Center v. . Weed

34 N.E. 294, 138 N.Y. 532, 53 N.Y. St. Rep. 88, 93 Sickels 532, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 867
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 294 (Center v. . Weed) 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
Center v. . Weed, 34 N.E. 294, 138 N.Y. 532, 53 N.Y. St. Rep. 88, 93 Sickels 532, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 867 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Maynard, J.

The substantial relief which the plaintiff has secured in this action consists of a decree adjudging that she is the equitable owner of an undivided one-third of the real property described in the complaint, of which the defendant has the legal title, and directing that he convey to her the share to which she is thus entitled. The parties are children of Charles IT. Weed, who died intestate in June, 1889, seized of three parcels of real estate, and leaving, besides these parties, a widow, two daughters and a son surviving him. At the time of his death his widow was the owner of a house and lot upon which the family resided, and known as the homestead property. The daughters were all married and lived away from home, but in or near the same village. The other son was an invalid and unmarried, and died in February, 189Q, intestate. The defendant was then forty-four years of age and unmarried, and had not lived at home since he was sixteen, but had frequently visited his parents, and was at the homestead when his father died, and remained there after his death caring for the mother and the invalid brother. Mrs. Weed seems to have had a mother’s love and affection for all her children, and her relations with them all were friendly and cordial, but she was especially fond of the defendant ; and it is evident that she confided in him fully, and that he had the entire control and management of her affairs after her husband’s death. She died March 28,1890, also intestate. One of the pieces of real property owned by the father and known as the eight-acre parcel was in the possession of Mrs. Caroline Putnam, one of the daughters, who had occupied it since 1865, and who claimed that she had gone into *536 possession under an agreement with her father, which had been performed on her part, that if she would live upon the property and improve it and make her home there he would convey it to her and it should be her property. Subsequently, the father mortgaged the premises to the plaintiff’s husband, which mortgage was outstanding when he died, and shortly after his death an action was brought to foreclose it, to which all his heirs at law were made parties defendant. Mrs. Putnam interposed a defense, setting up the agreement with her father and claiming that by virtue of it she was the rightful owner of the property and entitled to a deed free of all incumbrances.

Various attempts were made in the lifetime of the mother to settle this controversy, in which the defendant actively participated. Mrs. Putnam finally proposed that if the other heirs would convey to her their interest in the eight acres, she would pay off the mortgage and convey to them her interest as heir at law in the other pieces of real estate owned by her father. It was shown that these pieces were worth from $5,000 to $6,000, and it has been found that Mrs. Putnam’s lot, after paying off the mortgage, was worth $1,650.

If her proposition had been accepted she would thus have received nearly a full equivalent in value for the exchange which she had made. The plaintiff alone strenuously objected to a settlement on these terms, giving as her principal reason that both Mrs. Putnam and the other sister, Mrs. Gilmore, had received from the father in his lifetime advancements to the amount of several thousands of dollars in excess of what she had received, and that by this arrangement she would not be placed upon an equality with the other heirs. Pending the negotiations the mother died, apparently the owner of the homestead and of personal property of the value of $600, and the plaintiff, as one of her heirs at law, was entitled to an undivided one-fourth of whatever estate she may have left.

Mrs. Putnam’s suit was noticed for trial the following week and the efforts for a compromise were renewed, in which the defendant was a prominent actor. He represented to the *537 plaintiff that she ought now to be willing to accept of the terms proposed, because by reason of the death of Mrs. Weed she would become entitled to a share of her property in addition to that which she had in her father’s estate, or what she would acquire by the transfer from her sister. The plaintiff was still reluctant to consent to a settlement and still claimed that she should receive more in order to render her portion equal to that which the other heirs would receive. Mrs. Putnam then proposed to convey to the plaintiff and defendant and Mrs. Gilmore her interest in the homestead, which they all assumed belonged to the mother when she died, in addition to the two pieces of real estate owned by the father, and the defendant urged the plaintiff to accept of this proposition, and stated to her that if she did, she would have a one-third interest in the homestead and her share of the personal property, and that his mother had not made any will or any disposition of her property that he knew of. The plaintiff then consulted with her attorney, Mr. Wm. E. Hughitt, of Auburn, and intrusted him with the further management of the business. He had a conference with the defendant at the office of his attorney, in which he stated the terms of settlement, as he understood them, to which the defendant assented.

It is manifest that both the plaintiff and her attorney suspected that owing to the confidential relations existing between defendant and his mother she might have made a will in his favor, or conveyed her property to him, and the attorney before leaving Auburn examined the records of the clerk’s office to see if any conveyance from her had been recorded, and found none. Mr. Hughitt stated to the defendant that the plaintiff understood that the mother had made no will or any conveyance of her property, so that her children would take her estate under the law, and the defendant replied, he supposed that was so. Again, while the preparation of the papers was in progress, the attorney, desirous of making sure of this point, went out and found the defendant and said to him, the only uncertainty about the adjustment of the matter, *538 and the only hesitancy he had about advising acceptance of the proposition for settlement, arose out of the possibility of Mrs. Weed’s, having made a will or conveyed the homestead property ; that the plaintiff had no idea that anything of the kind had been done, and that the other sisters knew of nothing of the kind, and the defendant replied : “ Well, if she has done anything of the kind I don’t know it.” Mr. Hughitt then said that under those circumstances he thought it was reasonably safe for him to say so to the plaintiff, and the defendant repeated the assurance he had given. These statements were communicated to the plaintiff tnrough her husband, who was acting for her, and who directed Ur. Hughitt “ to go ahead and finish the papers under those circumstances.” A deed was then drawn from the defendant and plaintiff and Mrs. Gilmore, to Mrs. Putnam, of the eight-acre parcel, and a deed from Mrs.' Putnam to the three, of the two other pieces of real estate belonging to the father and of the homestead property. Defendant was present when the latter deed was drawn, and gave Mr. Hughitt the description of the homestead for insertion in the deed, in which it is also described as the same lands and premises owned and occupied by his mother at the time of her death. The deeds were completed late in the afternoon of April 3d, and given to the plaintiff to procure their execution. They were not executed the next day, because Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 294, 138 N.Y. 532, 53 N.Y. St. Rep. 88, 93 Sickels 532, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/center-v-weed-ny-1893.