Hadley v. Clabeau

140 Misc. 2d 994, 532 N.Y.S.2d 221, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 526
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 140 Misc. 2d 994 (Hadley v. Clabeau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hadley v. Clabeau, 140 Misc. 2d 994, 532 N.Y.S.2d 221, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 526 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward M. Horey, J.

In the instant case an attorney was hired for the limited purpose of drawing a deed for the conveyance of a parcel of real property.

[995]*995To assist the attorney with his assigned task the seller furnished the attorney with a hand-drafted sketch of the acreage to be conveyed. On that sketch the eastern boundary of the parcel was shown to be parallel to the west line of the parcel. The east line was also shown as being parallel to a town highway known as Hoxie Road.

The difficulty which has ensued stems from the fact that Hoxie Road runs generally northeasterly and southwesterly and not in a north and south direction as does the west boundary of the parcel. The attorney testified that he consulted a county map and observed that Hoxie Road did not run in a north and south direction. Nonetheless the attorney mistakenly prepared the deed with the eastern line of the parcel running in a north-south direction parallel with the west line of the premises. The attorney concedes his error.

Upon trial of the issues the plaintiff sought to offer proof of the intention of the seller as to the land to be conveyed. Proof was offered that the wife of the seller, to wit, one Iona Benson, had witnessed her husband taking measurements along the existing natural boundaries in the preparation of the sketch which he furnished for the sale to the defendants, Clabeau. Later, as a surviving tenant by the entirety, Mrs. Benson executed a deed of adjacent premises to the plaintiffs, Hadley. Appropriate and timely objections that the testimony of Mrs. Benson violated the provisions of the Dead Man’s Statute (CPLR 4519) were made by the attorney for the defendant. Decision on the objections with the concurrent motion to strike was reserved by the court. The court considers this rule of evidence concerning which debate over its worth and efficacy continues unabated.

Briefs upon the evidentiary point have been submitted. Plaintiff relies heavily upon the case of Matter of Potter (24 AD2d 812, 813 [3d Dept 1965]) wherein that court stated: "We agree with the proponent that she and another witness should have been allowed to testify to transactions and conversations with the decedent which they observed but in which they did not participate.”

On the basis of this decision, plaintiff urges that information gleaned from an "observation” does not fall within the parameters of a "transaction” or a "communication” which are precluded under CPLR 4519.

What constitutes a "transaction” or "communication” under the provisions of the Dead Man’s Statute (CPLR 4519) was set [996]*996forth in detail in the time-honored and continuously quoted case of Holcomb v Holcomb (95 NY 316, 325 [1884]). There the court stated: "Transactions and communications embrace every variety of affairs which can form the subject of negotiation, interviews, or actions between two persons, and include every method by which one person can derive impressions or information from the conduct, condition, or language of another. The statute is a beneficial one and ought not to be limited or narrowed by construction. Although it must appear that the interview or transaction sought to be excluded was a personal one, it need not have been private or confined to the witness and deceased. If they participated, it does not change its character because others were present.” (Emphasis added.)

If as stated by the Court of Appeals in Holcomb v Holcomb (supra) a communication includes every method by which one person can derive impressions or information from the conduct of another, it follows, as night the day, that the information gleaned by Iona Benson from observing her husband walking the fence and tree lines in preparing the sketch was a communication and the witness is incompetent to testify thereto.

This court does not share the opinion that the construction to be given to the Dead Man’s Statute is dependent upon the personal views of the particular presiding Judge or determining court as to strictness and leniency of construction. In Matter of Kelly (238 NY 71 [1924]) Judge Crane writing for the Court of Appeals made an extensive review of the matters of judicial construction of the Dead Man’s Statute. He stated:

"In Griswold v. Hart (205 N. Y. 384) Chief Judge Cullen reviewed * * * the earlier authorities in this state upon this question and determined that since the Holcomb Case (95 N. Y. 316) a much stricter view had been taken regarding the exclusion of the testimony of interested parties than theretofore. While it has been the early rule that a party in interest could testify to conversations between the deceased and a third party which he had overheard and in which he had taken no part, since the Holcomb case, this was no longer the rule and any information received from the deceased or through the deceased from a transaction of any nature could not be testified to by a party in interest. * * *

"Further, he [Judge Cullen] said: 'A personal communication, within the meaning of the section, was well defined by the Supreme Court in Price v. Price (33 Hun, 69, 73), as "any [997]*997one which the surviving party claims to have received directly or indirectly from the deceased person, and which the deceased person if living could contradict or explain. Nor, in our judgment, is the mode of making the communication by the deceased to survivor at all controlling. ” ’ ” (Supra, at 80-81; emphasis added.)

It is well noted that the history and defined proper construction to be given to the Dead Man’s Statute in Matter of Kelly (supra) was concurred in by Chief Judge Hiscock and Judges Cardozo and Pound, giants in the formulation and construction of the laws of this State.

This court concedes that Matter of Potter (24 AD2d 812 [1965], supra) does as the plaintiff urges make an exception to the statute when the information received was an observation in which the witness did not participate, thus making a distinction in the mode of making the communication by the deceased to the survivor.

Although readily comprehended, the Dead Man’s Statute is perhaps the most difficult of all evidentiary rules to apply. That together with the fact that on occasion its rigid application can work injustice and thus beg for leniency or distinction in application has lead to innumerable contradictory decisions both at the trial and appellate court levels. This court does not seek to explain the decision in Matter of Potter (supra) nor attempt to distinguish it. That should be for the court which made the decision.

It is noted, however, that no authority was cited in Matter of Potter (supra) for the proposition that information gleaned by observation was not a communication.

It is submitted that if the evidence in that case were tested under the rules of construction of Holcomb v Holcomb (95 NY 316, supra) and Griswold v Hart (205 NY 384, supra) and Price v Price (33 Hun 69) all as construed in Matter of Kelly (238 NY 71, supra) a different result would have obtained. Until those decisions are reversed or modified, this court proposes to follow them as decisional law binding on this court.

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Bluebook (online)
140 Misc. 2d 994, 532 N.Y.S.2d 221, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-clabeau-nysupct-1988.