ever since. In the same year the United States recovered a judgment against him in an action in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York. May 18, 1874, the United States marshal sold the real estate by virtue of an execution issued upon such judgment, and the premises were bid in by the marshal.

In June, 1874, one Samuel Boyd recovered a judgment against this plaintiff in an action in the late Court of Common Pleas. Samuel Boyd was a nephew of plaintiff and had for many years resided with him, and continued to so reside until his death in 1883.

On the last day of the fifteen months in which the holder of a subsequent judgment could redeem, the plaintiff redeemed the premises with his own money, but in the name of Samuel Boyd, and by virtue of Samuel’s judgment, but did not take a certificate of redemption. At the time of such redemption it was understood between the plaintiff and Samuel Boyd that the redemption was for the benefit of the plaintiff.

As before stated, Samuel Boyd continued to live in the family of plaintiff until his death about eight years later. Hothing further was done until about ten years after Samuel’s death, and in 1893 when the defendant David Boyd was appointed his administrator. Shortly after his appointment as administrator, he procured an order from the said Circuit Court upon notice to the marshal, but without notice to the plaintiff, requiring the marshal to execute and deliver to the administrator a certificate of redemption and a deed.

After receiving such certificate and deed the administrator in-' stituted summary proceedings in the Second District Court of the city of Hew York, to recover possession of the premises under section 2232 of the Code, upon the ground that the plaintiff held over and continued in possession after the premises had been sold by virtue of the execution, issued upon the judgment obtained as aforesaid by the United States, and after title thereto had been [681]*681perfected under such sale, and after due notice to quit had been given.

The plaintiff, although duly served, did not answer in that proceeding and a final order was duly made awarding to the petitioner, the administrator David Boyd, the possession of the premises. Before the dispossess warrant was issued a stay thereof was effected under section 2254 by the defendant (this plaintiff paying the costs of the special proceeding and dehveiring to the clerk of the court an affidavit to the effect that he claimed possession by virtue of a .right or title acquired after such sale. He also delivered the undertaking required by the section.

While the dispossess proceedings were pending the plaintiff commenced an action in the late Superior Court of the city of Hew York, against the defendant David Boyd, as administrator, and one Malcolm Campbell, the attorney who acted for the plaintiff when the property was redeemed from the sale in 1874, to restrain the summary proceedings, and to compel Campbell to deliver to plaintiff an assignment of the certificate of redemption alleged to have been executed by Samuel Boyd in his lifetime to the plaintiff, but wrongfully withheld by Campbell, and also to compel the defendant David Boyd to assign the certificate and deed obtained from the marshal, pursuant to the said order of the Circuit Court in 1893, and that he be compelled to execute and deliver to plaintiff a deed of the premises. The complaint contained the averments sufficient and proper to obtain such relief. The defendants interposed answers denying the material averments upon which the plaintiff’s right to maintain the action rested. The issues Avere thereafter tried and a judgment duly rendered on the 11th day of January, 1894, dismissing the complaints on the merits.

The defendant David Boyd then, and within six months after the warrant was stayed in the summary proceedings by delivering the affidaAdt and undertaking as aforesaid, commenced ait action in ejectment in the late Court of Common Pleas against the plaintiff to recover possession of the premises. After the issues Avere joined in that action by the service of an answer by this plaintiff, in which he alleged, as legal and equitable defenses, the same facts which he has averred in his complaint herein, the plaintiff commenced this action on the equity side of the court, to restrain the further prosecution of the ejectment action and to establish his equitable title. A temporary injunction order was granted herein staying proceedings in the ejectment action until the determination of this action.

[682]*682The defendants interpose certain denials and plead the final order in summary proceedings in the District Court as a bar to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action. They also plead the judgment in the Superior Oourt action as a former adjudication and bar, and the pendency of the ejectment action as a bar.

The defendants in addition plead the Statute of Limitations, the Statute of Frauds and the Statute of Uses and Trusts.

The amendment in 1893 to section 2244 of the Oode permits the person to whom the precept is directed in summary proceedings to set up equitable as well as legal defenses. This amendment materially enlarged the power of the District Court and authorized it to consider equitable defenses. The amendment did not malee the District Court a court of equity, or confer upon it the power to grant affirmative, equitable relief, but it did enable such court to pass upon equitable defenses to the extent of defeating a recovery by the petitioner.

In every common-law action the defendant may interpose as many legal and equitable defenses as he has. § 507, Code Civ. Pro. Equitable defenses may be urged as a defense in actions at law, for the purpose of defeating a recovery by the plaintiff, but the consideration and determination of such defenses by a court of law do not make it a court of equity.

Conceding, therefore, that this plaintiff was entitled to shield himself and his right to the possession of the premises in that summary proceeding by the interposition of equitable defenses, yet he was-not bound to do so.

The final order in summary proceedings to recover possession of lands in a case of this kind is not necessarily conclusive upon the person holding over, as to any fact, except the regularity and validity of the sale, for the reason that the Code (§ 2254) gives the person holding over, not only the choice of two remedies, but gives him the right to avail himself of both remedies. It is not in theory unlike an action in ejectment where two trials may be had on payment of the costs of the first trial.

The person holding over, where the petitioner institutes summary proceedings claiming title perfected by virtue of a sale under execution, may appear and interpose his legal and equitable defenses, or he may lie by and permit the final order to be made against him.

In either case the Code permits him, after the final order is made and before the warrant to dispossess is issued, to pay the costs [683]

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Related

Pelgram v. Ehrenzweig
58 Misc. 195 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)
Boyd v. Boyd
53 A.D. 152 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 679, 56 N.Y.S. 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-boyd-nysupct-1899.