44 N.J. Eq. 21 | New York Court of Chancery | 1888
This case has already been once decided. On the first hearing, the question mainly discussed was, whether a receipt, produced by the defendant, showing that the debt which is the subject of the controversy, had been paid, was an honest paper or not. The conclusion then reached, on that question, was in favor of the integrity of the receipt. It was also contended, on the first -argument, that even if the receipt was found to be an honest
The controversy arises out of the following facts: Peter Voorhees gave his bond to Fanny Traphagen, dated March 31st,. 1881, conditioned for the payment of $4,000, on the first of April, 1882, with interest. The payment of the bond was secured by a mortgage executed by Voorhees and his wife, on a farm in Somerset county. Fanny Traphagen died testate on the first day of October, 1885. At the time of her death, the bond and mortgage were in the possession of her counsel, together with her other securities. Shortly after the mortgagee’s death, and when the bond and mortgage were produced for appraisement, the defendant claimed that the debt which they represented had been paid, and that he was entitled to have them surrendered to him. In support of his claim, he produced a receipt, dated April 2d, 1883,, signed by the testatrix, admitting the payment of both principal and interest, and containing, at its end, these words; “bond to-be cancelled after my death.” The complainant refused to surrender the bond and mortgage. The defendant in March, 1884, conveyed the mortgaged premises to John Kuhl, subject to the mortgage, and Kuhl assumed its payment. The complainant, in July, 1886, brought this action to enforce the payment of the mortgage debt by a sale of the mortgaged premises. Kuhl afterwards filed a bill of interpleader and paid the mortgage-debt into court. Subsequently a decree was made, in that cause,.
The defendant’s right rests on his receipt. That paper, in my judgment, unless its honesty or validity has been successfully impugned, constitutes sufficient evidence to establish the defendant’s right. The paper admits that the mortgage-debt has been paid. This admission is made in words so plain that their meaning cannot be misunderstood. It is undisputed that the testatrix signed the paper. It seems to be settled that where a creditor says by a letter, not written to his debtor, but to a third person, that he has released his debtor from the. payment of a particular debt, that such admission will, even after the death of the debtor, furnish sufficient evidence of a release, though no foi’mal release is produced to justify the court in declaring that the debt is discharged. Lord Rosslyn so held in Eden v. Smyth, 5 Ves. 341. There it appeared that Mr. Smyth, the father-in-law of Sir Frederick Eden, two or three months before his death, wrote to Sir Frederick’s mother, stating that he had released Sir Frederick from a debt of £1,000. Sir Frederick had given Mr. Smyth his bond for £1,000, which, at Mr. Smyth’s death, remained in his possession. Mr. Smyth, by his will, gave Sir Frederick a legacy of £1,000. His executor refused to pay Sir Frederick his legacy, claiming that his debt discharged his legacy. Sir Frederick filed a bill to recover his legacy, and Lord Roslyn held that the debt was released, and that Sir Frederick was entitled to the payment of the legacy. In deciding the case, Lord Rosslyn said, that, if an action at law had been brought on the bond, and Sir Frederick had pleaded a release, it would not have been necessary for him, in order to maintain his plea, to have produced a formal release, but that the letter would have constituted sufficient evidence of a release to have destroyed the bond. The Master of the Rolls (Sir Richard Pepper Arden), in the subsquent case of Reeves v.
But the complainant assails both- the honesty and validity of the receipt. First, he says that the proofs show that it has been altered in material respects since it was signed by the testatrix. His claim in this regard is, that, after.it was signed by the testatrix, it was raised from $240 to $4,240, and also that an addition was made to it by adding the words, “ bond to be cancelled after my death.” He says, secondly, that if the receipt is an honest paper, it is without legal force, because, if it was intended to operate as a gift, the bond and mortgage not having been delivered, no title to them passed; or, if it was intended to operate as a contract to release or discharge the debt, it is a mere nudum pactum, because it is unsupported by a sufficient consideration to impart validity to it.
