113 Cal. 444 | Cal. | 1896
This is an appeal from a judgment, the evidence being brought up for review by a bill of exceptions.
The action is prosecuted by Maria B. Owens against Alice McNally, as administratrix of the estate of Lawrence McNally, deceased, and against Alice McNally individually, with whom are joined as defendants all the other heirs at law of said Lawrence McNally.
The action was to compel specific performance of a contract averred to have been entered into by and between plaintiff and Lawrence McNally. In the year 1881 plaintiff was eighteen years old, and was living with her parents in the state of Michigan. Lawrence McNally was the brother of plaintiff's mother, and at that time resided in the city of Eureka, in Humboldt county, state of California, where he continued to reside until his death. “ In 1881 said Lawrence McNally had never been married, and was fifty-four years old, and in- said year he went to the state of Michigan, and then and there represented to plaintiff, and to her parents, that he was possessed of money and property worth more than twenty thousand dollars, and that he had no one to care for him, and that he desired that plaintiff should leave her home and parents and accompany him to California, and thereafter live with him and care for him; and then and there said Lawrence McNally promised and agreed to with plaintiff that if she would accompany him to California, and live with him and care for him, he would give or bequeath to her all property which he might own at the time of his death.”
Under this agreement plaintiff left her home and par
The court found the contract exactly in the terms of the complaint, as above quoted. It further found that plaintiff had duly performed all the conditions of the contract upon her part to be performed, in accordance with the terms thereof. It found that the contract was in parol, and that it had never been declared or acknowledged by Lawrence McNally in any note or instrument signed by him or by any person thereunto authorized by him in writing so to do.
As matter of law it concluded that as the contract was in relation to real property, it was within the statute of frauds; that the services rendered, and the care bestowed by the plaintiff under the contract, were not of so peculiar or exceptional a nature as that they could not be compensated for in money, and that her performance of these services, and her bestowal of this care, did not operate as a part performance which would take the contract out of the operation of the statute of frauds; that the contract was in relation to both real and personal property, and it was therefore to be regarded as an entirety, and could not be enforced as to the personal property. Judgment for defendants properly followed these conclusions of law.
In view of the multitude of cases which have arisen in other states over contracts such as this, it is indeed curious that in nearly fifty, years of judicial life, these questions should be presented to this court for the first time. The result is, however, that the determination of them is not made difficult by an absence of authority,
Without entering upon any extended review of the authorities, there is and has been, from a very early date, a general concurrence among them upon the proposition that a man may make a valid agreement binding himself to dispose of his property in a particular Avay by last will and testament, and a court of equity will enforce such an agreement specifically by treating the heirs as trustees and compelling them to convey the property in accordance with the terms of the contract. The earlier cases in which this question arose were of two general classes, the one being those in which there was an agreement to the making of mutual wills, as the case of Durour v. Perrara, 2 Harg. 304, in .which Lord Camden, in 1769, decreed that an agreement to make mutual wills, Avhen properly proved, is binding on the parties, and will be enforced by a court of equity. So, in the similar case of Walpole v. Orford, 3 Ves. Jr. 402, while Lord Chancellor Loughborough denied specific performance because of the uncertainty and vagueness of the particular contract, the rule and doctrine previously announced by Lord Camden was never questioned, and has continued to be the accepted law to this day. The other class of early cases grew out of promises to make testamentary settlements in consideration of marriages, in consideration of compromises and the like, and such promises, upon clear proof of their execution, have been uniformly enforced. (Jones v. Martin, 3 Anstr. 882; Fortescue v. Hennah, 19 Ves. Jr. 66; Logan v. Wienholt, 7 Bligh, 1, 53; Goilmere v. Battison, 1 Vern. 48.)
In Rivers v. Rivers, 3 Desaus. 190; 4 Am. Dec. 609, the chancellor says: “It appears to me that to make a will in a particular way, on proper considerations, is as much a subject of contract as any other, and he who makes a contract on this subject is as much bound thereby as he would be by any agreement on any other subject. To be sure, the court would be more strict in
And in the leading case from New Jersey, Johnson v. Hubbell, 10 N. J. Eq. 332; 66 Am. Dec. 773, it is said: “ There can be no doubt but that a person may make a valid agreement binding himself legally to make a particular disposition of his property by last will and testament. The law permits a man to dispose of his own property at his pleasure, and no good reason can be assigned why he may not make a legal agreement to dispose of his property to a particular individual, or for a particular purpose, as well by will as by conveyance, to be made at some specified future period, or upon the happening of some future event. It may be unwise for a man to embarrass himself as to the final disposition of his property, but he is the disposer by law of his own fortune, and the sole and best judge as to the manner and time of disposing of it. A court of equity will decree a specific performance of such an agreement, upon the recognized principles by which it is governed in the exercise of this branch of its jurisprudence.”
