Downey v. Owen

98 A.D. 411, 90 N.Y.S. 280
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 98 A.D. 411 (Downey v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downey v. Owen, 98 A.D. 411, 90 N.Y.S. 280 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Williams, J.:

The judgment should be reversed as to the appellant and defendant Owen, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.

The action was in equity to set aside the transfer of moneys and mortgages made by the deceased, Robert Drew, to the defendant William E. Owen, and to recover the moneys and mortgages for the benefit of the estate. It was alleged that the transfers were obtained from the deceased while he was incompetent and by fraud and undue influence. The defendant Cordelia B. Hester, or Drew, was made a party, and it was alleged that she conspired with the defendant Owen to keep the moneys and mortgages away from the plaintiffs and the persons lawfully entitled to the estate of the deceased; that she had, by fraud and undue influence, procured the deceased to make a will under which she was the executrix and chief beneficiary; had procured the same to be admitted to probate in the State of Kentucky, and herself to be appointed executrix, and that the moneys and mortgages were liable to come into her [414]*414hands and to be removed by her from this State. She answered in the case alleging the will, the probate thereof in Kentucky, her appointment as executrix, and that the appointment of the plaintiffs as administrators was without jurisdiction, and asking that the complaint be dismissed.

Prior to or during the trial, however, an arrangement was made between the plaintiffs and Cordelia B. by which they were to make common cause against Owen, and they have since worked together pursuant to that arrangement, with the result that the trial court has found the will in favor of Cordelia B. a valid one, the deceased being competent to make the same; that he was a resident of Kentucky when he died, and the probate of the will in Kentucky was valid, and still has ordered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs herein for the recovery of the moneys and mortgages in controversy. If the transfer of this property to Owen was invalid, and the will in favor of Cordelia was valid and was properly probated in Kentucky, then this property passed under that will subject to any debts owing by deceased in this State. The foreign executrix could not sue for them here, but she could be appointed ancillary executrix here under section 2695 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and then could maintain any action in this State necessary to protect the estate she represented in Kentucky. Very likely the appointment of the plaintiffs as administrators could not be attacked collaterally in this action, and the court had power, notwithstanding its finding as to the will, to continue the action and grant the relief it did.

It would, however, have been more equitable it seems to me to have dismissed the complaint and left the executrix to take her own proceedings against Owen rather than award the relief to parties who were found to be really without any interest in the controversy.

Deceased resided with his first wife for many years on a farm in Newstead, Erie county, N. Y. They had two children, George H. Drew and Alice M. Downey. They removed to Middleport in 1874. George H. was then in Indiana and Alice M. was married and lived in Middleport. Deceased lived with his first wife at Middleport until about 1879. He was engaged in buying horses for the New York market in Missouri, Kentucky, Michigan and other southern and western States. He was away from home sometimes six months at once and his family did not always know where he was. He [415]*415owned a farm in Kentucky in 1879. In 1881 he separated from his first wife and commenced living with Cordelia B. as his wife in Kentucky. He claimed to have procured a divorce from this first wife in Indiana and to have married Cordelia B. After that marriage, his first wife brought an action against him in Niagara county for a divorce on the ground of adultery with Cordelia B., and deceased set up adultery on the part of his first wife, committed in 1872 and 1873. A trial was had in 1883 and the jury found both parties guilty of adultery. The first wife arid children also procured deceased to be indicted for bigamy in the State of Indiana by reason of his marriage with Cordelia B. and on his trial therefor he was acquitted. In both of these litigations Alice M. and her husband sided with the first wife and aided her therein. Deceased had given his first wife large sums of money from time to time and expressed himself freely as intending to give her nothing more. Deceased had loaned Alice M. and her husband money and taken a mortgage therefor, and when he attempted to foreclose the mortgage they set up the defense of usury, which succeeded and he lost his money. He expressed himself frequently as intending to give his daughter nothing more. He had also advanced to his son George many thousands of dollars in money and property, and had freely expressed himself as intending to give him nothing more. He was very friendly to Owen, and in the will he- made in 1890 he gave his first wife nothing, his son and daughter one dollar each, Owen and his father about one thousand dollars each, and the remainder of his estate to his second wife, Cordelia B. In 1890 and 1891 he gave his second wife, Cordelia B., several pieces of property, farms, mortgages and large sums of money. About April 15, 1891, he transferred to Owen two mortgages he held against Owen’s father, one for $3,633, and the other for $400, and in consideration thereof Owen gave deceased an agreement to furnish him all things necessary for his comfort and support during his natural life if he should require it at any time, and the court held that the transfer of these mortgages was for a valuable consideration, and deceased was at that time competent. January 31, 1893, deceased wrote from his home in Kentucky to Owen, stating that he was sick and asking Owen to come and take him to his, Owen’s, home in Newstead. Owen accordingly went and brought [416]*416deceased to Newstead where they arrived February 12, 1903. On the next day deceased and Owen went to Judge Miller’s office in Lockport and deceased there got from Miller a $9,000 note which he had for collection. After leaving Miller’s office deceased left Owen, got a bottle of whisky, and when they started for home deceased was intoxicated and when they got to Middleport he was drunk. Owen left him at the hotel there and went home. Deceased remained at the hotel for some time. While there, and on March 3, 1893, he made a transfer again of the $3,633 mortgage and of a $500 mortgage to Owen and Owen gave him another agreement to care for him at his home, if desired, so long as he lived, and at his death to see that he was buried at Shelby Basin, N. Y. at his, decedent’s; expense. The agreement was signed by both deceased and Owen, and it provided that all debts up to the time of the death should be canceled between them. March 4,1893, deceased transferred to his second wife, Cordelia B., a note of $6,000 and three mortgages amounting to about $14,000, in all $20,000. After remaining at the Middleport hotel several weeks the deceased went to Owen’s house where he stayed for a short time. Then he returned to the hotel and remained a short time and then returned to Owen’s house and remained there until he died, on the" 29th of April, 1893. About a month before his death, and at Owen’s home, deceased gave Owen certificates of deposit, drafts, United States bonds, and checks for deposits in savings banks, and money, amounting in all to about $17,500. At the time of his death deceased was seventy-six years old, and his two children were forty to fifty years of age. TTis first wife died in 1897.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 A.D. 411, 90 N.Y.S. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downey-v-owen-nyappdiv-1904.