The charge of alteration imputes a high crime to the defendant. The body of the receipt is in his handwriting, and if it be true that it has been altered, there can be no doubt that forgery has been committed, and also that the defendant is the forger. But while this is so, the law is settled, that the complainant is not bound to prove the truth of his charge beyond a reasonable doubt, but merely by a fair preponderance of evidence. Kane v. Hibernia Insurance Co. 10 Vr. 697. The burden of proof, however, is on the complainant, and where, as in this case, the issue to be tried involves something more precious and important to one of the parties than a mere property right, it would seem to be a plain dictate of justice, that the court should, before pronouncing a judgment, which, while it does not convict a citizen of a high crime, yet puts a stigma upon him, which renders him more detestable than he would be if he had been convicted, require the truth of the charge to be proved by evidence of a very persuasive and convincing character. Equivocal, uncertain or conjectural evidence is clearly insufficient to support such a judgment.
There is no direct proof of alteration. Neither party has given any evidence respecting the origin or history of the receipt. The defendant offered to prove both by his own oath, but his
“$4,240. “White House, April 2d,’83.
“Received of Peter Voorhees Forty Two Hundred and forty dollars Being one years interest and prinoapel on Bond and Mortgage which i hold on said Voorhees Farm at Two Bridges Bond to be canceled after my death.
“ F Tbaphagen”
The following is a copy as the complainant contends the receipt stood when the testatrix signed it:
“ White House, April 2d, ’83.
“Received of Peter Voorhees Two Hundred and forty dollars Being one years interest on Bond and Mortgage which i hold on said Voorhees Farm at Two Bridges. “ F. Traphagen.”
The complainant insists that the court should find, as a fact proved, that the word “ forty,” and the words “ and prinoapel ” and “Bond to be canceled after my death,” were added, after the testatrix signed the receipt, and without • her knowledge. But there is not an atom of direct proof in the case, showing that the receipt was other or different, in any respect, when the testatrix signed it, from what it is now. The position of the words in the receipt, which the complainant insists show that it
The testatrix was a maiden lady without relatives, at the time of this transaction, nearer than nephews and nieces; she was over eighty years of age at the time of her death; for some years before her death she had had no permanent home, but had lived temporarily among her relatives and friends; she left an estate of over $60,000, consisting principally of bonds and mortgages and two farms. The defendant, for more than ten years prior to her death, had been her chief man of business. She advised with him about her investments, and sometimes sent him to examine and appraise land on which she had been asked to make a loan; he went with her when she visited her counsel,, and sometimes he visited her counsel, on her business, alone; her farms were in the possession of tenants, and the defendant visited the farms at times, to sec the condition of the crops, and also made settlements with her tenants for her; she sent for him whenever she desired to see him, and he usually went to her whenever she requested him to do so, and she made such requests quite frequently. To a person of testatrix’s age, sex and condition in life the services which the defendant rendered to her were almost indispensable to her comfort. It is not disputed that he gave her, in all he undertook to do for her, the best service he
The fact that the defendant was the testatrix’s chief man of business, and that he had, in that capacity, rendered services to her of a quality and to an extent which deserved remuneration or recognition seems to have been known to and appreciated by the complainant. The testatrix made her will during her last sickness, about a week before her death. The complainant was-present when she gave instructions for the draft of her will. A number of other persons were also present. They all agree that while the testatrix was giving her instructions, the complainant said to her that the defendant had been kind to her and had done a great deal for her; and then asked if she did not want to leave him something, and that she replied that he had already been paid, but did not state how or with what he had been paid. If this reply referred to the receipt, there should be no further-question respecting either its honesty or validity. There is no-proof in the case showing a payment to the defendant by any other means or in any other way. There is no pretence that the testatrix gave the defendant either the whole or any part of the-interest accruing on the bond and mortgage; the proof, on the contrary, shows that both before and after the receipt was executed, the defendant paid the interest on the bond and mortgage each year. JSTo property belonging to the testatrix is traced from her possession to that of the defendant, nor is there a word of evidence in the case which will support even a conjecture that the testatrix ever paid the defendant a penny for his services, or made him a gift of either money or money’s worth. The failure of the complainant to show that the remark of the testatrix, that the defendant had already been paid, can fairly be applied to-some other method of payment than the surrender of the bond and mortgage, makes the probability that she meant that she had paid by giving the receipt, so strong, in my judgment, as to approach almost to certainty. In the present condition of the proofs, that is the only meaniug which, as it seems to me, can be attributed to her remark, unless it be assumed that she was
