Hutchins v. . Hutchins

98 N.Y. 56, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 579
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 98 N.Y. 56 (Hutchins v. . Hutchins) 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
Hutchins v. . Hutchins, 98 N.Y. 56, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 579 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Sapallo, J.

This was an action of ejectment to recover possession of certain lands which had been conveyed by the defendant by warranty deed, in fee, to Phineas Hutchins, since deceased, the husband of the plaintiff, and which were devised by him to the plaintiff in fee.

The plaintiff’s title is specially set forth in the complaint.

The answer of the defendant averred, in substance, that he *62 was, at the time of the commencement of the action, the equitable owner, in fee-simple, of the premises described in the complaint, and that the deed to Phineas Hutchins was not intended to be a conveyance of the land, but a mortgage in trust to secure $800, and was given under an express agreement between the defendant' and Phineas Hutchins, that the title in fee-simple should remain in the defendant, and that said Phineas, his heirs or assigns, should never ask payment of any part of said amount, and would release and- re-convey said land at any time, on the election of the defendant, and the answer demanded judgment that said instrument be discharged of record.1

The parties went to trial on the issue thus framed. It ap-. peared in evidence that the land had been conveyed to the defendant by Mary Jane Weeks, by deed dated April 1, 1819, in consideration of $1500, of which $600 was paid in cash and $900 was secured by the bond of the defendant, and a mortgage on the property conveyed. That the defendant afterward by a warranty deed, dated March 11, 1880, and expressing a consideration of $1391, conveyed the same premises to Phineas Hutchins in fee. This deed contained no condition or defeasance.

It further appeared in evidence that $400 of the cash payment of $600 had been furnished by Phineas, and that about April, 1880, Phineas paid to Mrs. Weeks the principal and interest then due upon her bond and mortgage, amounting to $968. As they bore date April 1, 1819, this payment must have been made more than a month after the conveyance from, the defendant to Phineas..

Oral evidence was admitted, under exception, of declarations of Phineas to the effect, some of them, that he was going to assist defendant, who was his brother, in paying for the place, to make him a home as long as he lived; others that defendant had bought the place for $1500 ; that there was $900 back on it and he, Phineas, wanted to pay up the mortgage and take a deed of the place, and that whenever defendant should pay the $900, he, Phineas, was' to deed him the place back; *63 that he hoped defendant would never pay the $900, because he was afraid he would sell it and go wild on it, and he wanted it to be kept as a home for defendant, and if he did not pay up the $900, defendant should have the place as long as he lived. These conversations appear to have taken place before Phineas acquired the title from defendant. Another witness testified to a conversation with Phineas, which took place after Phineas had received the deed, in which Phineas stated that he had taken a deed and paid the mortgage, and that he thought it best that the defendant should stay on the place; that it would make him a home, and if he could not pay for it, it was just as well; that he, Phineas, calculated to make a home for defendant. The defendant was not present at any of these conversations.

It is very questionable whether, under the answer, evidence of an oral agreement that the deed should operate as a mortgage was admissible. Where a deed is given as security, merely, for an indebtedness of the grantor to the grantee, that fact may be proved by oral evidence, but that is an exception to the general rule that the terms of a deed cannot be changed, by oral evidence. It has never been held that a deed can be so far contradicted by parol as to show that it was not intended to operate at all, or that it was the intention or agreement of the parties that the grantee should acquire no rights whatever under it, or that he should re-convey to the grantor on his request without any consideration. Yet this is in effect the purport of the answer. It acknowledged no indebtedness. It used the words that the deed was intended as a mortgage in trust to secure $800, not stating that that sum was due to any one, but this was accompanied with the averment that the agreement under which it was given, was that no part of this sum should ever be demanded, and that the grantee should re-convey to the grantor whenever requested. The averments taken together amount to a defense that the deed was in trust for the benefit of the grantor, or upon an agreement that the grantee should re-convey on request, not stating whether this agree *64 ment was or was not in writing, and the defendant avers that he is the equitable owner in fee. .

It may be, that under this answer a written covenant to the. effect set forth might have been proved; but an oral agreement to that effect would have been clearly inadmissible, and evidence of an agreement that the grantee should re-convey on payment of an indebtedness would havp been a flat contradiction of the answer, and therefore not admissible under it, the averment being that the property was to be re-conveyed on request, without any payment, and that no. part of the $800 was to be demanded.

This objection, however, was-not taken at the trial and consequently the plaintiff is not entitled to the benefit of it here. But as, under the issues as framed, a verdict and judgment for the defendant might perhaps be deemed conclusive in his favor in case the plaintiff should ever attempt to enforce the deed even as a mortgage, it is proper that full consideration should be given to the exceptions which were taken, so that, if sustained, the parties may go to a new trial under amended pleadings and a just result be attained.

The evidence of declarations made by Phineas before he acquired title to the property, as to what he intended or wanted to do when he should acquire it, and his motive in acquiring it, were, we think, inadmissible as against the plaintiff. It is only where the party making the declarations has, at the time of making them, the title to the property, that such declarations bind his successor in interest. We are not referred to any authority holding that declarations made before or after that time have that effect. An actual agreement between him and the party from whom he afterward obtained title might be effectual, but no such agreement was shown. A declaration to a stranger is mere heresay.

The declaration of Phineas after he had taken the deed from defendant, that he calculated to make a home for defendant, and that if he could not pay for it, it was just as well, was not excepted to.

But there was another item of evidence which was excepted *65 to and which we think was improperly admitted. The defendant was allowed to prove under objection, that Phineas Hutch-ins was supposed to be worth $15,000, while he testified that he himself was not a man of property. The evidence as to the wealth of Phineas was clearly irrelevant and improper, and cannot be said to have been harmless. “Hlegal evidence that would have a tendency to excite the passions, arouse the prejudices, awaken the sympathies or warp or influence the judgment of the jurors in any degree, cannot be considered harmless ” (Anderson v. R., W. & O. R. R. Co., 54 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.Y. 56, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchins-v-hutchins-ny-1885.