192 A.D. 583 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The action was brought against the executors of the estate of John W. Hunt, deceased, to recover the sum of $10,700 on alleged expressed contracts for compensation for services rendered to John W. Hunt in his lifetime by the plaintiff. The complaint alleges four causes of action. The first, that in 1909 John W. Hunt promised and agreed to pay the plaintiff the sum of $10,000 in consideration of services theretofore rendered by her to him. The second, for work, labor and services performed by plaintiff for Mr. Hunt between April 1 and October 1, 1910, of the reasonable value and for which Mr. Hunt agreed to pay $600. The third to recover the sum of $100 money paid out and expended by the plaintiff between April 1 and October 1, 1910, for and at the request of Mr. Hunt and which he promised and agreed to repay. The fourth, that about January, 1909, an account was stated between the plaintiff and Mr. Hunt and that thereupon the sum of $10,000 was found due to the plaintiff for services rendered to him by plaintiff, and that he had promised and agreed to pay the plaintiff said sum.
John W. Hunt and Dr. and Mrs. Frisbie had been socially intimate for some years. Mr. Hunt was a man of wealth who had been divorced from his wife and maintained a large and expensive house in Washington, D. C. Dr. Frisbie was an examiner in the Pension Office, receiving a salary of thirty-five dollars or forty dollars per month. Hunt’s housekeeper left,
Mr. Hunt returned from abroad in June, 1909, and instituted an action for divorce, in which a decree was entered in his favor. He resided in the Hotel Woodward in New York city and Mrs. Frisbie’s son, Henry B. Caldwell, was with him almost constantly in the most confidential relations for about two weeks. He testified that Mr. Hunt stated to him that he was going to give his mother $10,000 that he had promised her previously; that he mentioned that he had promised this to her on several occasions, and that he was now going to make good on this promise and he wanted Mrs. Frisbie to come back and look after him; that he had $90,000 lying idle in the bank and he wanted to utilize that money to make good his promise to Mrs. Frisbie and others. Six months later, Caldwell testified Mr. Hunt said that he was considering establishing an annuity for the Frisbies, the income of which would be equal to Dr. Frisbie’s salary from his position, the amount he did not remember, it was something in the neighborhood of $50,000. In the summer of 1910 Mrs. Frisbie desired to go to the seashore and selected a house which she persuaded Mr. Hunt to rent, and she again became the lady of the house, at Asbury Park, her husband and son spending much time with them, all at Mr. Hunt’s expense. Mr. Hunt was ill most of the time, and while there prepared and executed his will. Dr. Frisbie was one of the witnesses to the will.
The second and third causes of action are to recover for the value of Mrs. Frisbie’s services in acting as housekeeper at
The alleged agreement on which the first cause of action is based was not an arrangement made in advance of the rendition of the services, but was a promise to pay at some indefinite future time for services rendered nine years prior to the alleged promise. Although Dr. Frisbie testified that before Mrs. Frisbie entered upon the performance of the contract, Mr. Hunt made a statement that Mrs. Frisbie would be amply compensated, and that he never asked any one to work for him without paying them, and that Mr. Hunt was a man of large means and the Frisbies were living on a small salary, no request or demand for payment, nor even a suggestion that there was an obligation to pay, was made during Hunt’s lifetime. Hunt died December 11, 1910, in Dallas, Tex. His will was admitted to probate and letters testamentary were issued by the Supreme Court, New York county, on March 30, 1913. The executors advertised for claims, and the time to file claims against the estate expired in December, 1913, and it was not until February, 1914, that the claim was filed and then only the claim for $10,000. On July 29, 1913, Mrs. Frisbie wrote to Mr. Harris, one of the executors, as follows (the italics are mine):
“I am informed that Mr. Hunt’s estate is nearing settlement and have been wondering what I should do in regard to my interest.
“ I think you may know that it was Mr. Hunt’s intention to make a provision for us in his will but I am told that his last will does not mention our names, although Mr. Hunt made a number of promises which it seems he failed to keep.
