Herrmann v. Jorgenson

189 N.E. 449, 263 N.Y. 348, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1282
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 189 N.E. 449 (Herrmann v. Jorgenson) 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
Herrmann v. Jorgenson, 189 N.E. 449, 263 N.Y. 348, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1282 (N.Y. 1934).

Opinion

Crane, J.

The judgment appealed from, entered in this case on the 28th day of November, 1932, declared a deed dated May 26, 1916, made by the late Frederick F. Brueck to the defendants Kathryne Brueck and Chrystine H. Brueck, now Kathryne Jorgenson and Chrystine H, Bender, invalid and insufficient to transfer to them the property described therein. The facts are not disputed and can as well be taken from the briefs of counsel as from the findings of the court. On this appeal from the unanimous affirmance by the Appellate Division we must *351 determine whether these facts sustain the conclusion embodied in the judgment as well as pass upon an important ruling of law.

On May 26, 1916, Frederick F. Brueck owned an undivided one-half interest in premises at Forty-eighth street and Seventh avenue, New York city. On that date he executed and duly acknowledged two deeds, each in terms conveying an undivided one-quarter interest in the premises. One of these deeds conveyed a quarter interest to his wife, Sarah M. Brueck, which need not be mentioned again. The other deed conveyed, in consideration of natural love and affection, and for the sum of one dollar, an undivided one-quarter interest in the premises to the grantor’s sisters, then Kathryne Brueck and Chrystine H. Brueck. They are the defendants in this action.

On the next day, May 27th, a petition in bankruptcy was filed by Brueck & Wilson Co., the corporation through which Mr. Brueck was operating and of which he was an officer. While we do not see the materiality of this fact, we mention it as the trial justice stated that the only inference that can be deduced by the execution of the deed a day prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy against the company is that the deceased was either advised or himself believed that it was essential in order to protect the interest which he had in the real estate, but just what his reason was is not disclosed, and as he died without stating it, his reason can only be inferred from the facts established in the case.” Assuming this purpose to be the true one, in order that the respondent may have the benefit of every fact as well as every inference, we pass on to the other matters.

The deed in question was retained by Frederick F. Brueck, the grantor, from the date of its execution until September 15, 1919, when it was given by him to one of the grantees, his sister Chrystine H. Brueck, now Mrs. Bender. She testified on the trial, without objection, *352 that she had received the deed the day before she took out her safe deposit box for the purpose of putting the deed in it. She had seen the deed the night previous at Mr. Brueck’s home. The trial justice found as a fact that the deed was given by Frederick F. Brueck to Chrystine H. Brueck on the 15th day of September, 1919; that it had been retained up until then by the grantor from the date of its execution. The deed remained in Miss Brueck’s safe deposit box at the Garfield Safe Deposit Company from September 16, 1919, until March 16, 1920, on which date Chrystine Brueck gave the grantor access thereto. Thereafter the deed was placed in other safe deposit boxes to which Frederick Brueck and his sisters had access.

Mr. Frederick F. Brueck died March 19, 1930, and the day after the deed in question was placed on record. Up to the date of his death Mr. Brueck collected the rents and was charged with his pro rata share of the expenses of maintaining the property. He executed a lease and entered into an agreement extending a mortgage on the property in both of which he referred to himself as the owner of the premises. There is no doubt that he received the benefits, whatever they were, from this property during his lifetime. That he waited three years before delivering the deed to his sister indicates that the transfer could not have been made in view of the bankruptcy of his corporation in 1916. Irrespective of the operation of law, this act would seem to evidence an intention to transfer the property to his sisters at the time of delivery or, perhaps, an intent to secure the passing of title at the time of his death.

As there is no claim of fraud or the breach of any trust, we find the law to be that the delivery of this duly executed deed to Miss Brueck on the" 15th of September, 1919, passed title, and that she and her sister thereupon became the owners of the one-quarter interest of the property conveyed thereby. Accordingly, Frederick Brueck, the *353 grantor, if he were alive, would not be permitted to explain the purpose of the delivery, or that the deed was not intended to be delivered, or that it was a conditional delivery, or on an oral agreement or arrangement whereby title was not to vest until the death of the grantor. The plaintiff as devisee stands in the same position.

In Hamlin v. Hamlin (192 N. Y. 164, 168) we find the facts somewhat similar to those of the present case. There the plaintiff sought to have canceled certain deeds executed by her to her husband. She claimed that the deeds had never been delivered with the intention of passing title until the full value of the property was paid to her. She had executed two deeds by which she conveyed both parcels to him, and at the time of his death they were found in his safe deposit box although unrecorded. The contention upon the trial was that the delivery of the deeds was for temporary purposes or conditional and was not to operate to divest her of ownership. This court said; “ If we should give full effect to the plaintiff’s claim, it would be to hold the delivery by her of the deeds to have been conditional and not absolute; but that would be violative of the settled rule in this state that a delivery cannot be made to the grantee conditionally. Any oral condition accompanying the delivery, in such case, would be repugnant to the terms of the deed and parol evidence to prove that there was such a condition attached to the delivery is inadmissible. * * * It was not a case where the deeds were not to pass out of the possession of the grantor, until certain conditions were fulfilled. These deeds had passed out of the plaintiff’s possession and into that of the grantee, by the deliberate act of the former, and no oral condition, at the time, will be admitted to contradict the import of the written instruments.”

These words might just as well have been written for this case. The grantor executed a deed to his sisters. After keeping it in his possession for three years he *354 deliberately delivered it to one of them who kept it in her sole possession for six months. It had not left her possession up to the time of the grantor’s death. For other cases sustaining this law, see Saltzsieder v. Saltzsieder (219 N. Y. 523); Ten Eyck v. Whitbeck (156 N. Y. 341); Blewitt v. Boorum (142 N. Y. 357); Williams v. Williams (142 N. Y. 156); Hutchins v. Hutchins (98 N. Y. 56); Wallace v. Berdell (97 N. Y. 13); Braman v. Bingham (26 N. Y. 483); Worrall v. Munn (5 N. Y. 229).

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Bluebook (online)
189 N.E. 449, 263 N.Y. 348, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrmann-v-jorgenson-ny-1934.