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Hamlin v. Hamlin

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 19, 1908
192 N.Y. 164 (N.Y. 1908)

Summary

holding that a statement in a pronunciation by a tribunal inconsistent with another statement in the same pronunciation allows the affected party to rely in good faith upon the statement more favorable to the party's contentions

Summary of this case from Transcom, Inc. v. U.S.

Opinion

Argued April 16, 1908

Decided May 19, 1908

Morgan J. O'Brien, H.W. Alden, James Cochran and Albert E. Seibert for appellants. Henry W. Taft, Max Pam, Arthur C. Patterson and John B. Gleason for respondent.


The plaintiff seeks to have canceled, as clouds upon her alleged title to the real estate therein described, certain deeds executed by her to Frederick R. Hamlin, her husband, during his lifetime. The theory of her complaint was that there had never been any delivery of those deeds and that there had been no intention, on the part of either, that there should be a delivery, until the full value of the property was paid to her. It appears that her husband purchased the properties, which consisted in real estate in New York city and on Long Island, a few months after their marriage and had the deeds made out in her name. Thereafter, she executed two deeds, by which she conveyed both parcels to him and, upon his death, which occurred very shortly thereafter, her deeds to him were found in his safe deposit box. They had not been recorded and one of his executors, notwithstanding her objection, caused them to be recorded. Upon the trial, the claim that there had been no delivery was, practically, abandoned and the contention of the plaintiff was that the delivery of the deeds was for temporary purposes, or conditional, and was not to operate to divest her ownership. The plaintiff recovered judgment at the Special Term and the judgment has been affirmed at the Appellate Division, but by a divided court. The trial court, in reaching the legal conclusion that the deeds in question were null and should be canceled, found as facts, among others, that, in executing the deeds, "the plaintiff did not intend that said deeds should be delivered as operative or effective deeds;" that "the said Frederick R. Hamlin did not, at the time the deeds came into his possession, intend to accept or receive the deeds as operative or effective deeds or conveyances of the property therein described" and that "there was no delivery of the deeds * * * and no acceptance thereof." Singularly enough, however, it was, also, found by the trial court, upon the request of the defendants, that the "plaintiff delivered the deeds, covering both of said premises, to Frederick R. Hamlin." Though not embodied in the formal decision of the court, this finding is, nevertheless, a part of, and enters into, the judgment and being inconsistent with the finding upon the question of delivery, the appellants have the right to rely upon it as being more favorable to their contention. We must regard it, therefore, as established that the plaintiff had delivered to her husband the deeds conveying the properties, which she had executed, and, indeed, her own testimony puts it beyond doubt. She stated to the executor, in a conversation, that her husband had told her "fifteen minutes before she signed the deeds that it was simply to help him temporarily, in case he needed the money for his business." The necessary inference is of a sufficient delivery to pass the title. With that fact established in the case, there remains but little tenable ground for the plaintiff's position that her delivery of the deeds was conditional and that it was not the intention of either party that the conveyances should be effective at the time of delivery. Whether this circuitous method of transferring the title to the real estate into Hamlin, which he had purchased, was with no idea of acquiring it for himself, but, merely, that he might have the evidences of title in his possession, to subserve the needs of his business, as is the claim of the plaintiff; or whether, being in a business attended by considerable hazards, plaintiff's husband wished to be in a position, at any time, either to be able to resort to the property as an asset, or to preserve it from his creditors, is quite immaterial. If we should give full effect to the plaintiff's claim, it would be to hold the delivery by her of the deeds to have been conditional and not absolute; but that would be violative of the settled rule in this state that a delivery cannot be made to the grantee conditionally. Any oral condition accompanying the delivery, in such case, would be repugnant to the terms of the deed and parol evidence to prove that there was such a condition attached to the delivery is inadmissible. The reason for the rule applies to every case where the delivery is intended to give effect to a deed without the further act of the grantor and such was this case; for, according to plaintiff's testimony, she intended to convey to her husband, whatever their arrangement, at the time, that the properties should remain hers, if not needed in his business. It was not a case where the deeds were not to pass out of the possession of the grantor, until certain conditions were fulfilled. These deeds had passed out of the plaintiff's possession and into that of the grantee, by the deliberate act of the former, and no oral condition, at the time, will be admitted to contradict the import of the written instruments.

