Fisher v. . Hall

41 N.Y. 416
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 41 N.Y. 416 (Fisher v. . Hall) 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
Fisher v. . Hall, 41 N.Y. 416 (N.Y. 1869).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The deed from Leonard Fisher, to his son, George Fisher, was dated on the 19th day of September, 1822, and from that time until the month of September, 1835, when Leonard Fisher died, it appears to have remained in his possession, for it was found among his papers after his decease. If the evidence of George Fisher, taken upon the trial, was to be credited, and that, under the circumstances, was for the referee to decide, he knew nothing of the deed until December, 1840, when he procured it from a trunk containing his father’s papers, previously deposited by the executors of his father’s estate, in the office of their counsel. The deed contained an attestation clause, which was sub's’, scribed by two witnesses, stating that it was sealed and delivered in their presence. But no evidence was given, or probably could be given, as the grantor and both the witnesses were dead before the trial, showing what actually did transpire when the deed was executed, beyond that contained in the proof made by one of the witnesses before the commis *420 sioner, at the instance of George Fisher, after he had obtained possession of the deed. By the oath of this witness, which was taken on that occasion, it appeared, that Leonard Fisher, the grantor, executed the deed, and acknowledged that he had executed it. Nothing more than that was stated by this witness to have taken place at that time, except the fact that the became a subscribing witness to the deed. No declaration was stated to have been made by the grantor showing that he intended the instrument should then take effect as his deed, or that any formal delivery was made of it to any per- ¡ son for the use or benefit of his absent son, who was the ¡grantee named in it. This witness was produced for the purpose of pro-ring that the deed had been legally executed by the grantor; and it may therefore be presumed that he stated all that he was able to disclose on that subject when he was before the commissioner for that purpose.

It was alleged in the complaint that the deed was executed by Leonard Fisher. And this, it was insisted by the defendant’s counsel, could be relied upon as conceding a legal delivery of the instrument. Such may be assumed to be the ordinary legal signification of this term, but it was not what was intended by them, when they were used in the complaint; for they were immediately followed by the qualifying and restricting averment, that the deed never was delivered by the grantor, or any one in his behalf, to George Fisher, but that it remained in the possession of Leonard Fisher until his decease, and was afterward found among his papers, and taken possession of by George Fisher, who was one of the executors. Instead of affirming, the complaint negatives the idea of a delivery of the deed, unless these facts themselves legally support the conclusion sought to be derived from them.

Under this state of the pleadings and the evidence, the referee found that the deed had been subscribed and sealed by Leonard Fisher; that the witnesses attested it, under the clause stating that it had been sealed and delivered in their presence; that the grantee was not then present, and remained *421 ignorant of the existence of the deed until long after the death of his father, and that the latter, during the period of thirteen years intervening between the date of the deed and his own decease, continually remained in the possession of the premises, and in the receipt of the rents and profits to his own use. By these facts the referee must have intended to be understood as finding that the deed was not in fact delivered, although he has failed to say so in so many words; for he afterward follows them with his legal conclusions, one of which was, that the deed never took effect for want of delivery. This was indispensable to the support of the conclusion he arrived at, and the statement just referred to indicates it to have been his purpose to find that as a fact.

The facts thus found by the referee, as well as those alleged in the complaint, are insufficient to constitute a delivery of this deed. It is not necessary that the gran tee,, or his agent \ or servant, should be present at the execution, in order to j have such a delivery of the instrument made as will give it i operative vitality and effect. But it is necessary that it f should be placed within the power of some other person for t the grantee’s use, or that the grantor shall unequivocally indi cate it to be his intention that the instrument shall take effect as a conveyance of the property, in order to have it produce I that result. The mere subscribing and sealing, accompanied with the ordinary attestation of those acts by the witnesses, which is all that there is any reason for supposing was done in the present instance, followed by the grantor keeping the deed in his own custody, and his continued possession of the premises, are not sufficient to constitute a legal delivery of a sealed instrument. Several old authorities in equity were cited upon the argument for the purpose of showing the rule to be different from this statement of it. And it must be confessed that they appeared .to maintain that result; but they are evidently so directly opposite to 'che entire current of modern authority, both in the courts of this and of the other States, as well as of the United States, as to require them to be repudiated by this court. A rule of law by which *422 a voluntary deed, executed by the grantor, afterward retained by him during his life- in his own exclusive possession and control, never during that time made known to the grantee, and never delivered to any one for him, or declared by ,the grantor to be intended as a present operative conveyance, could be permitted to take effect as a transmission of the title, is so inconsistent with every substantial right of property, as to deserve no toleration whatever from any intelligent court either of law or equity.

It was not sanctioned by anything required by the decision of Doe v. Knight (12 Eng. C. L., 351; 5 B. & C., 671), for there the mortgage in controversy was made pursuant to an understanding on the part of the mortgagee that the debt due to him was to be secured by the mortgagor, and it was first declared by him to be his act and deed and afterward actually delivered to his sister for the mortgagee. The case was tried before the jury, and disposed of by the court upon the point whether even that was .sufficient to constitute an effectual legal delivery; and it was held that it was, which was all that the case really decided. The case of Souverlye v. Arden (1 John. Ch., 240), was equally as pointed in this respect in its circumstances; and the language of the chancellor, it will be found upon examination, was not designed to extend beyond them in his decision of the case. (Id. 255, 6.) In Ruslin v. Shield (11 Georgia, 636), it was held that the attestation clause reciting that the deed was delivered, was not of itself sufficient to establish a delivery; and it was afterward held by the same court that there was no delivery of a deed, which the grantor concealed from the grantee, and held, not in subordination to him, but independent of his will, and with the intention that it should not go into his custody. (Rutledge v. Montgomery,

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.Y. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-hall-ny-1869.