Yager v. Bedell
This text of 206 A.D. 803 (Yager v. Bedell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Prior to 1888 plaintiff had worked with his father in quarrying and selling stone and his wages with his father’s had been handed to his mother to bank for them. Plaintiff swears the amount of his contribution was $550. In that year he negotiated with Jacob Krum for the purchase of a house and some two acres of land and the deed, pursuant to an understanding between plaintiff and his mother, that she should deed it to him when required, was taken in his mother’s name. After the lapse of upwards of twenty years and in 1914 he demanded the deed of his mother and such demand was never complied with. While in such occupancy plaintiff paid the taxes and made repairs in an amount of $200. In 1920 the mother, who was infirm in health, in consideration of care, lodging and maintenance, deeded the property to Florence Bedell and turned in pension cheeks of $30 per month which she received from the government. Thereafter defendant Florence Bedell, treating the plaintiff as a tenant at will, revoked the tenancy and brought a summary proceeding before the county judge [804]*804to dispossess the plaintiff. At the conclusion of the hearing, the plaintiff herein being represented therein by counsel, the.county judge granted a warrant of dispossession. Proof was offered and rejected bearing upon the agreement to convey the property in suit but no evidence, besides, of the agreement was offered. The agreement to convey set up in the complaint in this action was not set up as a defense in the summary proceedings. Among the allegations in the answer herein the defendant Bedell has set up that the order in the summary proceedings was res adjudícala; that the alleged contract was within the Statute of Frauds, and that the action was barred by the Statute of Limitations. A trial has been had and a judgment rendered vacating the injunction and dismissing the complaint upon the sole ground that the order in the summary proceedings was res adjudícala. Section 2244 of the Code of Civil Procedure, now section 1425 of the Civil Practice Act,
See Code Civ. Proc. § 2244, as amd. by Laws of 1920, chap. 132; now Civ. Prac.. Act, § 1425, as added by Laws of 1921, chap. 199.— [Rep.
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