Court Opinion

ID: 3585109
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:35:20.336743+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:54:54.743997
License: Public Domain

The action is in ejectment, to recover the possession of a farm. The plaintiff had a verdict in her favor and the judgment upon that verdict has been affirmed at the Appellate Division, by the unanimous vote of the justices. The appeal to this court presents a question, arising upon exceptions to the admission of the plaintiff's testimony of conversations between herself and the defendant. The plaintiff and the original defendant, upon whose death, pending the action, the present defendants were brought in, claimed title by deeds from the same grantor. Cowan, their grantor, was the brother of the defendant and the plaintiff was a daughter of the defendant and his niece. In 1891, concededly, *Page 320 
he had executed a deed of the farm to the plaintiff. He was unmarried and she was his favorite niece, and in his will, made in 1892, she was sole legatee of his personal estate. According to the testimony of Walts, a lawyer, the deed to the plaintiff of the farm was drawn by him; it was kept in his office after its execution; in 1892, it was destroyed by Cowan, at a time when he executed a mortgage upon the property to secure a debt owing by him to a creditor, and, the same day, a deed of the same property was executed to Mrs. Lawyer, the defendant. This witness said "there never was any other deed in my possession from Cowan to the plaintiff." Inasmuch as the deed had been destroyed and could not, therefore, be produced by the plaintiff, it became necessary for her to prove her possession of the property through the delivery of the deed to her; a fact which, if established, would render ineffective the subsequent deed to Mrs. Lawyer. For this purpose, the plaintiff resorted to the evidence of witnesses; from whose testimony such facts and circumstances were made to appear as to justify a finding by the jury that the deed had been delivered to her and, therefore, that she was entitled to the possession of the property. If, in the admission of such evidence, no error has been committed, then, of course, the judgment is beyond attack in this court. The only assignment of error, of sufficient importance to demand consideration is, as already observed, the admission of plaintiff's evidence of conversations with the defendant. Two witnesses were called, who testified to having seen in the plaintiff's possession, in the summer of 1891, a paper upon which appeared the words "deed" and "John M. Cowan to his niece Aurelia Lawyer." One of these witnesses saw the same paper in Walts' office a few months afterwards, upon an occasion when, being with the plaintiff and having met Cowan, the plaintiff was asked by him to go there to see the deed, so that "in case anything happened to him, she would have a witness that the deed was there." When at Walts' office, the witness was shown the deed and observed Cowan's signature to it and the acknowledgment before a *Page 321 
commissioner of deeds. The other witness saw the deed, again, in the fall, at a time when Cowan came to plaintiff's house for it, saying that Walts told him to get it, as there "was something he wanted to fix in it," whereupon she gave it to him. She called three other witnesses to testify to their conversations with Mrs. Lawyer upon the subject of the deed. Each of them testified to statements by Mrs. Lawyer that Cowan had given a deed of the property to the plaintiff. One of them said that Mrs. Lawyer had told her that the plaintiff "had had the deed in the house quite a long time and that she had read it to her." Another said that Mrs. Lawyer told her that her brother had given the plaintiff the deed of the farm, "because Doll (the plaintiff) was his favorite." The plaintiff called the defendant, Mrs. Lawyer, to the stand and she testified that upon the occasion of a call by their clergyman, some time after Cowan's death, her daughter told him of her uncle having given her the farm and that she, the witness, had said "if she had done as she ought to have done, she would have had the farm. He was in debt and she would not sign any mortgage, so he destroyed the deed and raised the mortgage and made the deed over to me." Again, the witness testified that upon an occasion, when she, with her husband, Cowan's creditor and others were present in Walts' office, "they claimed if Doll did not sign the mortgage, it would not be good for anything" and that, upon the plaintiff's refusing to sign, her brother (Cowan) had given way to his feelings by crying. She testified that she "never saw any deed or anything of the kind made by John M. Cowan to Aurelia (plaintiff), but I know they said he drawed papers to her. That was before he went to work and made the deed to me."
At that stage of the case, the situation was this, while the plaintiff had succeeded in showing by evidence, more or less conclusive, that she had had possession of a deed made by Cowan to her and that her mother had admitted to others that she had known of a conveyance of the farm to her daughter in the latter's possession, yet, her mother had denied ever seeing *Page 322 
any such deed. Thereupon, the plaintiff took the stand, as a witness in her own behalf, and gave evidence of conversations in 1891 between her mother and herself with reference to the farm. The evidence was admitted, over the objection of the defendants that it was incompetent under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and whether her testimony was admissible is the question for our consideration. She was not asked to testify to any transaction, or communication, had, personally, between herself and Cowan, the deceased grantor. She was permitted to testify to conversations with her mother about a deed of the farm, at the time, in her possession, and the argument is that such testimony involved, indirectly, proof of a personal transaction with the deceased and, therefore, became inadmissible. I do not think that the provisions of section 829 have any application to the case. The witness was not attempting to establish her title under the deed by testifying to any communication between herself and the deceased, or to any personal transactions between them. She was testifying to conversations between herself and her mother, during which she had exhibited her uncle's deed of the farm to her, while in her possession, and had read out its contents. Her testimony was of facts occurring in their intercourse, which showed that her mother had testified falsely in denying knowledge of the deed. It went to prove admissions and declarations by her mother negativing her previous testimony upon the subject. It is true that her evidence went to prove that there must have been a delivery of the deed; but the statute does not forbid evidence of extraneous facts and circumstances, from which a delivery by the deceased might be inferred. The issue between the plaintiff and her mother was whether the latter's deed was of any validity and it became a question of veracity between them whether the latter had not known, before she ever received her own deed, or, indeed, before it had ever been executed, that her daughter was the grantee of the property. Each claimed the right to the possession under separate deeds from the same grantor. The defendant had hers; *Page 323 
the plaintiff's had been destroyed. If defendant had known of the plaintiff's superior title, through a perfected grant, the plaintiff was entitled to show it by any declarations of the defendant, from which that knowledge would be evidenced. They stood before the tribunal, equally, entitled to make out a case from whatever proof, of a competent nature, was attainable, and if the jurors believed the plaintiff's evidence and her testimony of what came to her mother's knowledge, I can conceive of no legal rule, or principle, which has been violated.
The extent of the operation of section 829 has been much discussed and it is needless to review the discussion now. For some time, it was doubted how far its provisions extended to such cases as where a person offered to testify to conversations, or transactions, between persons since deceased and a third person in the presence, or hearing, of the witness. It was, finally, held that they might not be testified to by such witness, if he participated in the transaction, or conversation, or was in any way a party to it, by reference, or otherwise. In Hutton v.Smith, (175 N.Y. 375), that question was considered and the cases reviewed. But the present case involves no such close question. The purpose of this provision of the Code is to prevent undue advantage and that purpose is to be borne in mind when questions arise. (Wadsworth v. Heermans, 85 N.Y. 639.) If we are to give to the language "concerning a personal transaction" so broad a signification, as to exclude the evidence of facts not constituting the transaction and not proving any communications between the parties, and which had nothing to do with their negotiations, we should be using the Code provision as an instrument to work inequality and, therefore, injustice. (Hard
v. Ashley, 117 N.Y. 606, at p. 618.)
I advise the affirmance of the judgment.
CULLEN, Ch. J., EDWARD T. BARTLETT, WILLARD BARTLETT, and CHASE, JJ., concur; VANN, J., not voting; HAIGHT, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *Page 324