Peck v. Brown

26 How. Pr. 350, 2 Rob. 119
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 13, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 26 How. Pr. 350 (Peck v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peck v. Brown, 26 How. Pr. 350, 2 Rob. 119 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1864).

Opinion

By the court, Robertson, J.

This action, even if only the same relief were sought in it, as was formerly given under" the statute respecting the determination of claims to land (2 R. S. 313, § 3), would be subject to the same rules as all [368]*368other actions. (Code, § 449, Hammond agt. Tillotson, 18 Barb. R. 332 ; Man agt. Provoost, 3 Abb. Rep. 446.) The same defences to defeat the right to such relief might be set up by the defendant. Such statutory proceeding, evidently included only the determination of legal titles, as the defendant was to be barred only from claiming an estate of inheritance or freehold in possession, reversion or remainder in the premises. It did not include the setting aside of a conveyance upon the ground of the grantor’s incompetency, (Bridges agt. Miller, 2 Duer Rep. 683), or the rights of parties under a contract to convey. Were the- action so limited and the right claimed by the defendant in her second and fourth defences purely equitable', they might possibly be insufficient as defences.

But the relief demanded in the complaint in addition to that given under the statutory proceeding" is that the plaintiff’s title may be quieted and adjudged free and clear from any right claimed by the defendant and other relief.

•This includes the removal of the defendant’s claim, whatever it may be, from interfering with the title. It is by no means clear that the right set up by the defendant is not practically as much a legal one as the plaintiff’s. The language of the cases where deeds from a husband to a wife have been sustained in equity is by no means clear as to the mode in which the wife’s rights are to be protected or enforced, unless by repelling hostile claimants whenever they commenced an attack in a suit at law by an injunction in equity. Nor does it seem to be settled whether a second deed from the husband, through the intervention of a third person, is necessary to complete the wife’s title: at all events, the defendant has the same right to resist the attack of the present plaintiff upon her title, as if it were a legal one. He is neither a bona fide purchaser nor clothed with the rights of a creditor. He is only a voluntary trustee created by the defendant’s hus[369]*369band, and having no more rights than he would have had to interfere with the defendant’s estate or interest. The defences made therefore were proper if they were sufficient in law. The complaint in this case, however, is defective, as one in an action to remove a cloud from the plaintiff’s title, because it does not show the nature of the defendant’s claim. (Heywood agt. City of Buffalo, 14 N. Y. R. 534.) Since the law will not interfere to prevent speculative injuries. (Scott agt. Onderdonk, 14 N. Y. R. 9.) If it had simply stated such claim to arise from a deed from the defendant’s husband to her on the face of which their relation appeared, it would have been demurrable, as the defect, if any, appeared on its face. (Cox agt. Clift, 2 N. Y. R. 118; Ward agt. Dewey, 16 N. Y. R. 519 ; Fleet-wood agt. City of New York, 2 Sandf. R. 475.) If such deed, although prima facie void at law, could be sustained by extrinsic facts, the plaintiff would be bound to deny their existence in order to make the defendant’s claim void. This defect, however, cannot be taken advantage of as regards the counter-claim. (Graham agt. Dunnigan, 6 Duer R. 629.)

The first defence demurred to sets up that the defendant’s husband when entirely free from embarrassment for the purpose of applying the same to the separate use of the defendant conveyed to her in fee simple a portion of the property set out in the complaint which is specifically described by deed duly acknowledged and recorded. It also alleges that he did so in performance of an agreement to that effect with the defendant, and in consideration of his love and affection for her, and for other meritorious, valuable and pecuniary considerations. It further alleges that such settlement was no more than a reasonable provision for the defendant, in view of the pecuniary circumstances of her husband, and was so meant by him. Also that he was a man of great wealth, and the defendant had released her dower in large tracts of land. There is no [370]*370allegation that the release of such dower formed any part of the consideration for such settlement or any part of the agreement on which it was made.

If such second defence is not sufficiently definite, or certain in furnishing the details of the agreement for the execution of the settlement or the pecuniary consideration of it, the remedy of the plaintiff is to move to make it so, until he does so, it is to be presumed he understands the entire nature of them, particularly on demurrer where he claims whatever they were, such settlement forms no bar to his recovery, which is the matter now to be determined.

The voidness at law of a deed directly from a husband to a wife, which is the highly artificial result of the technical theory of their being but one person (1 Bl. Com. 442,) does not interfere with equitable rights which may grow out of such an instrument, they being capable in equity of being considered two persons. (2 Story Eq. Jur. §§ 1368 to 7375.) Such result at common law could always be obviated by interposing a stranger to accept a deed from the husband- and give one to the wife. That there was no policy of the law to be carried out by defeating a deed directly from the husband to the wife is evident from the harmlessness of a recital in a conveyance to a stranger by the husband that it was for the purpose of conveying to the wife. (Lynch agt. Livingston, 6 N. Y. R. 422.)

It has been indirectly suggested rather than seriously urged, that the statute of 1849 (Sess. L. 1849, 528, § 1), which empowers a married woman to take, hold, and convey as a feme sole, property derived from any one but her husband, may by implication deprive her of the right of acquiring any property or interests by the gift of her husband, although only to be enforced in equity. Whether it is intended to carry this doctrine so far as to deprive her [371]*371of any rights she might acquire as purchaser or creditor does not appear.

It would be sufficiently daring if it took away from all husbands, however wealthy, the right of making provisions for the support of their wives. The title of the statute is “ An Act for the more effectual protection of the property of married women,” (N. Y. Sess. Laws, 1848, Ch. 200) : not to restrict or limit their rights. The section in question gives a married woman the power of a feme sole, in certain cases from which gifts by their husbands are simply excluded.

The strange inference, that such a statute meant to take away the right of a husband to make, or a wife to receive from him, a provision for her support, needs no further argument to refute it, than the bare statement of the provision. (Powers agt. Lester, 17 How. P. R. 413.) But it is seriously argued that this court should not exert its'powers in equity “ to sustain a claim in contravention of an express statute.” How a court can do so when it is only asked as a court of equity to protect the interest of a wife as a cestui que trust,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 How. Pr. 350, 2 Rob. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peck-v-brown-nysuperctnyc-1864.