Westervelt v. Ackley
This text of 9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 258 (Westervelt v. Ackley) 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 first question presented by the appeal taken from the judgment in this action, is, whether a deed, executed by the plaintiff and Cornelius Westervelt, her husband, of premises owned by him, to the defendant, and delivered on the 6th day of January, 1862, was in fact a mortgage. The deed was absolute in form, containing all the usual covenants. At the time it was delivered, Cornelius Westervelt was embarrassed in his circumstances, and indebted to the defendant, who was his son-in-law. The .consideration mentioned in the deed, is the sum of $7,900, and the premises described in it were, at the time of its delivery, incumbered by mortgage in the sum of $5,500, besides unpaid taxes.
The evidence tended to show that Cornelius Westervelt was indebted to the defendant in the sum of $2,000 and upward, at the time of the delivery of the deed; and he testified that he delivered it simply as a security for what he was owing, and that the defendant received it for the same purpose. But the evidence of this witness was considerably impaired by the fact that when he was examined on certain supplementary • proceedings instituted against him, he swore that he sold the premises to the defendant for $7,500, subject to a mortgage of $5,500, and that the defendant had paid him the difference of $2,000. It is true, that, in the same connection, he also stated that there was an understanding that he might at any time redeem the property, by paying him the sum of $2,000, and assuming the mortgage. But that was a very different thing from a mere security for debt. It was a sale, with an agreement for the subsequent purchase of the property by the payment of a fixed amount for it. And that it was regarded as a complete sale, appears further from the proceedings taken by him in 1867, before the plaintiff received her deed from Salter, to whom the witness gave a deed of the premises in 1870. For, in his sworn inventory accompanying his petition, he stated that he had no real estate. And that could not have been true, if the deed received by the defendant had been delivered only as a mortgage.
The evidence of this witness, on the other hand, was slightly corroborated by that which the plaintiff gave as a witness. For she swore that she paid the defendant money, to keep down the interest on the mortgage, and that the house was mentioned between her[260]*260self and the defendant as her house, after he had received the deed. And it was still further corroborated by the statement sworn to by Salter, who said that he read to the defendant what Cornelius Westervelt had said in the supplementary examination concerning his right to redeem, and that the defendant responded that he would swear the same way, and that he held the deed as a security. Welch also testified that the defendant, in substance, conceded that his debt had been paid, but that he claimed still to hold the property for supporting Westervelt’s family. Horton’s evidence afforded the plaintiff very slight benefit, because he said that the defendant claimed the transaction to be a fraud on Westervelt’s creditors. This is the substance of the plaintiff’s case, as to the nature and character of the deed; and, standing by itself, it was sufficient to justify a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor, declaring the deed to have been delivered and received as a mere-mortgage. But the defendant denied, in the evidence he gave as a witness, the case made on the part of the plaintiff, and stated that the deed was expressly delivered to him, to make him whole for what Westervelt individually owed him, to do whatever he liked with it; and that it was said, at the time, that if was the defendant’s, and was handed to hini on account. This evidence, consistently with the form of the deed itselfj indicated an absolute delivery of it, in payment of the debt Westervelt owed' the defendant. And the evidence of the defendant’s wife—• that her father wanted the defendant to take the house and do whatever he could with it; that it might be at some time worth something to him; that he, Westervelt, could do nothing with it; and that he did not know how he should ever repay the defendant — tends to confirm the truth of the claim made by the defendant himself. Under this evidence, which is the substance of what was given respecting the nature and character of the deed, a question of fact was presented for the decision of the court before whom the witnesses were examined, and who could, from that circumstance, judge, to some extent, as to how much credit should properly be given to their statements. There was no such preponderance on either side, as would justify this court, on appeal, in holding that the conclusion adopted by the court, was wrong, and, for that reason, reverse the judgment recovered upon it.
[261]*261The defendant, by his answer, alleged that he had rented the premises to the plaintiff, in the year 1867, for the yearly rent of $1,500, and that she had used and occupied them, under that demise, until the time the answer was served. This was denied hy the plaintiff in her reply. And during. the trial evidence was given without objection, tending to sustain the allegations made. The plaintiff’s evidence positively denied this demise and the occupancy under it. But the proof left this portion of the case in the simple form of a question of fact, which the court could decide either way without violating any settled principle of law applicable to the case; and, on that evidence, the court decided in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff did not resist the defendant’s demand for rent, by alleging in her reply that she was a married woman, although the court found that fact in her favor. But, as it was not alleged, it is exceedingly doubtful whether the fact found, could properly prove of any benefit to her upon this appeal, even if that would relieve her from the consequences of her agreement to pay the rent-.
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9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westervelt-v-ackley-nysupct-1874.