13 N.J. Eq. 246 | New York Court of Chancery | 1861
The- bill' ©barges, that in the year 1849, the defendant, James "W. Davison, being seized and possessed of bis- homestead- farm of one hundred acres,
That he has faithfully performed the said agreement on his part by the cultivation and improvement of the farm, by the payment of the- said portions to his sisters, by making permanent and valuable improvements upon the farm, and by affording a comfortable maintenance to his parents till the death of his mother, and to his father since her decease, as- long as he was permitted to do so, and that by reason thereof b® became justly and legally entitled to the farm upon.the death’of his father, he continuing, as he is able and willing to do, to afford a comfortable maintenance to his father during the residue of his life.
The bill prays that the- contract may he established and performed on the part of James "W. Davison; that the deed made by the said James-"W. Davison to his sons, Reuben and Joseph,, may be vacated upon just-and equitable terms;- or if the contract cannot be enforced, that the defendant may he decreed to account for the services of the complainant, and to pay him what may he found due upon such accounting, and for an injunction to¡restrain proceedings at law. .Upon filing the bill an injunction issued, which was afterwards dissolved upon the coming in of the defendants’ answer, which denied the equity of the hill.
“ To Mr. James Davison, junior.
Take notice that your service is not wanting o.n my farm now conveyed away to my two sons Reuben and Joseph Davison and I have give them immediate possession of the same and if you continue thereon I shall hold you as a trespasser, and proceed against you according to law, and further I shall not want any more of your help to gather in my crop at present o.n said farm.”
Refusing to give up possession an ejectment was brought by the brothers. The complainant sought to protect himself by injunction, but the defendants, by their answer, denying all the equity of the bill, the injunction was dissolved, and the complainant was turned out of possession. And thus, after fifteen years’ labor from his attaining his majority in his father’s service, during nine of which he had the entire control and management of the farm, engaged faithfully and laboriously, and as appears by the evidence, to bis father’s entire satisfaction, having received no compensation, whatever' for his services beyond a bare subsistence, he is turned out of his home without a dollar’s compensation, and so far as appears without the means of subsistence. And as if to deprive him of the possibility of obtaining redress, the title of the farm is immediately conveyed to two of the complainant’s brothers, the goods and chattels converted into money, and thus the entire real and personal estate of the father placed beyond the reach of legal process. The case, in its leading features, is a most extraordinary one. The father, as appears not only by the testimony of numerous witnesses, but from his express recital in the deed to his sons, Reuben and Joseph, was in old age, infirm, and tmablp to take care of himself. He needed the services
The complainant claims, and I think the evidence satisfactorily proves, that these services by him were not ren
I entertain no doubt, from the evidence, that the eom
The agreement thus proved is valid in law; Jacobson v. Ex’rs of Legrange, 3 J. R. 199; Paterson v. Paterson, 13 J. R. 379; Chitty on Con. (9th ed.) 557, and cases cited in note 1, and may be enforced in equity; Gary v. Ex’rs of James, 4 Dess. 185; Johnson v. Hubbell, 2 Stockton 332.
That the contract was by parol and not in writing, while it greatly increases the difficulty of proving its terms, constitutes no valid objection to its enforcement. There has been a paid performance on the part of the complainant. He served his father several years upon the faith of the contract, and as the evidence shows faithfully and to his father’s satisfaction. Part performance takes the case out of the operation of the statute of frauds.
The contract is not proved precisely as laid in the complainant’s bill. The complainant charges that by the agreement he was to receive not only the real estate, but also the personal estate of his father upon making certain advances to his daughters. The evidence, so far as the personal estate is concerned, does not prove this contract. The bill must be amended so as to conform to the contract as proved. It may be done at this stage of the cause after hearing on bill, answer, and evidence. Bellows v. Stone, 14 New Hamp. 175. No embarrassment can result from it. It is not a case where the defendant sets up and proves a different contract from that relied on by the complainant. There the defendant is entitled to a decree for the performance of the contract as he proves it. Story’s Eq. Pl. § 394.
Here the defendant has utterly denied the existence of
Upon the bill being amended the court will decree that the contract, as proved, be established; that the complainant, upon the performance of the agreement on his part, or upon his readiness to perform if prevented by the acts of the defendants, will be entitled to the farm upon the death of the father; that the deed executed by the father to his sons, Beuben and Joseph, be set aside as fraudulent and void as against the complainant, and that the defendants, and each of them, be restrained from aliening, charging, or encumbering the said farm.
It is eminently desirable that this controversy should be amicably adjusted, and the court repeats the hope expressed on the argument, that a settlement may be effected between the parties without further action on the part of the court. The father is entitled to the enjoyment of the farm during his life. Ho present decree for the specific performance of the contract can be made. The complainant is entitled to the farm only upon the death of his father. By the terms of the contract, is to have the management of the farm and to provide for his father during his life. If the father refuses to accept the services of the complainant, and no amicable adjustment can be made, further directions will be given for the management of the farm and the support of the father during his life.