115 Mich. 352 | Mich. | 1897
Complainant seek's to enforce the specifici performance of a parol land contract, claimed to have' been made with his father, James Laird, deceased. The.
“He (my husband) told father, he said, if the house was not rented by next Wednesday, we will move; and I said, ‘No, I want to know how we stand.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I have not paid you any boárd. You may move into the house, and consider it your own, but we will have to pay all the taxes, and make all the repairs, and fix it to suit yourselves. It will be yours along with the rest, but not until I am done.’ ”
This was in 1888. Complainant and his wife took possession of the house, and occupied it rent free; the father living with them until his death, in 1893. They lived together as one family.
1. Is the testimony of complainant’s wife competent, under 3 How. Stat, § 7545; Act No. 121, Pub. Acts 1895 ? She has a direct interest in the subject-matter of the litigation. If the agreement be sustained, she secures homestead and dower rights, of neither of which can she be deprived except by her own voluntary act. She is as deeply interested as her husband. If the legal title be in him, he cannot convey it, or deprive her of possession. She can hold possession during her life. She is, therefore, a party in interest, within both the letter and spirit of the law, and her testimony must be excluded from consideration. In re Lambie’s Estate, 97 Mich. 58; Hillman v. Schwenk, 68 Mich. 293, 301.
2. The defendants reside in Scotland. The father,, a common laborer, was of frugal habits, and left an estate, real and personal, which inventoried $3,975.29. He left no debts, and no claims were presented against the estate except that of the complainant for board, etc., amounting to $1,261.75, to which, under the theory of the existence of
The will was executed January 10, 1893. Complainant presented it to the probate court, and petitioned for its probate. It was duly probated, complainant’s claim allowed, and, upon the petition of the complainant, an order made to sell the real estate to pay the debts and expenses of administration. The petition stated the expenses of administration to be $275. Meanwhile the complainant had not informed his brothers and sister of his claim against the estate, or of its allowance, or of the proceedings taken to sell the land. It is evident that he intentionally kept this information from them. On learning the situation, the defendants took steps to appeal from the allowance of complainant’s claim, and secured from this court an order allowing such appeal. After this was done, the complainant filed this bill on October 16, 1895. He made no claim of this alleged contract, either to Dr. Dickie or to his father, at the time the will was executed. He has not yet abandoned his claim against the estate, and it is still pend
It is unimportant to discuss the testimony claimed to show a contract resting entirely in parol.
The decree is affirmed, with costs.