234 S.W.2d 789 | Mo. | 1950
[ 790] Arthur Jacquemin (plaintiff-appellant, and hereinafter called plaintiff) appealed from the order of the circuit court sustaining the defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition in the latter’s action for specific performance of his alleged oral contract with John Sheehan, Jr. (now deceased), that the latter would make a will devising his .entire estate (excepting certain small bequests) to plaintiff. The respondent-defendant Bank is executor under the last will of John Sheehan, Jr., (who died Feb. 13, 1948) and the individual respondents-defendants are. the nephew and nieces of deceased, and the residuary legatees of John Sheehan, Jr., under his last-will. The latter’s estate consisted of both real and personal property valued in excess of $194,000.
John Sheehan, Jr. died in St. Louis County, Missouri, leaving surviving him no widow, no children either natural born or adopted, no descendants of any deceased children, either natural born or adopted, and leaving no heirs except the four named individual defendants, all of whom were children of testator’s predeceased sister. Sheehan’s last will (dated July 29, 1930) was probated and letters testamentary were issued to defendant Bank and Trust Company.
The petition alleged that prior to May 5, 1946, plaintiff visited Sheehan and ran errands for him; that about May 5, 1946 Sheehan told plaintiff that he (Sheehan) was lonesome and that when plaintiff failed to visit him (Sheehan) the latter missed him; that if plaintiff would continue to visit Sheehan, as plaintiff theretofore had done, and would continue to do favors for him (Sheehan), that the latter would change his will and leave plaintiff all his estate, except the small bequests referred to above; that on that date plaintiff accepted Sheehan’s offer; and that on November 10, 1946, Sheehan repeated said offer and plaintiff again accepted it.
Plaintiff further alleged that thereafter Sheehan told plaintiff that he (Sheehan) had made a new will leaving plaintiff Sheehan’s entire estate (excepting the small bequests) ; that, at some sacrifice, plaintiff carried out and performed his agreement with Sheehan frequently giving up the companionship of his family to do so; that after May 5, 1946, plaifitiff “visited said John Sheehan, ;Jr.,
Plaintiff’s petition prayed a decree “specifically enforcing the agreement made by John Sheehan, Jr. with plaintiff”, and divesting title to Sheehan’s estate exclusive of the small bequests, out of defendants and vesting title thereto in plaintiff.
Defendants filed their motion to dismiss on the grounds that it appeared from plaintiff’s petition (1) that letters testamentary were issued on February 18, 1948 and that plaintiff’s' suit was filed March 29, 1949, (2) that plaintiff’s action was barred by the statutes of limitation and non-claim set out in Article 7 of Chapter I of R. S. Mo. 1939, (3) that plaintiff’s suit was filed more than a year after issuance of letters testamentary and was therefore barred by See. 182 R. S. Mo. 1939, Mo. R. S. A., (4) that plaintiff was not entitled to the relief prayed, and (5) that no claim was stated upon which the relief prayed could be granted. Defendants’ motion to dismiss was sustained.
Plaintiff’here contends (1) that an “action in equity for the specific performance of' an oral contract to make a will” is not a “demand” within the purview of Sec. 182, R. S. Mo. 1939, Mo. R. S. A., and (2) that the petition states a claim upon which relief may be granted because it clearly shows a case for specific performance, and that the value of the services plaintiff alleges he rendered ‘'‘are not readily estimable in money.”
In our view of this appeal it seems unnecessary. to discuss all of the contentions stated in the two paragraphs last above. If plaintiff’s petition states no case for specific performance, i. e., if it states no claim upon which the relief prayed could in any event be granted, then it becomes unnecessary for us ’to consider the respective contentions of the parties as to the statutes of limitation.
