Dean v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.

23 N.E. 1054, 119 N.Y. 540, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 81, 74 Sickels 540, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1120
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 1054 (Dean v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.) 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
Dean v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co., 23 N.E. 1054, 119 N.Y. 540, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 81, 74 Sickels 540, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1120 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff brought this action for, and recovered a verdict of $2,205 damages against the defendant by reason of the unlawful construction and maintenance, of its railroad structure in front of his premises in West Third street in the city of blew York. The defendant admits that the damages awarded are not excessive, and that there is no reason for disturbing the verdict, providing the plaintiff has shown such title to and possession of the premises as enables him to bring and maintain the action. It is contended by the defendant that, upon the proofs given at the trial, the plaintiff had neither title nor possession, and, therefore, the recovery cannot be upheld.

The plaintiff gave in evidence a conveyance of the property and an assignment of the cause of action to him from his wife, executed and delivered after the suit was commenced, and in fact during the trial. These instruments were properly objected to by the counsel for the defendant, but were admitted by the trial court, and the defendant excepted. The court held, as matter of law, that the papers, in connection with other proofs of title, which will be referred to hereafter, estopped the wife from ever after making any claim to the property or the cause of action, and established title in the plaintiff.

It is quite clear that this proof was not admissible. The action was at law to recover for an injury in the nature of a trespass to plaintiff’s real estate, and his rights could be determined only in accordance with the situation existing when the action was commenced. He must stand or fall with such title and right to recover as he then had, and no other. (Wisner v. Ocumpaugh, 71 N. Y. 113; Prouty v. L. S. & M. S. R. R. Co., 85 id. 272; Hollingsworth v. Flint, 101 U. S. 591.).

Unless there was other conclusive evidence in the case to. establish the plaintiff’s title, the judgment cannot be upheld. *546 The plaintiff produced and put in evidence a deed to him from Isaac C. Deleplain and wife, dated September 6, 1860, and it was shown that from the delivery to him of this deed to the commencement of the action he had received the rents and profits of the premises. If the title conveyed to the plaintiff by this deed has not been divested by the conveyances subsequently made, and which will be presently referred to, then his right to maintain this action would be clear enough, and the deed and assignment from his wife, executed at the trial and above referred to, might be regarded as immaterial. But in order to show title out of the plaintiff, the defendant gave in evidence a deed from the plaintiff to his wife, dated April 28, 1819. Whether this instrument operated to divest the title of the plaintiff under the Deleplain deed of 1860, depends upon the effect to be given to a deed from husband to wife. The disability of husband and wife to convey lands to each other was wholly removed by the passage of chapter 531 of the Laws of 1881, but the question here must be determined with respect to the condition of the law upon this subject as it existed prior to the passage of that statute. It is not necessary now to cite authority in support of the proposition that a deed of lands from the husband to the wife, or from the wife to the husband, was void at common law. By the enactment of the statute just referred to the legislature recognized that rule as then existing. Fourteen years after the passage of the act of 1848 this court held that the common-law disability still continued, notwithstanding the legislation in behalf of married women (White v. Wager, 25 N. Y. 328); and three years later this rule was again reiterated (W inans v. Peebles, 32 N. Y. 423). More recently it was held that under a conveyance of lands to husband and wife jointly, they take, not as tenants in common or as joint tenants, but as tenants by the entirety, and upon the death of either, the survivor takes the whole estate. (Bertles v. Nunan, 92 N. Y. 152.) This result was reached by the aj>plication of the common-law doctrine of the unity of husband and wife, and that conveyances of this character were not affected by *547 the legislation in this state, in regard to the property of married women, and the cases of White v. Wager and Winans v. Peebles (supra) were both cited approvingly, in support of the rule that the common-law disability of husband and wife, growing out of their unity of person, to convey to each other, still existed. This corn’t has quite recently held that the rule of the common law which made the husband liable for the torts of his wife, has not yet been abrogated. (Fi tzgerald v. Quann, 109 N. Y. 441; Mangam v. Peck, 111 id. 401.) The decision in all the cases proceeded upon the ground that statutes changing the common law are to be strictly construed, and the latter will be held to be no further abrogated than the clear import of the language used "in the statute absolutely requires, and hence that the common-law disabilities incident to the relation of husband and wife still exist, except in so far as they have been swept away by express enactments. As there was no statute prior to the year 1887, changing the common law with respect to deeds of land between husband and wife, it follows that the deed from the plaintiff to his wife did not operate to divest his title, unless the consideration was such as to enable a court of equity to uphold it. It is true that conveyances of real estate between husband and wife, though void at law, are sustained in equity when founded upon a valuable or meritorious consideration. (Shepard v. Shepard, 7 Johns. Ch. 57; Umit v. Johnson, 44 N. Y. 27; Tallinger v. Mandeville, 113 id. 432.) This rule, however, requires the party setting up or claiming under the deed, to show such facts and to establish a consideration requiring a court of equity to sustain it. In the cases where equity interferes to sustain a deed between husband and wife, an equitable consideration must be shown, either upon the face of the conveyance itself or by extraneous proof. The defendant did not, in this case, erect any obstacle to the plaintiff’s right of recovery by producing and putting in evidence a deed from the plaintiff to his wife expressing no equitable consideration. To accomplish the defendant’s purpose, it was incumbent upon it to go further and show that the deed was in fact *548 given for such purpose, and upon such consideration as would require a court of equity to sustain it as operative to divest the husband of title. The plaintiff had primia facie shown title in himself through the Deleplain deed of 1860, and his receipt of the rents and profits from that time to the commencement of the action, and it then rested with the defendant to show that the deed to the wife was of such a character, and based upon such a consideration, as to change this title.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 1054, 119 N.Y. 540, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 81, 74 Sickels 540, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-metropolitan-elevated-railway-co-ny-1890.