Kinney v. . Kinney

116 N.E. 772, 221 N.Y. 133, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 1282
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 N.E. 772 (Kinney v. . Kinney) 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
Kinney v. . Kinney, 116 N.E. 772, 221 N.Y. 133, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 1282 (N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

McLaughlin, J.

This action was brought to set aside a deed of conveyance from the plaintiff to his nephew, the defendant John W. Kinney, the consideration of which was the latter’s agreement to, among other things, properly support and care for the plaintiff during life, and upon his death to pay his funeral expenses. There have been two trials. The first resulted in a judgment setting aside the deed on the ground of the nephew’s failure to perform the agreement. On appeal the same was reversed as against the weight of evidence and a new trial ordered (152 App. Div. 901). The second trial resulted in a judgment dismissing the complaint upon the merits, which, by a divided court, was affirmed, and the plaintiff appeals to this court.

There is no substantial dispute between the parties as to the material facts involved. In 1883 the plaintiff, a veteran of the Civil War, purchased a small farm in Niagara county, N. Y., and thereafter, with his wife, lived upon it until her death, which occurred in May, 1899. They had no children, and the plaintiff, who was then sixty-two years of age, was greatly affected and much depressed by her death. Subsequently, the defendants, who resided in a home of their own in Buffalo, N. Y., went to live with and care for the plaintiff on his farm and they there remained several months. During that time the relations between the parties were very close, and the plaintiff being apparently so well satisfied with *136 the arrangement, suggested that if his nephew would let him live with them, support him for the rest of his life, give him proper clothing, a certain amount of spending money, and provide a proper burial at death, he would give the farm and personal property thereon to him. When the matter was first suggested the nephew was unwilling to enter into such an arrangement. The farm was worth not more than $5,400, and was subject to a mortgage of $1,500. He was employed at the time as a fireman, earning $85 a month. The proposed arrangement, therefore, seemed of doubtful financial advantage to him. However, he finally consented to it and on September 13, 1899, they went to an attorney who prepared a deed of the farm, a bill of sale of the personal property thereon, worth from seven to eight hundred dollars, and an agreement by which, in consideration of the conveyance and transfer, the nephew assumed the payment of the mortgage, agreed to pay the taxes thereafter assessed on the farm, keep the buildings and fences in good repair during plaintiff’s life, and also agreed “that he will board and lodge said party of the first part during his lifetime in his family, upon said premises or elsewhere if his family shall not live thereon, and that he will clothe said first party .during his lifetime according to his habit of living and will furnish said party spending money from time to time as he shall require it during his lifetime, but not to exceed in any one year the sum of one hundred dollars; and that in case of sickness of said party of the first part he will pay the necessary expenses of his sickness and at his death will pay his funeral expenses. ” To insure the faithful performance of its covenants, the agreement on the part of the nephew was made a lien upon the premises, the deed reciting “the performance of which is made a lien and charge on the said premises.” Immediately following the execution of the instruments, the defendant and his wife moved their effects from their home in Buffalo to the plaintiff’s farm, where they all *137 lived together until the following spring, when it seemed best to all of the parties to let the farm on shares and remove therefrom to Buffalo. The personal property upon the farm was thereupon sold, with the consent and active co-operation of the plaintiff, and in May or June of that year they went to Buffalo and took up their residence in the nephew’s home.

As to what subsequently took place between them, the findings are somewhat conflicting, and the appellant is entitled to the benefit of those most favorable to him. ( Whalen v. Stuart, 194 N. Y. 495.) The material facts, however, are clearly set forth, from which it appears that the plaintiff remained with his nephew in Buffalo only a few weeks, when he returned to the farm, and at the request of the nephew, attended to its management. Since that time the farm has continued to be let on shares and the plaintiff, except for a short time between 1907, when he married a second time, and 1909, has continued to live on the farm and manage the same, accounting to his nephew for the proceeds, or the greater part thereof. Prior to the commencement of this action (1910) he had applied practically all of the income from the farm to the payment of the taxes and insurance thereon, and had paid and satisfied in full the principal and interest of the mortgage referred to. While he occasionally visited the defendants, he did not board or lodge with them except for an aggregate of about seventeen weeks during the ten years the agreement had been in force. Meanwhile, the nephew furnished him with only one suit of clothes costing $16, and gave him spending money only to the amount of $20. He has never gone to the plaintiff and offered him spending money, or inquired whether he needed clothing, and on several occasions when plaintiff asked for spending money he put him off with excuses until plaintiff gave up asking for it.

Not only this, but the court found as a fact that the plaintiff “did not always receive kind and con *138 siderate treatment from the defendant John W. Kinney and his family ” on his visits to them, and that his relations with his nephew “have become strained to the point that they do not speak, either of them to the other, so that John W. Kinney himself believes that plaintiff could not now be made reasonably comfortable and happy boarding and lodging in the family of John W. Kinney.”

It is obvious from these facts and others found that the purpose of the conveyance and agreement has not been, and cannot now be carried out. The parties undoubtedly expected, when the agreement was made, to live together on the farm for the rest of plaintiff’s life, the nephew assuming the burden of running it. This is evident from the fact that the nephew moved from Buffalo to the farm immediately after the instruments were executed, though he did not give up his work as a fireman, which occupied approximately one-half of his time. While the nephew was not hound, under the agreement, to remain on the farm, it is quite apparent that the plaintiff was not a welcome inmate of his house after he moved hack to Buffalo, and aside from the plaintiff’s remarriage, their relations now are such that it is not practicable or desirable for the plaintiff to board and lodge with defendants’ family. The plaintiff, instead of having a home provided for bis declining years, as was contemplated when the conveyance and agreement were executed, has managed the farm just as he would have done had he not given it to his nephew; and while the latter has advanced something over $570 for the farm and -to the plaintiff, the proceeds derived from the farm and sale of the personal property have more than repaid him, so that, as the court found, the conveyance of the farm and the transfer of the personal property have been to the financial advantage of the nephew.

Clearly, the plaintiff has not received the consideration to which the agreement entitled him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.E. 772, 221 N.Y. 133, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinney-v-kinney-ny-1917.