Hershey v. Robson

121 N.Y.S. 167
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 N.Y.S. 167 (Hershey v. Robson) 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
Hershey v. Robson, 121 N.Y.S. 167 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

FOOTE, J.

The plaintiff brings this action against the executor ' of the last will and testament of Joseph Hershey and against his heirs at law and the devisees and legatees named in his will. As to the defendants other than the executor of Joseph» Hershey, the only allegation in the complaint is that they have or claim to have some interest in or lien upon the lands which are the subject of the action, which interest, if any, is alleged to have accrued subsequent to plaintiff’s title.

The plaintiff claims to have received from Joseph Hershey, who was her uncle, on or about December 15, 1899, a deed of the lands involved in this action, which consist of a brick store building in the village of Rushville, in Yates county. It was intended as a gift of these lands to her, subject to a life estate in Joseph Hershey, the grantor, which was reserved in the deed. The property was then, and has ever since been, occupied by a tenant, who during his life paid the rent to Joseph Hershey. This deed was never recorded, and the plaintiff claims that she was requested by Joseph Hershey not to record it, or to disclose the fact that the deed had been made. The complaint alleges, in substance, that on or about the 1st day of November, 1900, the plaintiff loaned this deed to said Hershey at his request, to enable said Hershey to obtain certain information and data to be used by him in preparation of another deed conveying a strip of adjoining lands ' [169]*169to the plaintiff, and that said deed was never returned to plaintiff, but remained in possession of said Joseph Hershey until his death on the-3d day of September, 1907. It is further alleged that upon his death and the probate of his will shortly thereafter said premises came under the control and management of the defendant Robson as executor of his will. It is also alleged that after the death of Joseph Hershey careful search of his papers failed to discover this deed, and that the same was lost or destroyed while in his possession; that plaintiff has-demanded that the tenant upon said premises should attorn to her, which he has refused to do; that the plaintiff has also demanded of the defendant Robson as executor an accounting of the rents and income since the death of Joseph Hershey, which has been refused;, and that the defendants, other .than said executor, are all the heirs at law, next of kin, and legatees of said Hershey. One of said defendants is alleged to reside in the state of Michigan and another in the-state of Nebraska. The residence of the other defendants is not alleged and did hot appear upon the trial. Eleven of the defendants, have not appeared in the action.

Joseph Hershey, by his will, which was made on the 18th day of October, 1906, disposed of certain articles of personal property, and gave several small money legacies to certain of the defendants, who are for the most part nephews and nieces, and by the tenth clause of his will he directed all the rest, residue, and remainder of his property and estate, of whatsoever nature or kind, to be divided into ten equal parts or shares, and for the purpose of division and distribution he authorized and directed his executor, either at public or private sale,, to selly transfer, convey, and dispose of all the lands, tenements, and real property of which he died seised or possessed, or of which his. executor may be or become seised or possessed or in any manner entitled to, at such time or times and in such manner and in such shares, or parcels as to said executor shall seem best, to convert the same into money, and upon such sale to execute and deliver all necessary deeds and conveyances. He then directed to whom said ten shares, after-being converted into money, should be given, being his nephews and nieces and their descendants, all of whom are defendants. The will created no trusts and vested no title to any of his real estate in his ekecutor, and did not appoint his executor a testamentary trustee. The will does not contemplate that the executor should hold any of the real estate, or that he should delay the administration of the estate longer than was reasonably necessary to convert the real estate into money for division. It appeared upon the trial that the executor has had no possession of this real estate, that the tenant in possession has refused to pay rent either to the executor or to the plaintiff, and tnat the only relations the executor has had to this particular piece of real estate is the payment of one or two items of taxes and insurance.

Upon the trial the plaintiff established by several witnesses the existence of the alleged lost deed. She proved by two witnesses that the deed was in her possession in the fall or winter of 1899. The deed was read by them, and one of them is able to give sufficient of its contents to identify it as a deed of this particular property. He identifies [170]*170the signature as that of Joseph Hershey, with whose handwriting he was familiar. He remembers that there was a seal opposite the signature, that the consideration was $1, and that the deed had been made only a few days previously. He did not recognize the handwriting in the body of the deed, remembers it had revenue stamps affixed, and the signature of some person to the certificate of acknowledgment, which he thinks was Mr. Pulver, a justice of the peace, but of this he is not certain. The deed was seen by another witness, Charles Hershey, one of the defendants, in possession of Joseph Hershey about two years before his death. Joseph Hershey had sent for him to come to the house to help him find some paper, and in looking over Mr. Hershey’s papers he discovered this deed, and .Joseph Hershey told him that he had borrowed it of the plaintiff to get the boundary of the property to add a piece of land that he had bought in the rear, and said he had borrowed it of the plaintiff and had neglected to attend to the business. He read the deed through, remembers that it stated a consideration of $1 and described this brick block, thinks the date was in 1898, that it reserved the use of the property to Joseph Hershey for his lifetime, that there was a seal on it, and that it was acknowledged, was part writing and part printed. He did not know the handwriting, but thinks the body of the deed was not in Hershey’s handwriting, and that it was signed by him, and he knew his signature. He does not remember the name of the officer taking the acknowledgment, but thinks it was Pulver. The plaintiff proved by four other witnesses declarations to them by Joseph Hershey in his lifetime, each on a separate occasion, that he had deeded this property to the plaintiff. One of these witnesses was a tenant of the property. The last declaration to this effect was made three or four weeks before his death.

I regard this testimony as sufficient to establish the fact that Joseph Hershey did, near the close of the year 1899, execute and deliver to the plaintiff a deed of the lands in question, intended as a gift, and reserving to himself the use of the property during his life; that this deed was sufficient to and did vest in the plaintiff title to this property subject to the grantor’s life estate; that the deed was acknowledged, but who the person was who took the acknowledgment, or whether he was an officer empowered by law to take acknowledgments, does not sufficiently appear. But the deed was sufficient as between the parties to pass the title, if not acknowledged. Wood v. Chapin, 13 N. Y. 509, 67 Am. Dec. 62. The deed was not recorded by the plaintiff, because the grantor requested that it should not be recorded.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Estate of Schildkraut v. Commissioner
1965 T.C. Memo. 239 (U.S. Tax Court, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 N.Y.S. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hershey-v-robson-nysupct-1910.