In Re the Accounting of Brown

169 N.E. 612, 252 N.Y. 366, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 633
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 612 (In Re the Accounting of Brown) 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
In Re the Accounting of Brown, 169 N.E. 612, 252 N.Y. 366, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 633 (N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

Crane, J. J.

Romaine Brown, of Yonkers, N. Y., died on November 5, 1924, ninety-one years of age. Until within a few weeks of his death he was actively engaged in the real estate business in New York city and Westchester county, conducting it with a will and determination, according to his own plans and ideas. In the buying and selling of real estate, wherein his fortune of over $3,000,000 had been made, he used methods peculiar to himself. He took and carried title in dummy corporations or in the name of his clerks, and had an aversion to the keeping of books. His bookkeeper posted such information as he could get from Mr. Brown, who was rather a reticent man on his business affairs. An account was kept with each piece of property; cost, expense, income, all being entered under the heading of the piece of property to which they related. J. Romaine Brown had an office on Forty-third street, New York, which was also the office, if he ever had one, for the dummy corporations through which he did his real estate business. Robert J. Murphy was the bookkeeper for Mr. Brown and his personally owned corporations. Three corporations are mentioned as the creatures of Mr. Brown, of which he owned all the stock and filled all the offices, except so far as necessary to have his representatives comply with legal forms. These three corporations were the Nod-A-Way Company, the Nathan Realty Corporation and Brown Circle. Mr. Brown also held in his own name two pieces known as the Rockwood street property and the MacCombs road property.

Elliott L. Brown is a son of J. Romaine Brown. He was in business with his father. During the times herein mentioned Elliott Brown was married, had two children, and lived in Yonkers about a mile away from his father. *372 Although giving his entire. time and attention to his father’s business, he appears, to have received a very meager income in proportion to his father’s wealth, and to have been dependent on the good will and bounty of the old gentleman. Mr. Prime, the father’s confidential lawyer and adviser, had frequently spoken to him about Elliott, urging him to give him more money — at least an income suitable for his position — and reminding the father of his good fortune in having such a worthy and dutiful boy. Whether it be that age. was working mental revaluations, or the friendly suggestions revealed the injustice under which Elliott had been patiently, laboring, the father in 1922, two and one-half years before his death, made up his mind to give certain property to his son. This was declared to various people, including Mr. Prime and Mr. Murphy. But his intention was not revealed solely in the spoken word. He carried out his intention as to certain stock and, moneys, and also as to the Mac-Combs road property and the Bockwood street property.

Let us examine first the MacCombs road property. On June 2, 1922, this property stood .in the name of J. Romaine Brown. On that date he, apparently in his own hand, signed-and executed the following:

June 2, 1922
This is to certify that the property known as vacant lots Concourse & Bockwood St. deeded to Nod-A-Way Company is property of Elliott L. Brown. • Any taxes or assessments to be paid by me or out of Estate. Also the improved property on MacCombs Road is to be conveyed to Nod-A-Way Co. and held-by said company subject to a mortgage of $8,000 and it is to belong to Elliott L. Brown. •- “ (Sgd.) J. ROMAINE BROWN
“ Witness
Annie E. Brown.”

Annie E. Brown was the mother of Elliott.

In 1923 Mr. Brown signed and executed a further paper reading as follows:

*373 1923
This is to certify that I have given to my son Elliott L. Brown all my right title and interest in that certain property known as Rockwood St. property in Block 2836 and Lots 21-22, 26 & 27 on North side of -Rockwood Street and west of Grand Concourse, Borough of Bronx and any right, title or interest in old Fifth Ave. or Concourse or any interest in any adjoining streets, and I am to pay all Taxes, assessments or Tax Sales with interest after 1923. Said property stands in the name of Nod-AWay Co., Inc., and I direct the property to be made over to him at any time he requests.
“ J. ROMAINE BROWN,
“ President of Nodr-A-Way Co., Inc.
P. S.
I have made this statement at many times but for fear that there may be some doubt or dispute I have put it in my own hand. . -
“ 1923 (sgd.) J. ROMAINE BROWN.”

As before,stated, at the time of these declarations, the MacCombs property stood in the name of J. Romaine Brown. That he intended his son to have these properties is not at all questioned. Undue influence, fraud or any other taint has never been suggested. The father knew what he was about, but like so many other people in this world, he had formed his own ideas and notions, which to others seemed peculiar. Individuality is either the mark of genius or the reverse. Mediocrity finds safety in standardization. Brown might have made a deed at once to his son. He did not do it. Both father and son had carried on business by holding real property in the name of others — individuals or corporations.

On April 3, 1924, J. Romaine Brown conveyed-the-property to Nod-A-Way Co.— one of the dummies — of which he was president and sole stockholder. Of course the company must have, taken it, charged with the *374 knowledge which its president, board of directors and stockholders had, that the conveyance was subject to the trust declared by the grantor in writing in favor of his son. The corporation took it, knowing that the son owned the property and that the conveyance to it was for the purpose of holding the property for the son. These papers, written and signed by J. Romaine Brown, were found after his death in the possession of his son Elliott. Expression and facts are cramped when the person knowing the circumstances is prevented from telling them by section 347 of the Civil Practice Act. There is evidence, however, from which it may reasonably be found that these papers were delivered to Elliott at the time of execution. In the first place, J. Romaine Brown wrote them out in his own hand, one in 1922 and the other in 1923, and he did it to make known to others his intention, and to accomplish his previously declared purpose. In the paper of 1923 he said, I have made this statement many times.” Mr. Murphy and the attorney Prime state that Mr. Brown told them that he had given these pieces of real property to his son Elliott.' To others he made the statement of having made gifts to his son without specifying the nature thereof. Delivery may be proved by admissions that the property belongs to another. (Porter v. Gardner, [4th Dept.] 60 Hun, 571; Govin v. de Miranda, 140 N. Y. 474; Miller v. Silverman, 247 N. Y. 447.)

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 612, 252 N.Y. 366, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-brown-ny-1930.