80 A. 773 | Conn. | 1911
The plaintiffs, the administrator and the heirs at law of one Mary A. Brockway, now deceased, in their complaint ask that a certain deed given by Miss Brockway in her lifetime to the defendant Mary E. Brooks be set aside, because Mrs. Brooks failed to perform certain agreements contained in the deed, in that she failed to pay the sum of $800, and failed to care for Miss Brockway when she was ill and needed care.
Upon the facts found the Superior Court reached the following conclusions: that the defendant Mary E. Brooks has not refused or neglected to comply with the terms of the agreement in the manner alleged in the complaint; that the plaintiffs are estopped from maintaining this action; that the deceased Mary A. Brockway made a valid, present gift to the defendant Mary E. Brooks of all the property described in the complaint, including the designated price or consideration of $800, subject to certain uses reserved to herself and to certain conditions subsequent, which have been fully enjoyed and performed and kept. Each of these facts is sufficient to prevent the plaintiffs' recovery. The reasons of appeal involve the action of the trial court in reaching the conclusions just stated.
As bearing upon the subject of estoppel, the facts found in substance are: January 18th, 1899, Mary A. *514 Brockway, an elderly lady, owned and occupied a house and lot of land in the town of Lyme, in New London county. She was a timid woman, and afraid to live alone in her house, and had let tenants occupy a part of it without rent. About one year previous to January, 1899, she took the defendants (Mr. and Mrs. Brooks) into her home and allowed them to occupy about two thirds of it without rent. The relations between Miss Brockway and the defendants became and continued friendly, and they always lived happily together in her house. To secure the continuance of these relations, Miss Brockway proposed to give the house to Mrs. Brooks if she would stay there on certain conditions, which Miss Brockway stated. Among the conditions so stated was an agreement that Mrs. Brooks was to care for Miss Brockway, or furnish some one to care for her, if at any time she should be sick and unable to care for herself. Mrs. Brooks accepted the gift of the place upon these conditions. On January 18th, 1899, Miss Brockway executed and delivered to Mrs. Brooks a warranty deed of the premises in question. This deed purported to be given for the consideration of $800 received to the full satisfaction of Miss Brockway. The grantor reserved in the deed the right to use and occupy that portion of the dwelling-house which she then occupied, and all other rights and privileges, which were fully set forth in a written agreement executed by the parties the 18th of January, 1899; and the deed expressly provided, as one of its conditions, that if the grantee at any time should refuse or neglect to comply with the terms of said agreement, such refusal or neglect "will make this deed null and void." The agreement contained these statements and provisions, among others: "The said Mary A. Brockway in consideration of the sum of eight hundred dollars to her paid by the said Mary E. Brooks, the receipt of which *515 is hereby acknowledged, and in further consideration of the promises and covenants of the said Mary E. Brooks hereinafter contained, hereby agrees with the said Mary E. Brooks, that she will on or before the 18th day of January A.D. 1899, make and deliver to the said Mary E. Brooks, a good and sufficient deed of all that tract or piece of land" in question. "In consideration hereof the said Mary E. Brooks, hereby agrees with the said Mary A. Brockway, that she will on receiving a deed of the above bounded and described property on or before the 18th day of January A.D. 1899, pay the said Mary A. Brockway, the sum of eight hundred dollars and faithfully keep and perform all the promises, covenants and agreements herein contained. . . . The said Mary E. Brooks further promises, covenants and agrees that should the said Mary A. Brockway be at any time sick and unable to care for herself she will care for or furnish some one to nurse and care for her during her sickness."
The plaintiffs hold under Miss Brockway, and it is not claimed that they have any other or greater rights than she had under the deed and this written agreement. The estate conveyed to Mrs. Brooks, being of the kind indicated in the deed, vested immediately, subject only to becoming divested upon breach of condition. Her title in and to these premises is not void, and can only be so at the election of the grantor or such other person or persons as are empowered to make the election; and then, only upon the doing of that which equity requires to entitle them to make such an election.
Acknowledgments of the receipt of the $800 in the deed and agreement, upon the part of the grantor, were prima facie evidence of that fact; and to sustain the allegations of their complaint that the grantee had refused to pay according to the terms of the agreement, it became necessary for the plaintiffs to resort to parol *516 evidence to vary or contradict these admissions. Parol evidence, upon the subject of consideration, being admissible for the plaintiffs to sustain their contention, it was also proper for the defendants to rely upon the same class of testimony as to the same subject-matter. If the character or amount of the consideration could be shown by parol, those proofs were equally open to both sides. Upon the facts found, the Superior Court was warranted in deciding that Mrs. Brooks had been excused from making payment of the $800 under such circumstances that equity and good conscience required that the grantor, and those in privity with her, should be estopped from demanding a forfeiture of the grantee's interest in the land.
"The modern estoppel in pais is of equitable origin, though of equal application in courts of law. It is much more than a rule of evidence. It establishes rights; it determines remedies. An equitable estoppel does not so much shut out the truth as let in the truth, and the whole truth. Its office is not to support some strict rule of law, but to show what equity and good conscience require, under the particular circumstances of the case, irrespective of what might otherwise be the legal rights of the parties." Canfield v. Gregory,
The plaintiffs, to sustain their contention that there was a forfeiture of the condition in the deed, also rely upon one instance when the defendant failed to care for Miss Brockway when she was sick and away from home. A court of equity has power to relieve a party against the forfeiture or penalty incurred by the breach of a condition subsequent, when no wilful neglect on his part is shown, upon the principle that a party having a legal right shall not be permitted to avail himself of it for the purpose of injustice and oppression. Noyes v.Anderson,
The Superior Court consistently held that there was a substantial compliance with the terms of the contract by Mrs. Brooks, and therefore no cause of forefeiture.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.