Case Name: WILLIAM R. CARNES, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. GEORGE W. PLATT, Defendant and Appellant
Court: New York Superior Court
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1869-05-03
Citations: 1 Sweeny 140
Docket Number: 
Parties: WILLIAM R. CARNES, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. GEORGE W. PLATT, Defendant and Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Reports of cases argued and determined in the Superior Court of the city of New York
Volume: 31
Pages: 140–148

Head Matter:
WILLIAM R. CARNES, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. GEORGE W. PLATT, Defendant and Appellant.
The office of a jury is to find facts upon conflicting evidence. If there is no dispute, and the proof is clear, it is the duty of the Court to apply the law and pronounce’ judgment. And even where the evidence is not wholly on one side, yet if a verdict would be set aside as being against the clear weight of the evidence, the Court should direct the verdict.
Although the question whether there had been a delivery of a deed is to some extent a question of “ intent,” it need not necessarily he submitted to a jury; and where the proof is such as to repel a presumption of any intention to deliver, it is proper for the Court to withdraw the question from the jury. A question of “ intent ”, is not so exclusively a question for the jury that the Court cannot take it from them.
Before Monell, McCunn, and Freedman, JJ.
[Decided May 3, 1869.]
This case was tried before Chief-Justice Robertson and a jury.
The action was to recover possession of certain real property in this city.
Upon a former trial the jury found a verdict for the defendants, which upon appeal was set aside and a new trial ordered.
On the new trial, at the close of the evidence, the defendants’ counsel made the following requests:
First—To direct a verdict for the defendant on the ground that it was clear upon the uncontradieted evidence in the case that the deed of Charles W. Houghton to Charles L., Anthony, covering the premises in question, was delivered, and the title thereby passed from said Houghton to said Anthony, before the recovery of the judgment in favor of the Merchants’ Bank.
Second—If the foregoing request should be denied, then to submit to the jury the question whether Charles W. Houghton handed the deed aforesaid to Wetmore with intent to deliver the same as his deed for the use of Anthony.
Third—Whether Wetmore had authority as agent for Anthony to accept a delivery of the deed at the time it was left with him.
Fourth—Whether the assignment of the judgment was procured from the Merchants’ Bank for the benefit and on behalf of the said Charles W. Houghton, or in collusion with him for the purpose of enforcing the same as a lien upon the premises in question.
The justice refused each of such requests, and refused to submit any question to the jury; to which refusals, and to each of them, the defendant’s counsel excepted.
The justice thereupon directed the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff, for an estate for his life in the premises described in the complaint, with a right to the present possession, to which direction the defendant’s counsel duly excepted.
The jury thereupon found a verdict for the plaintiff, in accordance with the above direction.
The defendant appealed from the judgment.
Mr. James C. Carter for appellant.
The weight of the testimony was that the deed executed by Anthony to Edwin and Elijah Houghton, of the premises in question, was for a valuable consideration. As this question was taken from the jury, the defendant is entitled to the assumption that the deed was for a valuable consideration.
It was also proved that the mortgage to the defendant was for a new and valuable consideration. A.s a conclusion of law upon the uncontradicted evidence, the delivery of the deed by Charles W. Hougton to Wetmore was valid and effectual to pass the title to Anthony, the grantee named in it (Butler and Baker’s Case, 3 Rep., 26 ; vide the learned note to Jackson v. Dunlop, 1 Johns. Cases, 114; Wheelwright v. Wheelwright, 2 Mass., 447; Hedge v. Drew, 12 Pick., 141; Goodridge v. Walker, 1 Johns. Cases, 253, n. ; McKinney v. Rhoads, 5 Watts, 343; Doe dem Garnons v. Knight, 5 B. & C., 671).
But- let it be conceded in the fullest manner that the question, whether the handing of the deed by Houghton to Wetmore was effectual to pass the estate, is one which, turns upon the intent with which this act was done, and that such intent is to be gathered from all the attending circumstances, the direction to the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff,,withdrawing, as it did, every question of fact from the jury, was a plain error (Brown v. Austen, 35 Barb., 341; Chonteau v. Suydam, 21 N. Y., 179; Worrall v. Munn, 1 Seld., 229; Brackett v. Barney, 28 N. Y., 333).
It appearing, therefore, that the question is, in its natu/re, one of fact, the ruling can be defended only by showing that the evidence was so conclusive as to leave no reasonable doubt that the deed was not ha/nded to Wetmore with the intent to' deliver it. The clear weight of the ^evidence establishes the intent to deliver the deed when it was handed to Wetmore.
It was error also to take from the jury the questions whether the judgment was purchased by Carnes for the benefit of Charles W. Houghton, and whether the plaintiff and Houghton were not fraudulently and collusively endeavoring, for their mutual benefit, to enforce the lien of this judgment.
