Stokes v. Stokes

119 Misc. 168
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 Misc. 168 (Stokes v. Stokes) 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
Stokes v. Stokes, 119 Misc. 168 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Cohalan, J.

This action is brought to set aside two deeds by the defendant Stokes to the defendant Mervyn Realty Company, in which the plaintiff joined. The plaintiff contends that these deeds were without consideration; that their execution by her was secured by fraud, coercion, suppression of the facts and undue influence; that a wife may not release her dower to her husband, and that thus the procuring of her signature to these deeds was for the purpose of defrauding her of her inchoate right of dower in the property conveyed.

The defendant in addition to general denials sets up three separate defenses: First, that the plaintiff and defendant Stokes had entered into an antenuptial agreement wherein and whereby they promised to marry one another, the husband to give to the wife for her personal and exclusive use $500 per month so long as she lived with him as his wife and she, on her part, to join with him, upon his demand, in the execution and delivery of conveyances of his real estate to the corporation which he then contemplated forming; second, the plea of laches, and third, the Statute of Limitations.

The deeds of November 13, 1911, and November 8, 1916, signed by plaintiff, but given to bona fide purchasers, are not included in the present action.

The main questions here arise with relation to Exhibit A — the deed dated May 17, 1911, to the defendant corporation, transferring to it forty-odd pieces of valuable real estate.

Was this instrument executed willingly and with knowledge on the part of the plaintiff of its contents or purport? Was it executed in compliance with the alleged antenuptial agreement? Was its execution the result of coercion, duress or suppression of the facts? Were the organization of the defendant company and the execution of the deeds to it parts of a scheme whereby the plaintiff was to be [170]*170deprived of her inchoate right in defendant’s real estate? These are the main points in this phase of this acrimonious contest between husband and wife.

The parties intermarried on February 11, 1911. The defendant claims that the marriage proposal came from the plaintiff; that he accepted it only upon condition that she would enter into an agreement to release her inchoate dower rights in his real estate to a corporation he was to form whenever he would require her to do so, while he on his part, in addition to marrying her, would pay her $500 a month for her personal and exclusive use so long as they continued to live together as man and wife. At the trial this agreement, said by the defendant to have been in writing — and to have been drawn by himself — was not produced nor was its non-production, if it ever existed, properly accounted for. Whether or not there ever was such an agreement is the real crux of the case. The defendant says he does not know if he destroyed it or whether it is among his many scattered papers. His attorneys claim that, as it was an executed agreement, its existence at this time and its non-production are immaterial. In this I differ with them. It was material to know if there was such a paper. When one considers the defendant’s story of his desire to protect himself from any dower claim under his second marriage, it seems improbable, if there were such an agreement, that the defendant did not keep it safely. Whether we consider it as executed or not, the various steps leading up to the alleged agreement; the recital of defendant’s visits to the title company to see or procure a copy of the release of dower from his former wife to be used by him in drawing the antenuptial agreement; his story that the agreement, which he by his words and actions held to be very important to him, was drafted and prepared not by the attorney whom he then had under an annual retainer and who at the time was arranging for the incorporation of the defendant company —the company referred to in the claimed agreement — but by himself; the further statement that, immediately after its execution by the plaintiff in duplicate, he took the plaintiff’s copy from her — all seem improbable. The impression that they leave is that there never was any such agreement made or executed. Practically the sole testimony covering this essential point was given by the defendant himself. It is true there was an attempt to show the existence of the agreement by the defendant’s former attorney, but that testimony does not change my view. The plaintiff unequivocally denies that she ever signed the alleged agreement. She says there was some talk before the marriage of his giving her a $500 allowance, but this alone does not tend to sustain the defendant’s contention. [171]*171It might well be that upon this conversation the defendant built his story of the antenuptial agreement. If the defendant were anxious to avoid future marital trouble with regard to his real estate, it seems hardly possible, with his large experience of life, that he would have depended upon his own ability to draw so important an agreement. I have gone over the evidence and the briefs of the learned counsel very carefully and I see nothing upon which to base a holding that an antenuptial agreement ever existed.

A review of the testimony of both sides is very interesting as to man’s memory of events of a few years past. Here we are continually faced with clear-cut denials and contradictions in the strongest of terms. Throughout there appears an undercurrent of intent on the part of the defendant that the plaintiff was not to have any inchoate right of dower in his real estate.

With no antenuptial agreement from which one might have a starting point for the acts and occurrences that followed, then whether or not the defendant’s desire to have the property free of plaintiff’s inchoate right of dower was willingly complied with by her is the main question left to be considered. An answer to this depends largely upon the early history of the married lives of this couple as presented in the testimony and the circumstances attendant upon the execution of the deeds and the relationship of the parties to one another and to the corporation.

Exhibit A was executed within three months after the marriage. It appears that on the morning of May 17, 1911, while the plaintiff was still in bed, the defendant came to her and had her sign the deed in question. This deed was to the defendant corporation — the entire stock of which was at all times owned or controlled by the defendant Stokes. The deed was not recorded then, but, instead, remained in the defendant’s possession for eight years. When the storm clouds came between the parties the deed, as is shown by the resolutions of the board of directors of the defendant corporation, was delivered to and accepted by that company.

It is an elementary principle that a wife may not release to her husband her inchoate right of dower. She may enter into an antenuptial agreement covering the release of dower, but she may not release to him directly. May she by joining in a deed to a corporation, the stock of which is entirely owned by the husband, release that dower right? A corporation is ordinarily to be considered a separate entity, but when I consider all the circumstances before me — the claim of an antenuptial agreement and the evidence introduced to sustain that claim; the non-production of the agreement; the withholding of the deed to the corporation by defendant [172]

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Bluebook (online)
119 Misc. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-stokes-nysupct-1922.