Paine v. Hunt
This text of 40 Barb. 75 (Paine v. Hunt) 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.
Opinion
The referee has found that the note in question was given by the defendant for a debt due from him to his mother, Sally Hunt, who was the grandmother of the plaintiff, and that by the direction of said Sally Hunt it was made payable, and on the day of its date was delivered, to the plaintiff, not, as insisted by the counsel of the defendant, in payment of a debt due to the plaintiff for services rendered, but as a gift to her and as her separate property. The evidence on these questions was voluminous and conflicting, but there was enough to justify the findings. That settles the question — all the counter-claims claimed' to have been proved, were, in judgment of law against the plaintiff’s husband, Daniel E. Paine, only, and cannot be [77]*77allowed in an action by his wife to enforce a demand due he': as her separate property. The defendant confessedly owed this money to his mother, who has given her claim to it to the plaintiff. Ho injustice is done to the defendant by requiring him to pay it to the plaintiff. He is in no worse condition than he would have been in if the gift had not been made, in which case he would have been obliged to pay it to his mother, or to her representatives.
Hone of the alleged counter-claims accrued on the faith of the gift to the plaintiff. She could not by any promise make herself legally responsible for any part of them. All that can be said is that there was evidence tending to show that the defendant used his influence with his mother to induce her to make the gift, in consideration of the promise by the plaintiff to allow and pay the counter-claims. But it does not appear that the plaintiff’s mother was influenced by those considerations to make the gift.
The only question in the case is one of ownership of the note, to recover the amount of which the action is brought. It is either the property of the plaintiff or of the representatives of Sally Hunt, and the referee has settled that question by his findings. ”
The judgment should be affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.
Johnson, E. Darwin Smith and Welles, Justices.]
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
40 Barb. 75, 1863 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-hunt-nysupct-1863.