Mr. D. T. Walden for respondent.
The deed from Houghton to Anthony was not delivered so as. to take effect prior to the docketing of the judgment.
There can be no perfect delivery of a deed without acceptance by the grantee, or some one by his authority (Bracket v. Barney, 28 N. Y., 333, 340; Charlean v. Suydam, 21 N. Y., 179 ; Jackson v. Richards, 6 Cow., 617; Crosby v. Hillyer, 24 Wend., 280, 284).
Acceptance of' a deed will, in some cases, be presumed where there is no evidence to the contrary ; the law will, from the beneficial character of the deed or other circumstances, assume that it was accepted by the grantee; there can be no presumption against the positive testimony of the grantee, that he did not ac cept (Church v. Gilman, 15 Wend., 556, 660-66 ; Crosby v. Hillyer, 24 ib., 285, per Nelson, Jr.; Jackson v. Brodie, 20 Johns., 187).
It is well settled that a delivery and acceptance cannot relate back so as to affect the intervening right of third parties; the doctrine of relation is a fiction, resorted to in some instances from, necessity, to prevent injury and to uphold the deed; but, as against intervening creditors’ claims, the fiction will not be resorted to, the transaction will be left to rest upon the simple and naked truth, and the deed take effect only from the time of its acceptance (per Chancellor, Frost v. Beekman, 1 John. Ch., 297, 18 ; Jackson v. Rowland, 6 Wend., 666, 670 ; per Sutherland, J., Jackson v. Ramsey, 3 Cow., 79 ; per Thompson, J., Jackson v. Bard, 4 Johns., 234; per Thompson, J., Case v. De Goes, 3 Caines, 263; Heath v. Ross, 12 Johns., 140; Jackson v. Douglass, 5 Cow., 462 ; per Sutherland, J., Crosby v. Hillyer, 24 Wend., 284).
The ease was properly taken from the jury, the plaintiff’s case was in effect admitted, the legal title was proved, and the defendant failed to impeach it in any way; there was nothing in the testimony for the jury to consider, and if it had been left to them, and they had found for the defendant, it would have been the duty of the Court to set aside the verdict as against evidence (Godin v. Bank of Commonwealth, 6 Duer, 76 ; Herring v. Hoppock, 25 N. Y., 413 ; People v. Cook, 8 ib., 67, 75 ; Besson v. Southard, 10 ib., 236 ; Bowne v. Brahe, 3 Duer, 35).
See 6 Robt., 270, for a full statement of the facts.

Opinion:
McCunn, J.
The appeal presents but a single issue for decision in this Court; and that is, was the conveyance from Houghton to Anthony of the premises in controversy delivered before the 10th of August, 1854, the date of record of the judgment of the Merchants' Bank of Boston v. Charles W. Houghton % If the docketing of the judgment be prior to the delivery of the deed, then the title of the respondent is indefeasible. If the delivery of the deed were prior to the record of the judgment, then the appellant is entitled to a new trial.
The delivery is essential to the effect of a deed; and that effect is determined not by the nominal date, but by the legal delivery of the conveyance.
And, when the circumstances are undisputed, delivery or no delivery is a -question for the Court.
On the uncontrovprted facts of this case, I infer, as matter of law, there was no delivery of the deed from Houghton to Anthony previous to the docketing of the judgment in favor of the bank.
Acceptance by the grantee is indispensable to an effective delivery. An absolute acceptance by an agent may operate a good delivery to the grantee. But, in the first place, it is apparent, on the face of the transaction, that Wetmore was the agent of Anthony to examine the title, and for no other purpose; and, secondly, that he did not in fact assume to accept the conveyance, lie held it until the return of Anthony to the city; and the judgment having been meanwhile recovered and docketed against the grantor, Mr. Anthony, the grantee, then declined to accept the deed. Acceptance of a beneficial conveyance may be presumed ; but the presumption in this case is repelled by the positive refusal of Anthony.
By reason of the cloud on Houghton's title, arising from the judgment, Anthony refused to consummate the arrangement of which the delivery and acceptance of the deed were essential conditions; and by the abandonment of the whole arrangement by Anthony, the conveyance necessarily became a nullity. The consideration of the conveyance was the release by Anthony of an attachment on Houghton's property ; but on discovery of the cloud upon Houghton's title, Anthony proceeded to enforce his attachment. Here is the strongest possible evidence of rejection of the deed by Anthony, and neither he nor his privies can now be heard in a court of justice to assert the operative effect of the repudiated conveyance.
It is an elementary rule, which forbids a man to blow hot and cold with reference to the same transaction—to insist at different times on the truth of each of two conflicting allegations, ac cording to the promptings of his private interest (Broom's Legal Maxims, 4th ed., 169).
The judgment of the Court below finds support as well in technical law as in substantial justice.