19 N.Y.S. 335 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The plaintiff, claiming to be the owner of a one-fourth interest in the premises in West Washington place, brings this action to eject the defendant, who is in possession of the premises. The complaint alleges that one Elizabeth Knapp died in June, 1890, being at that time seised in fee of the property. That her title thereto was derived through one William Parscyl, who died seised and possessed of the lot of land on the 11th day of May, 1849, leaving a last will, whereby he devised the same to Edwin Knapp and the said Elizabeth Knapp, his wife, and the survivor of them. Edwin Knapp died July 4, 1887, leaving Elizabeth Knapp, his wife, surviving, who thereupon became seised in fee in her own right of the premises in question, and continued in possession thereof until the time of her death. That, she having died intestate, the plaintiff, who was a niece of said Elizabeth Knapp and one of her heirs, became entitled to one undivided fourth part of such real estate. In answer to the claim thus made, the defendant alleged as a defense that in April, 1844, her mother, with the consent and approval of her father, gave and surrendered her, then an infant of the age of one and a half years, to the said Elizabeth and Edwin Knapp, for and in consideration that they then and there promised and agreed to adopt and bring her up as their daughter, give her their name, make her their heir, and that the property they might have at their decease should go to her in case she should survive them. That in pursuance of such agreement she was immediately taken by the Knapps, and lived with them, and so continued until the time of their death, and was at all times treated by them as their daughter, bearing their name, and being by them given in marriage under the name of Henrietta Knapp to Richard R. Kidd. Upon the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, (ordering the exceptions to be heard in the first instance at the general term,) upon the ground that the equitable defense set up was not sufficient to exclude the heirs at law. It was thus assumed by the learned trial judge, just as the evidence warranted, that an agreement substantially as set forth in the defense was established. It was made to appear that Mr. and Mrs. Knapp, who were childless, made application to the mother of the defendant, when the latter was but 18 months old, for permission to take and bring the child up, agreeing to treat her as their own daughter, and in all respects to make provision for her as their own child, including a disposition of their property in her favor at their death. The agreement, so far as any obligation was imposed on a child towards parents, was fulfilled by the defendant; and so far as concerns that part of the agreement by which the Knapps were to leave her their property, this was partially performed by the will made in favor of the defendant by Mr. Knapp, who at the time claimed and supposed himself to be, as did Mrs. Knapp, the owner, not only of the personal property which by the terms of his will went to the defendant, but also of the real estate in which, however, together with his wife, he only took an estate by the entirety; which left the property in such position that it did not pass, as he intended it should under the terms of his will, to the defendant, but passed to his wife, by reason of her surviving him.
In the case of Gall v. Gall, 19 N. Y. Supp. 332, (handed down herewith,) this question has been considered by this court, and the views expressed by Mr. Justice Talcott in Shakespeare v. Markham, 10 Hun, 322, have been referred to with approval. It was in the latter case said: “There is upon the authorities no doubt that, in a case where a certain and definite contract is clearly established, even though it involves an agreement to leave property by will, and it has been performed on the part of the promisee, equity, in a case free from all objections on account of the adequacy of the consideration, or other circumstances rendering the claim inequitable, will compel a specific, performance. ” Again, the courts require clearest evidence that a contract founded on a valuable consideration, and certain and definite in all its parts, should be shown to have been deliberately made by the d.ecedent. In his able
It will thus be seen that, while the courts are reluctant to enforce such contracts where there is the slightest suspicion of fraud, or the slightest doubt as to the existence and certainty of the contract, yet the law recognizes that specific performance will be decreed of a definite contract, founded upon an adequate consideration, which is established by the clearest proof. Where, therefore, the act of adoption is based upon a contract, it is not the law or statute regulating, adoption that is to prevail, but the law relative to contracts. Whart. Confl. Laws, § 251.
Applying the principles thus laid down for our guidance, the conclusion to be reached in this case must necessarily depend upon the character and strength of the evidence adduced to support the contract alleged. In respect thereto we have no more difficulty than did the learned trial judge in arriving at the conclusion upon the testimony that Mrs. Kidd, while an infant, was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Knapp, and “ made substantially and virtually their child.” The agreement made between these people and the mother of Mrs. Kidd, showing the complete surrender of the child to them on condition that they should have the care and custody of the child, free from any control or interference on the part of the parents, and upon their death should leave her their property, is clearly established. We have not only direct testimony as to the terms of the agreement, but all the surrounding circumstances unequivocally support its existence. So complete was the control vested in the Knapps that from 1844 to the date of Mrs. Knapp’s death, in June, 1890, the defendant never knew but that she was actually the child of Mr. and Mrs. Knapp, and it was only after her marriage that she learned she was the child of other parents. The enforcement of the contract here will not result in inj ustice to any third persons, nor is it against public policy; but, in view of the literal way in which it has been performed upon the part of the defendant’s parents and her own, it would be an extreme hardship, and both inequitable and unjust, if she were now prevented, after all these years of performance on her part and that of her parents, from enforcing it. Even though we should assume, therefore, that none of the arrangements between the parties was of original binding obligation upon the defendant’s parents, yet the subsequent
As already stated, there is abundant law to sustain the view that, “ where a certain and definite contract is clearly established, even though it involves an agreement to leave property by will, and it has been performed on the part of the promisee, equity, in a case free from all objections on account of the adequacy of the consideration, or other circumstances rendering the claim inequitable, will compel specific performance.” Though recognizing this