24 Misc. 65 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1898
That claimant has established an agreement on the part of testatrix to devise her farm to him and his brother Calvin, in consideration of their making improvements thereon and paying her debt to Lydia Sherman, there can be no doubt. To be sure there is no direct testimony as to'such agreement, but several witnesses swear that they each, at different times, heal’d testatrix sa.y that she had made such an arrangement with them, who are not only uncontradicted, but Calvin, himself, who is one of the executors and sole devisee, although on the stand as a witness and examined at length on behalf of the estate and against this claim, and who must have known whether such agreement ever existed or not, does not attempt to deny it, It is further evidenced by the fact that the boys, immediately after the alleged date thereof, commenced making improvements on the farm of a permanent character, such as the erection of buildings, viz., a wagon-house, sheep barn, ice-house, tool and henhouse, and also established a system of drainage thereon, constructing closed and open ditches, laid tile^ built stone walls and new fences, involving an expenditure of several hundred dollars, and also assumed the said debt of testa,trix of $2,100, for which they gave their note less $300 of principal and $105 of accrued interest, which they then paid in cash. Excluding the inducement of this promise to them no* explanation is given for this large outlay of money,
But so far as the brother is concerned the testatrix has performed and he is in possession of the whole farm, as devisee; so long as this situation continues he has no claim either fox-specific performance or compensation; he has been settled with and the rule is that the other has his separate remedy for his share. Lansing v. Bliss, supra. In considering how much he is entitled to recover, the agreement, being void under the Statute of Frauds, cannot be accepted as fixing the measure, although it was said in Lisk v. Sherman, 25 Barb. 433; Burlingame v. Burlingame, 7 Cow. 92; Fort v. Gooding, 9 Barb. 376, that it could be. The rule is, in such cases of void contracts, that there is an implied assumpsit on the part of the defaulting party to reimburse the other to the extent of the value of his services or the money he had expended. Day v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 51 N. Y. 583; Reed v. McConnell, 133 id. 425. The evidence shows that the claimant’s share amounts to $693.60, and I think he would be entitled to interest Thereon-from a time prior to the date of the death of testatrix-had he demanded it in his complaint or on the trial. It is true that by the terms
In the Reed case Judge Andrews says: “ The law in such case will raise an implied assumpsit in favor of the other party to accomplish justice and prevent fraud.” It would be doing but partial justice to' limit the implied agreement to the payment of the principal. In this case the claimant has lost the use of his money for years and the testatrix has had the benefit thereof. He was in no position to demand payment before her death, for the law assumed that she would discharge her moral obligation; she having failed, the plainest equity demands that she should not profit thereby, but should return to the claimant all she received from him, which includes the value of the use of his money and services; but the claimant having failed to ask, either in his complaint or on the trial, for interest prior to the death of testatrix, the computation must be from that time. Shreve, C. & L. Co. v. Holbrook, 87 Hun, 621; 68 N. Y. St. Repr. 468. The proceeding in which this claim incidentally arises is the judicial settlement' of the estate of testatrix, which involves the determination of all matters necessary to a full and complete distribution; hence it is proper at this
In the present case the testatrix made no' agreement to give the claimant a legacy, she agreed to devise her farm to him and his brother, he was to have land, not money, and had she done as she agreed he would have received three times as much as she gave him; she gives the whole farm to the brother, subject to this legacy. Can it be said, under such circumstances, that she was attempting, by the provision she made, to carry out her agreement with the claimant ? It lacks every element of performance ; what she gave him was wholly different in kind and quantity from v'hat she agreed, and the delivery was postponed for two years beyond the time agreed on. So radically different is the scheme she adopted from the one she promised that I am led irresistibly to the conclusion that, instead of intending to consummate it, she deliberately ignored it. Certainly what she gave Calvin, beyond his half interest in the farm, was by way of bounty. There would be more plausibility in the claim of payment, by the legacy to Frank, if he was not her son; some allowance must be made for the fact that he was a natural object of her bounty and not a mere stranger. The agreement
Decreed accordingly.