The rule, to which I referred, has been repeatedly asserted in the courts of this state from an early time. ( Souverbye v. Arden, 1 Johns. Ch. 240; Worrall v. Munn, 5 N.Y. 229; Braman v. Bingham, 26 ib. 483; Wallace v. Berdell, 97 ib. 13; Blewitt v. Boorum, 142 ib. 357; Moore v. Winans, 23 App. Div. 308; affd. by this court on opinion below, 160 N.Y. 703. ) In Braman v. Bingham ( supra) Judge SELDEN observed, "if a delivery to the grantee can be made subject to one parol condition, I see no ground of principle which can exclude any parol condition. The deed having been delivered to the grantee, I think the parol evidence that the delivery was conditional was properly excluded." In that case, a defense was that the deed was delivered to the grantee to be held in escrow and it was held that "such a delivery vests the title in the grantee, although it may be contrary to the intentions of the parties." In Blewitt v. Boorum ( supra) Judge PECKHAM, referring to the rule, observed "whether there is a sound basis for any distinction between cases relating to real estate and other kinds of written instruments, it is not now important to inquire; for the rule that instruments of the former character cannot be conditionally delivered to a party is too firmly settled here in this state to be overruled, or even questioned."

It is argued for the respondent that the intention of the parties bears upon the question of a delivery of the deeds and of their acceptance; that, as a question of fact, intention is to be determined by evidence and that the evidence of the plaintiff supported the decision of the trial court. In the argument much reliance is placed upon the authority of Ten Eyck v. Whitbeck ( 156 N.Y. 341). Irrespective of authority, it would go far in answer to say that delivery in this case was expressly found by the court as a fact. This finding upon the evidence, of which plaintiff's own testimony, to which I have adverted, was a part, that she executed the deeds "to help her husband temporarily in case he needed the money for his business," leaves little room for such an argument. I am unable to perceive how the case of Ten Eyck v. Whitbeck has any especial application to the plaintiff's case. There the title to the land was attacked upon the ground that the deed, under which the defendant claimed title, was obtained from the grantor through fraud, conspiracy and undue influence. Judge MARTIN, in his opinion, points out that the delivery of a deed is essential to the transfer of title and says that the question of delivery, "involving as it does acceptance, is always one of intention and where there is a conflict in the evidence, it becomes a question of fact to be determined by the jury." In this statement and in observing that the presumption of delivery and of acceptance is one that must yield to opposing evidence, he only states the general rule applicable to all cases where those facts are to be established, in order that the deed in dispute may be held to have been an effective conveyance. But, in truth, the argument is not, now, that there was no actual delivery, nor acceptance, of the deeds; as I apprehend it, it is that the delivery was inoperative, by reason of "terms and conditions thereafter to be determined", to convey an absolute title. That is a contention, however, which, in effect, opposes the operation of the rule of law heretofore mentioned; which condemned the doctrine of conditional deliveries, for avoiding by parol averment the terms of the deed.

Much evidence was introduced by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing what Mr. Hamlin's intentions were with reference to the properties he had bought, as declared upon several occasions to various persons, and reliance is placed upon it as supporting the judgment. These declarations were made in conversations of a most casual nature and were of the purport, that he was going to give the house to his wife, or that he had made a wedding present of it to her, or that it was his wife's house, or that the house belonged to her. These conversations were, at various times, with real estate agents, friends, a house decorator, a painter, an architect, a physician, or with his wife's father, and were quite inadmissible to affect the absoluteness of the title of the deceased. The evidence had no bearing upon the delivery of the deeds and, in so far as it tended to contradict their terms, it should have been excluded. It was insufficient as proof, in any event. If such authentic acts as duly executed deeds "can be impeached by loose and idle conversations", as Chancellor KENT remarked in Souverbye v. Arden ( supra), "there would be no safety in ordinary transactions and no certainty in legal solemnities." Declarations by a grantee to be admissible should be such as characterize his possession and must be made when pertinent and important upon the question of the actual ownership. They must rise higher than casual and conversational remarks; they must be made when the person was called upon to make them and when the truth was required to be spoken. Such a rule commends itself in principle and should be adhered to in the interest of the safety of titles.

A serious question is raised as to the admissibility of conversations between the plaintiff and her husband's executor, in which she repeated what her husband had said to her; but, in the view I take of the case, the appellants were not prejudiced and I shall not discuss the evidence, or whether it was sufficiently excepted to. I think that the decision of the trial court was without support in the findings, or in the evidence, and whether for that reason, or for the erroneous admission of the evidence of the declarations of the deceased grantee, I advise that the judgment appealed from be reversed and that a new trial be ordered; with costs to abide the event.

CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Hamlin v. Hamlin

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 19, 1908
192 N.Y. 164 (N.Y. 1908)

holding that a statement in a pronunciation by a tribunal inconsistent with another statement in the same pronunciation allows the affected party to rely in good faith upon the statement more favorable to the party's contentions

Summary of this case from Transcom, Inc. v. U.S.
Case details for

Hamlin v. Hamlin

Case Details

Full title:MARY B. HAMLIN, Respondent, v . HERBERT W. HAMLIN et al., Appellants

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: May 19, 1908

Citations

192 N.Y. 164 (N.Y. 1908)
84 N.E. 806

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