52 How. Pr. 460 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1876
The facts found by the referee in this case are well established by the proof. That the testator, with a view to aid his brother, the plaintiff, made the purchase of the farm, and that-the latter entered, occupied and improved it, greatly enhanced its value by his own labor and with his own means, and paid all taxes and the interest on the purchase-money to the testator, year after year, under and pursuant to an understanding and agreement between them that the premises should be his on refunding to the testator the purchase-money, admits of no doubt.
The evidence is clear, direct, and' full to those facts. It seems quite probable that the testator did not intend to exact the principal sum, but proposed ultimately to discharge the debt to his brother, but never having done this in a legal and effective way, the referee was right in requiring its payment as a condition of the conveyance. The case of Freeman agt. Freeman (43 N. Y., 34), resembles the one in hand in many respects, and shows that contracts like that found by the referee in this case will be respected and enforced by the court.
The testator was often on the premises; saw the improvements going on; advised them and spoke of them as beneficial to the plaintiff; accepted annual payments as interest (not as rent); said he purchased the farm for his brother; spoke of a bargain with him; said his word was as good as his bond; that all that he wanted was the interest on his money as long as he lived; that, on his decease, the farm would be his brother’s, and that he would give him a deed of it. His omission to give the deed seems to have been occasioned by his
But it is insisted that technical difficulties are presented in the case which require a reversal of the judgment. It is urged that the action is against the defendants, personally, and not against them in their representative capacity as executors.
This question is to be determined from the averments in the complaint (Hallet agt. Harrower, 33 Barb., 537; Fowler agt. Westervelt, 40 id., 374). Those averments made a case against the defendants, as executors.
The facts stated and the prayer for relief fully characterize the action as one against the defendants in their representative capacity, and the defendants appeared and answered as executors.
This alleged ground of error is without support. Nor did this action abate, nor was it put in abeyance by the death of one of the three executors.
The right of action and ground of relief here continued against the surviving executors (Lachaise agt. Libby, 21 How., 363; Shook agt. Shook, 19 Barb., 653; Leggett agt. Dubois, 2 Paige, 211; 2 R. S. [Edmd. ed.], 79, sec. 44). The litigation remained against the surviving parties, and the decree could be against them the same as if their co-executors had lived.
A suggestion of the death of the co-executor in the record was all that was necessary. Nor is the objection that there is a defect of the parties well taken. As regards the defendants on the record they must be deemed to have
The learned judge cites Lobdell agt. Lobdell (36 N. Y., 33, 34), and Simmonds agt. Sisson (26 N. Y., 277), in support of his remark. The prohibition contained in section 399 did not reach and cover the evidence objected to; the testimony given by other witnesses was also objected to as prohibited by section 399, but very manifestly there were no grounds for objection.
They were not. parties claiming through or under the deceased in a sense which could exclude the testimony given by them.
But there is another answer to the objection urged against the evidence above alluded to. Strike out all the evidence to which.this objection can with any reason of fairness apply, and sufficient will still remain to afford abundant support to the findings of the referee.
In equity actions the court will look to the entire case, and see whether substantial justice has been done, and when that appears it will affirm the judgment, notwithstanding the admission of testimony which in ordinary actions at law might have necessitated a new trial (Church agt. Kidd, 5 N. Y. Sup. Ct. R., 454; Platt agt. Platt, 2 id., 454; Clapp agt. Fulerton, 34 N. Y., 190). In this last case it is laid down by Porter, J., that on a rehearing in equity the admission of improper evidence on the original hearing, furnishes no ground for reversing the final decision, if the facts established by legal testimony are plainly sufficient to uphold it. So in Schenck agt. Dart (22 N. Y., on page 424), Comstock, J., in remarking.on this class of cases, says : “ That it is the duty of the supreme court to pronounce such a judgment as the competent evidence would justify.”
There exists in this case no ground for a reversal of the judgment, because of the admission of improper evidence. The granting of costs to the plaintiff was, in the sound dis- _
We are of the opinion that substantial justice is answered by the judgment entered, and that it should be affirmed with costs.
So ordered.
Boardhan and Learned, JJ., concurred.