276 F. 87 | 9th Cir. | 1921
(after stating the facts as above). When the case was before this court on writ of error to the judgment of the court below sustaining the demurrer to the bill and dismissing it, that judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to require the defendants to answer. 251 Fed. 234, 163 C. C. A. 390. The question of the sufficiency of the bill is therefore settled.
One other thing we must take to be settled, and that is the fact, found by the court below, that the deceased, Corbett, was the half-brother of Bridget Madden. The record would not, in our opinion, justify us in interfering with that finding. Therefore it is clear, in view of the former decision of this court (251 Fed. pp. 237, 238, 163 C. C. A. 390), and of the statutes of Idaho and the decisions of its Supreme Court there referred to, and of the further fact shown by the record that Bridget Madden, a nonresident foreigner, failed to initiate her claim to the estate of the deceased within the required statutory time after his death, there can be no doubt of the right of the appellants Celia Diamond and Bridget McGrail to judgment, unless they failed to establish by proof the alleged fraud, or their rights are barred by limitation or laches, or by the conveyance from Bridget Madden, or by the alleged written contract by which for a valuable consideration Corbett provided that at his death all of his property should go to the said Lawrence P. Connolly, John J. Connolly, William Connolly, and Ellen Udell.
*90 “In support thereof defendant offered in evidence a writing bearing date April 28, 1899, at Erina, Nebraska, where all the parties then resided. For certain valuable considerations, therein named, Corbett agreed that at his death all his property should in equal shares go to the four Connollys, and upon the other hand, in case of the prior death of a Connolly, Corbett was to share in his estate equally with the other parties. To the instrument are attached the genuine signatures of €.11 the parties, including Corbett. The infirmity of the instrument as evidence lies in the fact that it consists of two pieces of paper glued together, upon one of which is the body of the agreement, and upon the other the signatures and date line together with the name of a witness. In corroboration of his own testimony as to the circumstances of its execution, defendant produced in court a citizen of Nebraska, living near Erina, who testified that he drafted the instrument, and explained how pieces of paper happened to be used. Another witness testified that Corbett left it in his keeping for a short time, and still another as to finding it with other effects of the intestate some time after his death. There was no attempt to cover up the fact that the instrument is ‘pieced,’ for the body is in green type while the latter part is in purple It bears the appearance of having been in its present condition for a considerable time, and the relations existing between the parties at the date it bears were such that it cannot be said to be improbable that Corbett would have entered into such an arrangement.
The veracity of the witnesses is not impeached, there is no contradictory testimony, and there are corroborating circumstances. But, upon the other hand, there are certain inherent improbabilities and opposing circumstances. Upon the one side it is pointed out that defendant did not plead or produce the instrument in the probate court, and upon the other it is to be said that at the very outset, when the controversy' first arose, he referred to it, and soon thereafter exhibited it to Bridget Madden’s attorneys. Upon the whole, it is thought that if, in such a case, it were requisite only that there be a preponderance of the evidence, the finding would have to be for the defendant; the weight is decidedly upon that side. But, while I have discovered no adjudication upon the subject, I am inclined to think that, where the law requires evidence of a transaction to be in writing, an instrument of this character ought not to be received, unless the proofs are so convincing as to leave little, if any, room for doubt that it was in the same condition when it was signed. It is so unusual for parties to commit their agreements to a form so objectionable that a strong presumption should be indulged against it, especially in a case where, as here, one of the parties is dead.
Injustice may sometimes result from the enforcement of such a rule, and in this case the rejection of the instrument may so result. But such a possibility also attends the enforcement of the rule requiring written evidence. The imprudence of putting a contract containing executory provisions to become operative only upon the death of one of the parties into such an unusual and precarious form should have been obvious, and, if the defendant suffers by reason of the rejection off the instrument, his loss must be attributed to his own want of care. My conclusion is that, while preponderating in the defendant’s favor, the proofs are not sufficiently conclusive, and hence the offer should have been rejected, and accordingly the instrument will be stricken out and disregarded.” •
An inspection of the original of that alleged contract which was afforded us at the oral argument of the case confirms us in the opinion that the court below was right in its ruling regarding it.
The defenses based upon laches and the limitations prescribed by the statutes of Idaho were covered and disposed of by the former decision of this court (251 Fed. page 241, 163 C. C. A. 390), where it was also decided that the sureties of the administrator were proper parties to the suit in order to do complete justice “in case the administrator should fail to pay.”
