Ten Eyck v. . Witbeck

31 N.E. 994, 135 N.Y. 40, 29 Abb. N. Cas. 314, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 251, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1592
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 994 (Ten Eyck v. . Witbeck) 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
Ten Eyck v. . Witbeck, 31 N.E. 994, 135 N.Y. 40, 29 Abb. N. Cas. 314, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 251, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1592 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

JMaynabd, J.

The single question presented by this appeal relates to the rights of the parties under the Recording-Act. The property in controversy is a farm in the town of Ooeymans concededly worth $20,000. Peter W. Ten Eyck is the-common source of title. The plaintiffs claim under a deed prior in date; the defendant Catherine Witbeck under a deed, prior in registry. The plaintiffs’ conveyance is declared by statute to be void as against the defendant, providing she was. a purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration. In the sense that' she had no notice of the existence of the-prior deed, the bona fides of her purchase is not disputed. The issue is, therefore, narrowed to the question whether she was a purchaser for a valuable consideration. The deed was executed July 7, 1887. The grantor was her father, and it recited a consideration of ten dollars and the annual payment to'the father during his lifetime of the entire net proceeds of the farm, and of one-third of such proceeds to his wife during; her lifetime, if she survived him, and of one-third thereof to-another daughter for the same period, and of one-half of such proceeds to her after the death of both parents. The grantee *43 was given power to sell the property after the mother’s death, and, if sold, the use of one-lialf of the'proceeds of sale should be paid to the sister during her life, but the principal should be managed and controlled by the defendant. It was proved that ten dollars in money was actually paid by her to her father at the time of the execution of the deed. Peter Ten Eyck’s family then consisted of his wife and two daughters Avho lived with him upon the farm, except the defendant Mrs. Witbeck, who lived with her husband upon another farm in the same toAAm. Immediate possession was not taken by her under her deed, but her father, with the rest of the family, continued to reside upon the farm, and, by himself and tenants, to manage and control it until his death in 1883, after which it was in the same manner occupied by the mother and unmarried daughter until the death of the mother in 1885. In September, 1811, Ten Eyck, through an intermediate grantee, conveyed this property to his wife, who, in January, 1883, conveyed it to the plaintiffs. The defendant’s deed was recorded December 5, 1819, but Mrs. Ten Eyck’s deed, under Avhich the plaintiffs claim, was not recorded until February 21, 1883.

After Mrs. Ten Eyck’s death, the defendant took possession and the plaintiffs brought this action in ejectment. The defendant challenged the validity of the plaintiffs’ title, upon the ground of the mental incompetency of Mr. Ten Eyck, and the undue influence of his wife over him when the deed to her was executed, and of its alleged non-delivery, as well as the non-delivery of the deed from Mrs. Ten Eyck to the plaintiffs; and upon the further ground that Mrs. Ten Eyck’s deed was void as to defendant, under the ¡Recording Act.

The trial court held that the defendant was not a purchaser for a valuable consideration, and was not, therefore, within the protection of the statute; but submitted to the jury the question whether the deeds, under which plaintiffs claimed, had ever been delivered; and whether Peter W. Ten Eyck was of sound mind and free from undue influence when he executed the conveyance to his wife. The verdict was for the *44 defendant, and the General Term intimate very plainly that, in their opinion, it was not supported by the evidence, and that they would have set it aside were it not for the decision of the General Term in the fifth department in the case of Hendy v. Smith (49 Hun, 510), which holds that a grantee for a consideration of one dollar paid, is a purchaser for a valuable consideration, as the terms are used in the Recording Act. They felt constrained to regard this authority as controlling, and to hold, as matter of law, that the defendant had a superior title because of the prior record of her deed, and that the verdict and judgment were, therefore, right. The order of affirmance states that, but for the Recording Act, the judgment appealed from would have been reversed.

From the relationship of the parties; the recitals in the defendant’s deed; and the circumstances attending its execution, as disclosed by the evidence, it is, we think, apparent that she cannot be regarded as a purchaser for a valuable consideration, so as to avoid the effect. of the plaintiffs’ prior conveyance. While every legal mode of acquisition of real property, except by descent, is denominated in law a purchase, and the person who thus acquires it is a purchaser, it is evident that the word is used in this statute in a much more limited sense. It is there applied only to such grants of real estate as are obtained for money, or some other valuable consideration. It denotes a buyer of property and has reference to one of the actors in a transaction of bargain and sale, which is presumably controlled by commercial considerations.

We think it would be a perversion of language to say that a father, who had conveyed to a daughter property of the value of twenty thousand dollars for no greater sum than ten dollars paid, had sold the property to his child, or that she had bought it of him. The transfer would be recognized by the popular, as well as the judicial mind, as possessing all the essential qualities of a gift. It has been frequently so held. In Hayes v. Kershow (1 Sand. Ch. 265) the consideration recited in the deed was one dollar paid and love and affection, and the vice-chancellor said that this nominal sum was not *45 such a valuable consideration as would support a bargain and sale.

In Duvol v. Wilson (9 Barb. 487), the conveyance was to the grandchildren of the grantor, and recited a consideration of five dollars paid; and it was held that it was not sufficient to support a covenant to stand seized.

In Morris v. Ward (36 N. Y. 587) the conveyance ivas to. a granddaughter and recited a consideration of one dollar paid and natural love and affection, and this court held that it was an advancement and not a sale, and that the grantee took as donee and not as purchaser, and that it was competent, when the whole instrument shows the money consideration to have been intended as nominal merely, to give effect to such proof and to the intention which it indicates.

It is true that in these cases it was assumed, or conceded, that the nominal money consideration expressed had not been actually paid; but we do not understand that any emphasis was placed upon that fact. The decision in each case seems to have been put upon the ground that the nominal ivas not the real consideration.

In the case before us every feature of the transaction is. indicative of a' gift. The grantor was eiglity-two. years of age, and the grantee was his eldest daughter. He was evidently conscious that the end of liis life Avas near and desired to make some final disposition of his real property for the benefit of his family through the medium of this daughter, in whom, for the time being, he seems to liaAre had especial confidence. If in the full possession of his mental faculties, he must have known that he had preAdously conveyed the property to his Avife.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 994, 135 N.Y. 40, 29 Abb. N. Cas. 314, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 251, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ten-eyck-v-witbeck-ny-1892.