124 Minn. 114 | Minn. | 1913
This action is brought by the plaintiff to enforce specific performance of an alleged verbal agreement whereby he was to have the property of Frederick W. Brasch and Rachel J. Brasch, husband and wife, at their death. Frederick W. Brasch died June 2, 1906, and Rachel J. Brasch died July 5, 1911. Both died intestate. Upon his death all of Brasch’s property passed by the decree of the probate court to Rachel J. Brasch. The heirs at law and the administrator of Rachel J. Brasch are the defendants. Judgment was entered adjudging by way of specific performance that the plaintiff was the owner of certain property in Chippewa county of which Rachel J. Brasch died seized; and that the defendant heirs were the owners of the rest of her property. The plaintiff and the defendants appeal.
The Brasches were childless. For many years they lived upon a farm in Renville county. The plaintiff was born there on June 18, 1884. When he was about one and one-half years old, and after the death of his father, his mother, who was about to marry, claims to have made an agreement with the Brasches, with whom she had herself lived since she was two years old, relative to the care of her child. She claims that they wanted to keep him, and agreed that if she would leave him with them they would rear and educate him as their own and would leave him their property at their death. Soon afterward she married, after a few years went west, and passed out of the lives of her son and the Brasches. The plaintiff was reared by the Brasches and the ostensible relation between them was that of parent and son. ITe was not told that they were not his parents and he supposed that they were. He lived with them until the death
The court found that the Brasches took the plaintiff under an agreement with his mother that,, if she would leave him with them, they would rear and educate him, and after they were through with their property they would give the child what they had left. This finding is justified. The court further found that the property in contemplation was the property upon which they then lived in Ben-ville county. This finding is not justified. Under the evidence there was an agreement that the plaintiff should have all of the property owned by the Brasches at their death or there was no agreement. Pursuant to its finding that the agreement related to the Benville county farm, the court decreed to the plaintiff the home farm in Chippewa county which it is assumed came from the proceeds of the Benville county farm which was sold prior to the death of Braseh. In addition to the land decreed to the plaintiff, Mrs. Braseh died seized of considerable other property which was decreed to the defendant heirs.
The law applicable to cases of this kind is well settled. There must be full and satisfactory proof of the fact of a contract and of its terms before there can be specific performance. If the contract is sufficiently proved, and is definite in terms, and there has been performance'by the plaintiff, and a peculiar and domestic relation has been assumed pursuant to which services incapable of pecuniary valuation have been rendered, specific performance will be decreed. The evidence is always to be examined attentively and weighed carefully. The object is to find the truth. The large burden of responsibility for a correct result is upon the trial court. The following cases illustrate the principles applicable: Svanburg v. Fosseen, 75 Minn. 350, 78 N. W. 4; Stellmacher v. Bruder, 89 Minn. 507, 95 N. W. 324; Laird v. Vila, 93 Minn. 45, 100 N. W. 656; Richardson v. Richardson, 114 Minn. 12, 130 N. W. 4; Haubrich v. Haubrich, 118 Minn. 394, 136 N. W. 1025.
We are unable to hold, though we appreciate that the trial court has given the case painstaking care, that the evidence justifies a finding that the agreement related to less than all of the property which
Judgment reversed on both appeals and new trial ordered.