Mahaney v. . Carr

67 N.E. 903, 175 N.Y. 454, 13 Bedell 454, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1000
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 903 (Mahaney v. . Carr) 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
Mahaney v. . Carr, 67 N.E. 903, 175 N.Y. 454, 13 Bedell 454, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1000 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

This action was in form an action for specific performance and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff which has been unanimously affirmed. There are two questions still open for review in this court, and these questions are, first, whether the findings of fact sustain the judgment, and, second, whether there was error of law committed by the learned trial judge in the rulings and decisions in the course of the trial to which exceptions were taken. The review of the case in this court must, therefore, be confined to those two general questions.

The plaintiff is the granddaughter of one Joseph Carr, who died on the 18th of April, 1898, leaving a will in which he disposed of all of his property. He made some small bequests and then gave the rest, residue and remainder to the defendant, Margaret Carr, his widow by a second marriage. The will was duly proved and the executor took charge of the estate. The deceased during his lifetime conveyed and transferred to his wife certain real estate and personal property by way of gift, but the amount of property that she received under these transfers or under the will does not appear. The plaintiff’s mother was the daughter of Joseph Carr, and she died in the year 1876, when the plaintiff was about five years old. Carr had three other children that survived the plaintiff’s mother, and are still alive. In the year 1891 the plaintiff’s grandmother, Carr’s first wife, died, and subsequently he married the defendant Margaret Carr.

The judgment in this case rests entirely upon the following finding of fact: That the plaintiff is the daughter of James Connelly and that prior to and until about the month of April, *457 1876, the plaintiff lived with her said father as his daughter. That during or about the month of April, 1876, plaintiff’s said father, James Connelly, in behalf of this plaintiff, entered into a contract with Joseph Carr, deceased, the grandfather of this plaintiff, in and by which plaintiff’s said father, James Connelly, surrendered to said Joseph Carr, deceased, all rights in and to the plaintiff as his daughter, and permitted said Joseph Carr, deceased, to adopt the plaintiff as the daughter of said Joseph Carr, deceased, and to take her as his child, take 1ns name, and have the sole benefit of the plaintiff’s society, services and earnings, in consideration for which said Joseph Carr, deceased, agreed with said James Connelly in behalf of the plaintiff that said Joseph Carr, deceased, should give this plaintiff a child’s share of his property upon his death, to wit: a one-fourtli interest in all the real and personal property which said Joseph Carr, deceased, should thereafter acquire.”

It does not appear from the finding that the alleged contract was in writing, and upon the argument in this court the learned counsel for the plaintiff treated it as entirely oral. It must certainly be permissible to look into the record for the history of the transaction and in order to ascertain the true scope and meaning of the finding and then it is very easy to see what took place. The plaintiff’s mother had just died and she was a child five years old, veiy much in need of the care and attention of some relative who had an interest in her future welfare. Her grandfather and grandmother became her natural protectors and assumed towards her the duties of parents. They brought her up and educated her in a manner that was much above their station in life since it appears that both her parents and grandparents were people in very humble circumstances. She became a teacher in the schools and is now married. It is quite likely that her own merits and industry contributed to her success. We are hound to assume that she performed all the duties of a daughter in the household of her grandfather, and at the same time it is quite apparent that she was fortunate in finding so good a home. *458 The finding of fact described a case or a transaction that must occur almost every day, or at least is a very common event in the domestic relations, but the leai’ned courts below have attributed to the facts found legal consequences that are far reaching and of the most momentous importance. It has been held that from the time that the deceased took this child under the arrangement found he became disabled from transferring or disposing of his property, since all such conveyances and transfers, even to his wife, have been held to be null and void as to the plaintiff. It has been held that the grandfather’s will, in which he attempted to dispose of his property for the support and benefit of his widow, is also null and void as to the plaintiff, and generally that the plaintiff by means of this simple transaction, when she "was five years old, secured legal' rights against her grandfather and his property that overreach and override all future conveyances, transfers, gifts or testamentary dispositions of the same by him. From the time that the grandfather took this child into his house his right of future disposition of his property, which all men generally possess, became limited and restricted. These are the conclusions to be deduced from the judgment in this case. And yet no one. has attempted, so far as I can see, to classify the transaction described in the finding among the various methods for the transmission or devolution of property. It certainly is not a testamentary disposition since that must be in writing, executed with all the statutory formalities. It is not a conveyance or transfer in f resentí of any property whatever. If it had the effect attributed to it by the judgment it was more potential and effective than any testamentary disposition could be, since such dispositions are always ambulatory and subject to revocation. It was not an executory contract for the future conveyance or transfer of any specific property. It could not take effect until the death of the grandfather, and during his life he was not in default with respect to it, and yet this anomalous arrangement was, according to the judgment in this case, effective- enough in law to nullify the gifts and conveyances made by the grandfather in his *459 lifetime to his wife and the provisions of his will that took effect upon his death. The deceased left three children of his own that certainly had as strong a natural claim upon his bounty as the plaintiff, his grandchild, but no one, I think, would claim that had the deceased made the same promise to them that it is found he made to the plaintiff, it ■would constitute a basis for an action of specific performance against the widow. An adopted grandchild must, therefore, have acquired in some way a greater right in the grandfather's estate than his own children, since in a verbal interview between her father and grandfather, when she was five years old, she acquired one-fourth of all his property.

It is not asserted that the plaintiff’s right of action rests upon any distinct principle to be found in the law of property or of wills. It is said that it rests safely upon precedent, but precedents in order to be of any value must be based upon some principle. Actions of this character have now become quite common, and are made by a somewhat loose process of reasoning to take the place of a will or conveyance in favor of the party seeking the relief. There is a line of cases to be found in the books of which Freeman v. Freeman (43 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 903, 175 N.Y. 454, 13 Bedell 454, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahaney-v-carr-ny-1903.