“As you are an old friend and his executor, and probably know the truth of what I am trying to state, I should be glad to have you advise me what I had better do in regard to my claim.”
This letter tends strongly to disprove the plaintiff’s case. If a definite agreement had been made four years before this letter was written to pay Mrs. Frisbie $10,000, why is no mention made of it in this letter? The natural thing to do under such circumstance would be to make a demand for payment of the debt, and not to be seeking evidence of some agreement to make a provision by will. That there was a disappointed expectation of a gratuity by will is further shown by the change of attitude of Mrs. Frisbie and her son toward Mr. Hunt after the will was executed. We find them becoming partisans of his divorced wife, and supplying affidavits for the wife to use upon a motion to set aside the judgment against her and for a new trial, not for the purpose of proving her innocence, but to show Mr. Hunt’s guilt of a similar offense, and thus securing to her marital rights in his property. The proof of the alleged agreement rests upon the uncorroborated testimony of Dr. Frisbie, whose interest in the event was not direct and pecuniary so as to disqualify him from testifying under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, yet it was such that he could not be termed a disinterested witness. He was a man of approximately eighty years of age, he was testifying to a transaction six years after the event. He stated several times that his recollection had been refreshed by conversations with Mrs. Frisbie and Mrs. Hunt. Mrs. Hunt, who was present at the alleged conversation of January, 1909, was not called by the plaintiff, although plaintiff’s attorney in this
The evidence produced on the part of the plaintiff is not of the quality that Judge Vann has said was necessary. In speaking of parol contracts first brought forward and claim made upon, after the death of a party, he, speaking for the court said: “ Contracts of the character in question have become so frequent in recent years as to cause alarm, and the courts have grown conservative as to the nature of the evidence required to establish them, and in enforcing them, when established, by specific performance. Such contracts are easily fabricated and hard to disprove, because the sole contracting party on one side is always dead when the question arises. They are the natural resort of unscrupulous persons who wish to despoil the estates of decedents. * * * Such contracts should be in writing, and the writing should be produced, or, if ever based upon parol evidence, it should be given or corroborated in all substantial particulars by disinterested witnesses. * * * We wish to be emphatic upon the subject, for we are impressed with the danger, and aim to protect the community from the spoliation of dead men’s estates by proof of such contracts through parol evidence given by interested witnesses.” (Hamlin v. Stevens, 177 N. Y. 39, 47, 50; Rosseau v. Rouss, 180 id. 116, 120; Taylor v. Higgs, 202 id. 65, 70.) The respondent contends that later decisions of the Court of Appeals have substantially modified these rules. (McKeon v. Van Slyck, 223 N. Y. 392; Ward v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 225 id. 314; Matter of Sherman, 227 id. 350.) I do not understand that the Court of Appeals intended to alter the principles or policy of the earlier decisions, but only to correct errors in their application by lower courts. The court never said that as a matter of law the witness must be corroborated in all substantial particulars. Nor did it intend to lay down a different rule as to the burden of proof resting on the plaintiff in these and other civil cases. That is what these later cases state. But as to the quality of the proof itself, the rule remains that the lips of one party to the contract are sealed in death, that the other party and his relatives are liable to be swayed by interest, and are relieved from the fear of direct contradiction, and, therefore, they should be corroborated by dis
Furthermore, in 1899, it is claimed that Mr. Hunt stated that if the plaintiff would take charge of his house she would be amply compensated. If, relying on that promise, she performed the agreement on her part and rendered the service, a right of action for the reasonable value of her work, labor and service accrued in May, 1900, when she left the employment. Her claim was barred by the Statute of Limitations (Code Civ. Proc. § 382) and the oral promise in 1909 would not be sufficient to take the case out of the operation of the statute. Such an acknowledgment or promise must be in writing and signed by the person to be charged. (Code Civ. Proc. I 395.) _
_ The judgment and findings should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Dowling and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs. Settle order on notice.