There are certain pregnant facts in it which preclude us from taking that view of the case. That he who undertakes the administration of the estate of a deceased person is a trustee for the heirs of the deceased was expressly held by this court when the case was last here, and is the well-established law. Many years ago, in the leading case of Michoud et al. v. Girod et ah, 4 How. 503, 11 L. Ed. 1076, involving a purchase by executors at public sale of property of the estate, where they were empowered by the will to sell the estate of their testator for the benefit of heirs and'legatees, a part of which heirs and legatees they themselves were, the Supreme Court of the United States said:
“The rule of equity is, in every codo oí jurisprudence with which we are acquainted, that a purchase by a trustee or agent of the particular property of which he has the sale, or in which he represents another, whether he has an interest in it or not — per intorpositam personam — -carries fraud on the face of it. * * * The general rule stands upon our great moral obligation to refrain from placing ourselves in relations which ordinarily excite a conflict between self-interest and integrity. It restrains all agents, public and private; but the value of the prohibition is most felt, and its application is more frequent, in the private relations in which the vendor and purchaser may stand towards each other. The disability to purchase is a consequence of that relation between them which imposes on the one a duty to protect the interest of Lhe other," from the faithful discharge of which duty his own personal interest may withdraw him. In this conflict of interest, the law wisely interposes. It acts not on the possibility that, in some cases, the sense of that duty may prevail over the motives of self-interest; but it provides against; the probability in many eases, and the danger in all cases, that the dictates of self-interest will exercise a predominant influence, and supersede, that of duty. It therefore prohibits a party from purchasing on Ms own account that which Ms duty or trust requires Mm to sell on account of another, and from purchasing on account of another that which he sells on his own account. In effect, he is not allowed to unite the two opposite characters of buyer and seller, because his interests, when he is the seller or buyer on his own account, are directly conflicting with those of the person on whose account he buys or sells.”
The evidence in the present case shows that Corbett died in January, 1907, and that the decree of distribution of bis estate upon the petition of the administrator was entered August 23, 1909, and that on the 28th of Tune, 1912, the entire estate was actually distributed by the administrator to himself, his brothers, and his sister. Between the time of tiie entry of the decree of distribution and such actual distribution, however, according to the evidence, to wit, in the spring of 1911, the administrator went to Ireland, taking with him a Catholic priest, to see the old and ignorant woman, .Bridget Madden, for the purpose of acquiring all of her interest in the estate. It is undisputed that, being the half-sister of the deceased, she was, under and by virtue of section 570,2 of the Revised Codes of Idaho, entitled to the entire estate, and by virtue of section 5715 o£ the same Codes, although a nonresident foreigner, was entitled to take the estate by succession at any time within five years after the death of the decedent.
The learned judge seems from his opinion to have attached great importance to the testimony given on behalf of the defendants, to the effect that the administrator did not know and had never heard of the existence of Celia Diamond or Bridget McGrail prior to the entry of the decree of distribution. But, beyond any sort of, question, he did know while still administrator, and therefore trustee of the estate of the deceased, that if and when the right of succession existing in Bridget Madden should cease by reason of her failure to claim the estate within five years after the death of the deceased, there might be other “next of kin” entitled to take by succession under and by virtue of the above-cited section 5702 of the Idaho statute which provides that
“If the decedent leave neither issue, husband, wife, father, mother, brother nor sister, the estate must go to the next of kin in equal degree,” etc.
For such “next of kin,” whoever they might be, the administrator of the decedent’s estate continued trustee. Yet, while occupying that relation to the estate, and to whoever might be entitled to succeed to it under the law of Idaho, the uncontradicted evidence shows that the administrator went to Ireland in the spring of 1911, taking with him a Catholic priest, and on the 10th day of April of that year obtained from Bridget Madden, the half-sister of the deceased, in consideration of $2,500 paid to her, and $1,500 paid to her lawyers, a deed purporting to convey to him the entire estate of the deceased, which was appraised under his administration, as has been seen, at $21,356 in value, and which the evidence shows in truth greatly exceeded that amount.
It is true that the appellants Celia Diamond and Bridget McGrail did not and could not, as we think and as did the court below, claim to derive any right under or through Bridget Madden, but only as next of kin of the deceased in the event she did not make claim to the estate as heir within the five-year period allowed by the Idaho statute for that purpose. But, most obviously, the administrator represented, as trustee, that contingent right in them precisely the same and to the same extent as he represented as trustee the right of Bridget Madden as heir; and the same principle of equity, in our opinion, forbade him from acquiring, or in any way defeating, the interest or right of either the heir or next of kin.
The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded to the court below, for further proceedings in accordance with the views above expressed.