82 N.Y.S. 998 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
In this action the plaintiff claimed to be entitled to the specific performance of a contract which she asserts was entered into
It is well settled that in actions, of this character the ordinary rules of law which-govern in actions for .the specific enforcement of contracts will be rigidly applied. As was remarked in Gall v. Gall (64 Hun, 600): “ These rules require that the contract be certain and definite in all its parts ; that it be mutual and founded upon an adequate consideration; and-that it be established by the clearest and .most convincing evidence. - Even then, when the contract limits, á man’s right to dispose of his property by will, it is regarded with suspicion and enforced only when it is apparent that the hand of equity is-required to prevent a fraud upon the promisee.” (See, also, Winne v. Winne, 166 N. Y. 263 ; Healy v. Healy, 55 App. Div. 315; Shakespeare v. Markham, 72 N. Y. 403; Kine v. Farrell, 71 App. Div. 219 ; Godine v. Kidd, 64 Hun, 585 ; Gates v. Gates, 34 App. Div. 608;)
.- -In determining this cause the justice at Special Term by whom it was tried dismissed the complaint on the merits,: holding that the plaintiff’s casé was fatally defective, the proof resting entirely upon the husband’s declarations, and the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses being contradictory and improbable.
On a careful examination of the whole record, we find no reason for dissenting from that view of the case. The plaintiff sought to establish -by the testimony óf the witness Rosenberg that the contract was made just prior to the marriage agreement between the
No provision was made for the plaintiff by will, and she brought an action, which she prosecuted successfully to judgment, in which she claimed dower in her husband’s real estate; and by the judgment it was awarded to her. The institution of that action and the benefit derived therefrom, while it may not be an estoppel against the prosecution of other claims against the estate, is entirely incompatible with the existence of such a contract as she sets forth in her complaint. If, by agreement, all the property of which her husband died seized and possessed was hers, why should she seek dower in that to which she 'was absolutely entitled ? There are other acts of hers referred to in the evidence at variance with the claim she now urges, but it is unnecessary to refer to them. On the whole record we think the justice at Special Term was justified in dismissing the complaint, and, as the case was presented to him, it was proper to dismiss it on the merits.
However, there is proof in the record that the plaintiff advanced to Oonlon a certain sum of money. That advance may constitute an enforcible claim against his estate. We think that the plaintiff should not be precluded from enforcing a claim to recover that money, if one exists. It may be that the judgment entered herein would not have the effect of so precluding her, but there should be
As thus modified the judgment should be . affirmed, with costs to the respondents.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred. '
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, with costs to respondents.