This rule, it may be said without further quotation, is supported by the overwhelming weight of authority. It is so declared in New York, in Parsell v. Stryker, 41 N. Y. 480; Gall v. Gall, 19 N. Y. Supp. 330; in Missouri, in Gupton v. Gupton, 47 Mo. 37; in Michigan, in Faxton v. Faxon, 28 Mich. 161; Wright v. Wright, 99 Mich. 170; in Ohio, in Shahan v. Swan, 48 Ohio St. 25; 29 Am. St. Rep. 517; in Utah, in Brinton v. Van Cott, 8 Utah,480; in Nebraska, in Kofka v. Rosicky, 41 Neb. 328; 43 Am. St. Rep. 685; in Georgia, in Maddox v. Rowe, 23 Ga. 434; 68 Am. Dec. 535; while by the federal courts it is said in Jaffee v. Jacobson, 48 Fed. Rep. 21; 1 Cir. Ct. of App. 24: “ We concede the law to be that a court of equity
But the question whether relief should be granted or
We are justified in considering the terms of this contract to be as pleaded by plaintiff and as found by the court. As to the services to be rendered by plaintiff, those were that she should leave her home and parents, accompany McNally to California, “ and thereafter live with him and care for him.” There is here much vagueness and uncertainty as to how long she was to live with him, as to what kind of service she was to render to him. Where a contract such as this, resting in parol and sought to be enforced after the death of the other party to it, comes before a court of equity for review, it is scrutinized, and should be scrutinized, with particular care, and only upon a satisfactory showing that it is definite and certain and just will it be enforced. The proofs -of the contract should be clear, and the acts of the claimant referable alone to the contract. (Ackerman v. Ackerman, 24 N. J. Eq. 587.) Neither the length of time which plaintiff was to spend in living with and caring for the intestate is made certain, nor the kind or character of the services which she was to render. What position she was to occupy in his household is not made plain. Whether she was to remain there in the capacity of daughter, housekeeper, or menial servant is in doubt.
In the very similar case of Lisle v. Sherman, 25 Barb. 435, the contract was that the plaintiff was to live with and take care of the testatrix as long as the latter lived, and at her death plaintiff was to have all her property. This case arose in New York, which recognizes the rule as we have given it. The court said that the uncertain
So, also, in Shakespeare v. Markham, 10 Hun, 311, affirmed in 72 N. Y. 400, personal services were to be rendered upon an oral contract, and to be compensated for by a devise of all the property. The court held the services to be so uncertain in their character, not only with respect to the time of their continuance, but in regard to their nature and character, and the compensation to be made for them to be so uncertain, that the contract was one the specific performance of which a court of equity.would not be under the necessity of compelling.
On the other hand, it must be said that, looking to the evidence which supports the finding as to the nature of the services to be rendered, it fairly appears that the plaintiff entered the household of Lawrence McNally, and took and occupied the station which would have belonged to his daughter. There' is thus in plaintiff’s bill an omission of a term favorable to herself, which her evidence makes out, and for this reason, if this were the sole objection, the court might not be justified in withholding relief. (Pomeroy’s Specific Performance, sec. 137.)
But we pass to a much more serious question, whether specific performance, if decreed in this case, would not be harsh and oppressive, and unjust to innocent third parties. As was well said in the leading case of Johnson v. Subbell, supra: “ The complainant has a right to the protection of this court, and its aid in enforcing and protecting his rights, but, if that protection and aid cannot be afforded him without invading and disregarding the rights of others, this court may not, in its anxiety and desire to relieve one party, inflict a wrong and in
This is the precise situation presented by the peculiar facts of this case. Lawrence McNally married, and at his death left surviving him his widow, one of the defendants in this action. Marriage is a contract viewed by the law with such especial favor, and the family relation is one so deep-seated at the root of our institutions, that contracts in restraint of marriage are void as against public policy, while anything which tends to prevent marriage, or to disturb the marriage state, is viewed by the law with suspicion and disfavor. The defendant widow married McNally in ignorance of the contract, and, it appears, continued in ignorance of the contract until after his death. She acquired distinct rights of heirship and succession. There might, have been children born of the marriage with similar rights. It is true that these rights vested after the contract was made, but where a bill is brought for the specific performance of a contract, the after-acquired rights of third parties are equitable considerations to be regarded in adjudicating the questions. (Curran v. Holyoke etc. Co., 116 Mass. 90; 5 Wait’s Actions and Defenses, 775.)
A specific performance of this contract cannot, therefore, be decreed without sweeping aside, as of no moment or avail, the rights of the wife and widow, vested under a contract most strongly favored by the law.
Specific performance, as we have said, is not to be decreed under strict rule and formula. Every consideration which may properly be urged upon the court is to be weighed and passed upon, and it will be decreed only when no other adequate relief is available to plaintiff, and even then it will be denied if it operates by way of a hardship upon the innocent.
So, while this contract was not void as against public policy at the time it was entered into, it must be held that the parties to it contracted in view of the fact that a subsequent marriage by Lawrence McNally might be consummated, and that the effect of this marriage would
Or, viewed in another way, it must have been within the contemplation of the parties that Lawrence McNally might marry, for the contract could not have been designed as a restraint upon his marriage, or it would be void. If it was within their contemplation, and the contract embraced the taking of the deceased’s entire estate to the exclusion of any future wife or child, then we have no hesitation in saying that the contract was void as against public policy. The only permissible conclusion is, therefore, that the parties contracted in contemplation of that event. Upon its happening, the rights of innocent third parties intervened, and a decree of specific performance could not be awarded. (Gall v. Gall, supra.)
The trial court, as has been said, found that the contract in question rested in parol. -It is claimed that this finding is error, and that the trial court likewise committed error in rejecting offered parol evidence of a letter written and signed by Lawrence McNally, and containing the contract here in suit. Whether or not the court committed error in its ruling need not be considered. The statute of frauds and perjuries requires a writing to evidence the making of certain kinds of contracts, but, if this particular contract were in writing, the position of appellant would not be bettered. A written contract such as this, for the reasons we have discussed, would not strengthen appellant’s position, nor entitle her to the relief sought.
The court, by its decree, denied plaintiff specific performance. We think the decree was just, and that plaintiff, for her recovery, must resort to an action in quantum meruit.
The judgment is affirmed.
McFarland, J., Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J., and Temple, J., concurred.