Brown v. Thurber

10 Daly 188
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 4, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Daly 188 (Brown v. Thurber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Thurber, 10 Daly 188 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Van Hoesen, J.

This case was carefully tried by the experienced justice who presided at the trial term of the Marine Court, and there are no errors which I have been able to discover in his charge or in his rulings during the trial. He clearly stated to the jury the questions of fact on which they were to pass, and the rules of law applicable to the facts. I can find nothing in the case to justify the assertion of the respondent that questions of law were submitted to the jury for decision. Counsel for both parties felt it to be their duty to present, at the close of the evidence, a long-drawn-out series of prayers for instructions, but the gist of most that was valuable in them is found in the concluding words of Justice Mc-Adah’s charge: “ Let me repeat, that if these ales were to form part of Healy’s stock in trade as a retail dealer, and were to be used or sold by him, as he used and sold other portions of his stock, the plaintiff cannot recover. I cannot make myself understood any plainer than that.”

That was the simple question which the jury was to decide, and which it did decide in favor of the plaintiff, who is now before this court as the appellant. The verdict of the jury has been reviewed by the general term of the Marine Court, and has been declared by that tribunal—whose decision upon the matter is final—not to be against the weight of evidence. The judgment of the trial term was reversed, and a new tzial ordered, not because the verdict was not supported by the evidence, but because of some supposed errors of law found in the case. It is said by the respondent that there was absolutely no evidence to support the verdict, and that upon the [190]*190uncontrovertcd facts the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant. In answer to this, it may be observed that three juries have, at different times, found for the plaintiff, and that the court below, both at special and at general term, has.refused to disturb the verdict as against the weight of evidence. After a careful reading of the evidence, I have been led to the conclusion that there is enough to sustain the verdict, though had the case been submitted to me, I should probably have decided in favor of the defendant. A strong impression has been left upon my mind that the unspoken understanding between Brown and Healy was that Healy might sell the ales as his trade required, and pay for them from time to time, as he retailed them to his customers. But if I should so hold, I should be compelled to reject as unworthy of credit evidence which the jury had a perfect right to believe and to found their verdict upon. It cannot be said that the verdict is wholly unsustained by evidence.

We are then to examine the case in order to ascertain if any errors of law were committed in the court below which required the reversal of the judgment rendered at the trial term. The principal reliance of the respondent appears to be on the point that Mary A. Brown, the plaintiff, could not acquire by. a conveyance directly to her from her husband any title to the subject of this action, or to any other property whatsoever, which a court of law without equity powers could either assist her in establishing, or regard otherwise than as void. Whilst he is compelled to admit that the courts of New York have taken cognizance of actions in which the wife has sued to recover upon a claim assigned to her by her husband without the intervention of a trustee, the counsel for the respondent contends that such actions have been maintained only by courts ¡possessing equity powers, and that a court with common law jurisdiction merely is now, as it was before the changes in our legislation, compelled to pronounce null and void any conveyance made by the husband directly to the wife. The decisions of the court of last resort do not sustain that view of the law. In Kelly v. Campbell (2 Abb. App. Dec. 494), the Oourt of Appeals said: “ A gift by a husband to a wife will be upheld, [191]*191where the rights of creditors are not in question, without the aid of the statutes of 1848, or 1849, or 1860, or 1862.” In Rawson v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co. (48 K. Y. 216), where the wife sued to recover the value of certain property given directly to her by her husband, the court said: “ Prior to the recent legislation in this state in reference to the rights of married women, gifts of personal property from husband to wife would be upheld in equity, though void at common law, and such gifts could be impeached only by creditors. In equity the property would be treated as the wife’s separate estate, and she would be protected in its enjoyment and possession, even against the interference of her husband. This estate, under the statutes of 1848, 1849, 1860 and 1862, if not absolutely converted into a legal estate, is clothed with all the incidents of a legal- estate, and she is the proper person to sue and be sued in reference "thereto.”

In Seymour v. Fellows (77 N. Y. 178), the Court of Appeals, in an action brought by the wife to recover for the wages of her husband, a claim for which had been assigned to her, said : “ The appellant objects that the assignment of the cause of action, having been made directly to the plaintiff by her husband, is void. The rights of creditors are not in question, and we think the court below properly overruled the objection.” In Thompson v. The Commissioners (79 N. Y. 54), where the wife as the grantee of her husband sought to redeem lands from a sale under foreclosure, it was objected that she could not sustain the action because she acquired no title by a conveyance directly from her husband to herself, but the court said : “ Under recent legislation the husband has a right to convey to his wife,” and cited chapter 172 of Laws of 1862, and 76 N. Y. 262. The latest decision of the Court of Appeals, as will be seen from the case last cited, is that the act of 1862 gave the husband the right to convey to his wife, but independently of that decision, the case of Rawson (48 N. Y. 212) is clear and express upon the point that a conveyance from the husband gives to the wife, under the statutes already referred to, if not a legal estate, at least an estate clothed with [192]*192all the incidents of a legal estate, including the right to sue and the liability to be sued.

Whether the conveyance by the husband to the wife gives her a legal estate, or merely an equitable estate with the incidents of a legal estate superadded, the result is the same, for in either event she has the right to sue in a court of law.

It is next objected by the respondent that the claim in suit, which is for the value of ales converted by the defendants, is not one of the claims embraced by the conveyance on which the plaintiff relies. The conveyance transferred to the plaintiff the ales specified therein, certain materials used in brewing, horses, trucks, safes, office furniture, and all book accounts, bills receivable, judgments, claims and demands whatsoever, due or belonging to the grantor.” It is conceded that the first rule of construction is to seek the intention of the parties to the instrument, but it is said that that intention is to be ascertained by applying another rule, that where general words follow particular ones, they must be construed as limited to subjects ejusdem generis. Without saying that that rule is applicable to this instrument, when the question of its construction arises between a grantee and a defendant sued for the conversion of a part of the property alleged to be embraced in the conveyance, it is sufficient to observe that a claim in suit

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Related

Seymour v. . Fellows
77 N.Y. 178 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)
Rawson v. . Pennsylvania Railroad Co.
48 N.Y. 212 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Meeker v. . Wright
76 N.Y. 262 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Daly 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-thurber-nyctcompl-1881.