Carr v. . Carr

52 N.Y. 251, 1873 N.Y. LEXIS 246
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 52 N.Y. 251 (Carr v. . Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr v. . Carr, 52 N.Y. 251, 1873 N.Y. LEXIS 246 (N.Y. 1873).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 253 The record in this case is somewhat informal *Page 255 and does not present the questions arising out of the merits of the controversy as they ought to have been presented, to entitle the parties to be heard upon this appeal. But the cause has been tried upon the merits, and the real questions at issue have been ably presented by the respective counsel, and the court is inclined to overlook the informality, and so dispose of this appeal as to obviate the necessity of further litigation.

The trial of the action was commenced with a jury, and after the evidence had been given by the consent of counsel, the jury were made to respond to two questions of fact and dispensed with for all other purposes, and after the verdict upon those questions the cause was decided by the court without further aid from the jury. It was in substance, then, a trial by the court without a jury, and a decision upon the whole evidence with the aid of the finding of the jury upon two questions of fact.

What other facts were found by the court, or what legal effect, if any, was given to the facts found by the jury, or upon what conclusions of law final judgment passed for the defendant, the record does not disclose.

There is no exception to any ruling of law on the final determination of the action by the court, and the record is imperfect in not presenting in proper form and by distinct exceptions the questions of law to be reviewed here.

The exceptions to the refusals to charge as requested by the plaintiff were waived by the subsequent consent to the submission of particular questions to the jury, and that after verdict on such questions "the cause be decided by the court," reserving only the "right to except to the submission of any particular question that should be deemed immaterial or otherwise improper."

The plaintiff did not ask that any other question be submitted, or that the cause be submitted to the jury in any other form. The consent was inconsistent with the prior requests and exceptions, and they were therefore waived. The verdict was not a general verdict for the defendant with *Page 256 special findings upon particular facts, as authorized by section 261 of the Code. Neither was it a special verdict, which the jury, had all the issues been submitted to them, might in their discretion have found, the action being for the recovery of specific real property. (Id.)

A special verdict is one by which all the facts of the case are put on the record, and the law is submitted to the judges. (Bouvier's Institutes, 3, 264.) As a special verdict it is defective, as not finding all the material facts in detail, and cannot be aided by facts appearing elsewhere upon the record. (Langley v. Warner, 3 Comst., 327; Hill v. Covell, 1 id., 522.)

It was not proposed by the court or assented to by counsel that there should be a special finding of the facts, leaving solely to the court the application of the law to the facts, but simply a finding upon two specific questions, leaving every other fact as well as the application of the law to the court.

The two questions submitted were material, and there was evidence tending more or less forcibly to establish each. Upon the one side there was evidence that the plaintiff took the title to the premises as security for his advances and subject to his debt, in trust for the defendant; while the plaintiff claimed that his title was absolute, subject only to such rights and equities as might exist in the successors in interest to Daniel D. Carr under a verbal agreement to sell and convey the premises to him for the amount which he, the plaintiff, had advanced. In other words, the plaintiff, ignoring all equities of the defendant, insisted that the relation between himself and Daniel D. Carr, the husband of the defendant, was that of vendor and vendee, and that there had been a default in the payment of the purchase-money, and therefore the action of ejectment was maintainable. But the jury have found adversely to this claim, and have said that the deed to plaintiff was not taken by him on a parol arrangement for a sale of the premises to Daniel D. Carr on payment of the price paid by plaintiff, and taxes and insurance, and this finding is conclusive on this court as against the plaintiff. *Page 257

Had the jury responded differently to this question, there would have been a serious obstacle to the plaintiff's recovery, in the fact that the vendee of property, in possession under a contract with the assent of the vendor, cannot be ejected until after default in payment; and as no time appears to have been set for the payment, the vendee could only be put in default so as to work a forfeiture by a request to pay. While an action for the money might be brought, and the bringing of the action would be a sufficient demand, it would be at least doubtful whether the vendee could be treated as a trespasser and subjected to an action of ejectment before an actual default by neglecting to pay after a demand.

But passing this, the jury have found, on the only other question submitted to them, that the deed was taken by the plaintiff under a parol arrangement with his brother Daniel D. Carr that the purchase-money, or some portion of it, should be advanced by the plaintiff for the benefit of Daniel D., that the plaintiff should hold the title as security for the repayment to him of the sum advanced and insurance, and that on repayment of such advance the premises should be conveyed to Daniel D., or the defendant, his wife.

In addition to this one fact we must, in the form in which this case is presented, assume that the judge has found every material fact necessary to sustain the judgment, which there was evidence tending to establish and fairly and reasonably justifying a finding that it was proved. (Wright v. Douglass, 3 Seld., 564; Grant v. Morse, 23 N.Y., 323.)

It must be assumed, as proved and found, that Daniel D., Carr had negotiated for and had concluded a treaty for the purchase of the premises from Berry, the original owner, and for his own benefit; that he was able to and did pay a part of the purchase-money; that some or all the residue was advanced by the plaintiff for and at the request of Daniel D., who thereby became a debtor to the plaintiff for the amount thus advanced; and that in pursuance of the agreement made with Daniel D., and in performance of it, Berry conveyed the premises to the plaintiff, thus vesting the legal *Page 258 title in him in consummation of the equitable title which Daniel D. had under his agreement; and that Daniel D. took immediate possession of the premises, and occupied them as his own, making subsequent payments upon the loan of the plaintiff, and reducing the debt to a small amount, if not extinguishing it altogether; that Daniel D. remained in possession for some nine years and until his death, about 1867; during all which time his rights as the owner, subject only to the lien of the plaintiff for his advances, were acknowledged by the plaintiff, who only claimed as absolute owner, and adverse to Daniel D., after the death of the latter. The property has greatly appreciated in value since the purchase. These facts, which are clearly inferable from the evidence, with the fact found by the jury, make the plaintiff a mortgagee. By the transaction a trust was created in the nature of a mortgage for the security of the plaintiff, with right of redemption in Daniel D. Carr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.Y. 251, 1873 N.Y. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-carr-ny-1873.