But there is other proof on this point. The female, who nursed the testatrix during her last illness, testifies that, on the Sunday preceding the Thursday on which the testatrix died, the defendant visited the testatrix at the house of the complainant’s mother. The testatrix was taken sick there in the early part •of September, 1885, and died there on the 1st of October following. This witness says, that while the defendant was with the testatrix, on this occasion, the testatrix told him she had made a will, and said she hoped he was satisfied. She also says, that just before the defendant left, the testatrix asked him to ■stay with her, but on his replying that he could not, she kissed him and bade him good-bye, and then asked him to come to see her as often as he could. She also swears that, soon after the •defendant left, she said to the testatrix: “Peter is such a friend •of yours; how comes it you did not remember him in your will?” To which the testatrix replied: “I will tell you, but you must not tell any one. I have given Peter something, a paper, so that he will be paid after my death.” There can be no doubt that this remark referred to the receipt, nor, if this evidence is true, that the defendant should be awarded the fund in controversy. I know of no reason why the evidence of this witness should not be believed. There is nothing unnatural or improbable about it; on the contrary, it stands in strict accord with all the probabilities of the case. This witness was present when the testatrix gave instructions for the draft of her will, and heard her decline to place the defendant among her beneficiaries. She afterwards saw the testatrix manifest strong affection for him, and heard her speak of her obligations to him. It was, therefore, perfectly natural that she should make the remark to the testatrix that she says she did, and it is also easy to believe, in view of what the evidence shows the defendant had done for the testatrix, that the testatrix should say, in reply to the remark of this witness, just what this witness says she did.
Considering the honesty of the paper to be established, the next question to be decided is, Can effect be given to the paper as a discharge of the mortgage debt? The complainant’s position on this question has already been stated. He says that the promise Avhich the testatrix made by the paper is a mere nudum pactum, and that if the utmost effect is given to it, in favor of the defendant, it simply amounts to an engagement by the testatrix to make a gift of the debt, or to forgive the debt on her death. Want of a sufficient consideration to give legal efficacy to the testatrix’s promise constitutes the very foundation of the
A consideration sufficient to support a contract may be defined to be, either a benefit accruing to the promissor, or a loss or disadvantage sustained by the promisee. A consideration ema
But a single other question requires consideration. The defendant stood in a confidential relation to the testatrix at the time the receipt was given. He was her adviser. He was for that reason bound to exercise towards her, in all his dealings with her, the utmost fairness and good faith. In making a contract with her, his duty required him to refrain from all misrepresentations, to conceal nothing, but to see to it that all was open, fair, voluntary and well understood. And the burden of proving that he dealt with her in this manner rests on him. The proofs, however, I think,-show that his conduct towards her, in this transaction, was free from fault. When asked, while giving instructions for the draft of her will, if she did not want to give him a legacy as a reward for his services, it will be remembered that she said no, she had already paid him. It has already been shown that this remark can, so far as the evidence shows, be applied to nothing except the receipt. At the time this remai'k was xnade, the defendant was absent, and the testatrix was free to speak as she felt. If there had been anything in the defendant’s conduct, in conxxection with the receipt, which the testatrix thought blameworthy — if there had been any ovex-reaching or deception, any undue px-essure or xxrgency — that was the time she would have spoken of it, and the fact that she made no com
Except it be assumed that the receipt has been altered, it is impossible not to see a deliberate purpose on the part of the testatrix to release the mortgage debt, on her death, as a compensation to the defendant for his services. In this condition of affairs the court should not be eager to find a way to defeat such purpose, but rather to give effect to it. Justice to the defendant, as well as a decent regard for the desire of the testatrix to discharge what she evidently esteemed a just obligation, should incline the court to give effect to the teststrix’s purpose in this respect, if it can do so without violating any well-settled rule of law.
The defendant, in my judgment, is entitled to a decree directing that the fund in controversy be paid to him.