Because the opportunities for fraud are so great, when specific performance of an alleged oral contract to make a will or devise real estate is sought after the dfeath of an alleged promisor, the rules which govern must of necessity be rigid. Courts are “slow
Oral contracts to malee a will are sometimes enforced after the death of the promisor even where the time of the services was of comparatively short duration. See Berg v. Moreau, 199 Mo. 416, 97 S. W. 901, and cases'cited in Selle v. Selle, 337 Mo. 1234, 88 S. W. (2d) l. c. 882 and Perrin v. Grimshaw, supra. But an examination of that line of cases shows unusual circumstances of the rendition of peculiarly personal or exceptional and substantial services (which circumstances do not appear in the instant petition), and which, under the very justice of those cases, compelled the granting of the unusual relief of specific performance.
Plaintiff argues that the allegations of his petition as to the services he performed for John Sheehan, Jr. raise questions of facts which can be determined only after proof has been adduced, in that
In the instant ease (based upon his own pleading) plaintiff visited promisor, ran errands for him, visited promisor’s property and obtained birth records. In Ver Standig v. St. Louis Union Trust Company, supra, plaintiff rendered exceptional and substantial personal services, in that he exercised discretion in business affairs and supervised and managed promisor’s real estate, attended to her leases, advised with her about her investments and gave her affairs “almost daily personal attentions.” In Berg v. Moreau, supra, plaintiff moved into the Moreau home, rendered personal services and kept house for promisor, ministered to his wants, did all the menial and arduous housework, cooking and laundry and nursed him in his illness. In the Powers case, promisor moved into the home of plaintiff and there plaintiff rendered promisor menial and kindly personal services, did dll the housework, “kept the house well in order, cooked the meals, prepared special foods” (for promisor) and nursed her. In Maness v. Graham, supra, plaintiff moved into the home of promisor to take care of the helpless and aged promisor; she there rendered him arduous and menial personal services, shaved, fed, bathed him and attended his ill and helpless body; she also milked the cows, fed the stock, attended the garden, canned vegetables, chopped wood and prepared and marketed promisor’s dairy products. In the Sutton case, plaintiff went into promisor’s home, did the housework, cheerfully performed arduous and menial personal services, nursed promisor in illnesses and rendered “a thousand nameless and delicate services and attentions * * * which money, with all its peculiar potency, is powerless to purchase.” The facts of those five cases characterize and distinguish from the instant ease the facts and reasoning of cases wherein the courts have felt compelled to grant the unusual relief of specific performance. See Hardy v. Dillon, supra, and Perrin v. Grimshaw, supra. The very justice of the facts of such cases as the five above cited as relied on by plaintiff touch the conscience of the court and preclude any other conclusion. But those cases are not determinative here. This petition presents wholly different facts.
Here, upon plaintiff’s own pleading, all he did was visit and go upon errands such as [793] visiting property and obtaining birth
Merely visiting with promisor and “occasionally * * * when requested to do so” going upon inconsequential errands for him, such as visiting property and obtaining birth records, in these circumstances falls far short of pleading a fair and conscionable contract as to which a court of equity should decree specific performance. In determining the fairness of the contract we consider the situation of the parties at the time the alleged contract was made. The petition reveals that plaintiff lived in his own home with his own family, and that he continued to do so. . He never did more than make mere occasional visits to promisor and do isolated and unimportant errands for him. Nothing else appears. Clearly those errands were not services of such exceptional, substantial or personal character that plaintiff alone could have done them. The reasonable value of the services plaintiff pleaded he rendered was quite insignificant. Perrin v. G-rimshaw, supra, Feigenspan v. Pence, supra, Hardy v. Dillon, supra, Selle v. Selle, supra, Swedish Evangelical Free Church v. Benson, 77 Colo. 370, 237 Pac. 165. Here there was no filial relationship. See 106 A. L. R. 760. Nor is it alleged in the petition (and it is not inferable therefrom) that promisor was in any need of any strict personal attention from plaintiff. And it is not alleged that plaintiff rendered that character of service. In fact the contrary appears. To be entitled to invoke specific performance under these circumstances the services rendered by the promisee, at least in some respects, must be exceptional and substantial in nature and purely personal in character. See cases last above cited, and annotations, 69 A. L. R. 14, et seq., 106 A. L. R. 742, et seq.
It is our conclusion, and we rule that plaintiff’s petition wholly fails to state any case upon which specific performance can be decreed. . It follows therefrom that the above stated contentions of