Ring v. Ring

55 Misc. 420, 105 N.Y.S. 498
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 Misc. 420 (Ring v. Ring) 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.

Bluebook
Ring v. Ring, 55 Misc. 420, 105 N.Y.S. 498 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Tompkins, J.

The plaintiff is entitled to the relief asked for in the complaint. The deed, sought to he adjudged fraudulent and void, was executed on the 3d day of September, 1904. At that time the plaintiff was sixty-four or sixty-five years of age and a widow, while the defendant was forty years of age. On the 10th day of September, 1904, the plaintiff and defendant were married, pursuant to an agreement made at the time of the execution of the said deed, [421]*421which agreement is referred to in the deed and is stated as a part of the consideration therefor. They never, however, cohabited as husband and wife.

For several years prior to the execution and delivery of the deed in question, the defendant had acted as the plaintiffs confidential .agent and business manager, renting her property, collecting the rents therefor, looking after the repairs, and advising and assisting her in several law suits; during all of which time he had his meals at the plaintiffs home, free of charge, and frequently spent the evening there, in her company.

In 1902, the defendant induced the plaintiff to commence the erection of an opera-house upon certain lands owned by her in the city of Mount Vernon.

Defendant undertook the management of the building operations, made the contracts, employed the men, paid for labor and materials, and had entire charge of the construction of the new opera-house. Substantially all of the money that went into that venture was provided by the plaintiff.

True, the defendant claims to have used large sums of money in the building, but failed to establish that claim upon the trial. He never had more than five or six hundred dollars at the most of his own money, and it is doubtful whether that went into the new building.

Prior to September, 1902, the defendant from time to time rendered written statements to the plaintiff, showing the rents received by him as her agent and the disbursements made for repairs, etc., and stating the amount of his commission, which was five per cent, upon the gross rents collected, and striking a balance; which statements showed that the defendant paid himself five per cent, commission out of the plaintiff’s rents; and such a statement, hearing date June 5,1902, shows abalance claimed to be due the defendant from the plaintiff, of eighteen dollars and twenty-four cents. After September, 1902, and while the work upon the new opera-house was in progress, the defendant failed to render any account of his receipts and disbursements of the plaintiff’s moneys; and I find, as matters of fact, that, at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed in question, plaintiff [422]*422was not indebted to the defendant in any amount, and that the entire cost of the opera-house and the property described in and sought to be conveyed by the deed in question was paid by the plaintiff.

For some years prior to the execution of the deed, the defendant had been poisoning the plaintiff’s mind against her daughter, who had for many years been in poor health and on that account was living in blew Mexico, and her granddaughter, who resided in the plaintiff’s home from childhood and during most of the time until March, 1904, at which time defendant succeeded in persuading the plaintiff to drive her granddaughter, Mrs. Valentine, and her husband from her home; and, from that time until after the deed was executed, the plaintiff and her granddaughter, Mrs. Valentine, were separated and apart, as a result of the efforts made by the defendant to antagonize them.

For several months prior to the execution of the deed, the defendant, while practically living at the plaintiff’s home and in full charge of the opera-house property and the building operations upon that property, and having exclusive charge of all of the plaintiff’s other property, and handling practically all of her money, and acting as her confidential adviser, insisted, from time "to time, that the plaintiff was indebted to him in large sums of money, although he never rendered a statement or claimed any particular amount, and that, unless she would deed to him the opera-house property, or an interest therein, he would abandon the work on the new opera-house and would sue her for a large sum of money. These threats were repeated from time to time, and finally resulted in the preparation and execution of the deed in question.

Defendant stated to two of the plaintiff’s witnesses that his purpose in securing the removal of the Valentines from the plaintiff’s house was so that he could do what he pleased with the “ old lady.”

It also appears from the testimony of the plaintiff’s son-in-law, McClellan, who was on friendly terms with the plaintiff, that the defendant had so much influence over her, in 1902, that he persuaded her to construct the new opera-house [423]*423against the advice of her son-in-law. From the confidential relations existing between the plaintiff and defendant and the controlling influence which the defendant seemed to possess over the plaintiff, the difference in their ages, the threats, coercion and influence testified by the plaintiff to have been made and exercised over her by the defendant, and the absence of any valuable consideration, I find that the deed was not the free and voluntary act of the plaintiff, but was procured from her by the defendant by means of fraud, coercion, threats and undue influence.

The giving away of a valuable interest in her property, without any valuable consideration, was the foolish act of an old woman who was at that time completely under the influence and control of the defendant. That the defendant’s will overruled and controlled the mind of the plaintiff was - manifested by what followed between them, immediately after plaintiff commenced the first action to set aside this deed. As soon as defendant learned from public print that the action had been commenced, he found the plaintiff and succeeded in persuading her to discontinue the action, and then took her to a lawyer who had never been her attorney and, in the absence and without the knowledge of her own attorneys, obtained from her an affidavit designed to support the validity of the deed. All that followed the commencement of the first action, in respect to its discontinuance, tends to support the theory that, while plaintiff was alone in defendant’s presence, she was dominated and controlled by him.

The defendant’s counsel argues, with much earnestness and ability, that the deed in question is a “nuptial deed” and does not involve the questions which usually arise in relation to antenuptial or post-nuptial agreements. He contends that it was the marriage, and the marriage alone, that gave force and validity to the deed; and that, as long as the marriage stands, the deed must stand. The deed contains the following recital:

“ Whereas, It is intended and agreed by and between the said parties that they shall within three months of the dace of the execution, of these presents, become husband and wife, [424]*424and in consideration of said marriage, and of divers good, valuable and adequate considerations, it has been mutually agreed that the land shall be conveyed, and that the conveyances hereafter set forth, shall be executed, delivered and have full force and effect.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Misc. 420, 105 N.Y.S. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-ring-nysupct-1907.