111 Ky. 771 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Lead Opinion
Reversing.
The appellee instituted this action in the Fayette circuit court against the appellants. It is alleged in the petition that on the 1st of January, 1879, S. Price executed and delivered to D. L. Pride the following writing, to-wit: “January 1, 1879. One day after date I promise- to pay to D. L. Price or order sixty-two dollars 50-100 every three months during his natural life; it being the interest on four thousand dollars which I owe him. Witness: Geo. P. McCann. [Signed] S. Price.” It is further alleged that at-the same time D. L. Price executed and delivered to S. Price a writing relating to the same matter, which reads as follows: “January 1, 1879. Received of S. Price all demands to this date, except sixty-two dollars and fifty cents to be paid every three months'during my life; it being the interest on four thousand dollars which he owes me, and which he is to have at my death. Witness: Geo. P. MoOann. [Signed] D. L. Price.” Said latter writing was held-by S. Price during his life. It is further alleged: ' That by the terms of said agreement said $4,000 was loaned by said I). Li. Price to .said- S. Price during the natural life of said I). L. Price, and the said $4,000 was at the death of said D. L. Price to pass to said S.. Price as a devise. Said writing signed by D. L. Price being in the nature of a bequest by said D. L. Price to said S. Price, and said D. L. Price, so regarding it, afterwards gave him written notice that he (D. L. Price) revoked the .same; and in his last will he- again revoked the said will or bequest, and devised the said $4,000 to said Ann M. Price. That said $4,000 mentioned in said writings as owing by said1 S. Price to D. L. Price became due and payable at the death of said D. L. Price, on the 16th day of August, 1899, and the said $4,000 was .them
It is contended for appellee that the writing executed by D. L. Price is at most .a will or devise* or a promise to give or devise the $4,000 debt in question, and that D. L. Price could legally revoke the devise, or might legally refuse to execute Ms promise to give. It is undoubtedly true that a naked promise to devise or bequeath anything to a party may by the testator or promisor be revoked, or he may refuse to execute a promise to give, and that the party expecting the devise or gift is without remedy; but it is also true that, if a party receives a valuable consideration for such promise, the promisee is not without remedy. Or, in other words, a party can not, when he receives a valuable1 consideration therefor, refuse to comply with his contract. It is also contended for appellee that parol evidence is not admissible to vary or contradict a writing, and it is also contended that a writing can not be attacked by the answer and parol evidence unless fraud or mistake is pleaded. This contention is undoubtedly sound. It is argued at ’length for appellee that the writing in question' is a promise to pay, and that the answer contradicts the writing, without averring any fraud or mistake; hence the demurrers were properly sustained. It seems to be the further contention of appellee thiat the $4,000 became due at the1 death of D. L. Price; hence the statute of limitation can not avail, for the reason that the cause of action to recover the' $4,000 did not accrue five years before the institution of the suit. It is contended for appellants that the contract involved in this suit was a contract, and not a will; that
The second contention of appellants is not open- to serious controversy, and the same may be said of the third! and the fourth contentions. The first contention can best be determined by the contract itself. We have carefully considered the extensive briefs of counsel filed, and are not disposed to controvert many, if any, of the propositions of law announced by counsel. The question to b'e considered is, what is the law applicable to the case before us? It seems to be admitted that the two papers constitute one and the same transaction, and must be read together and considered .as constituting one transaction. It will be seen that the paper signed1 by S. Price is not a promise to pay anything, execept $62.50 every three months during the natural life of D. L. Price It is true, it is further said in the paper, “it being the interest on the $4,000 which I owe him;” and it may be taken as true that S. Price acknowledged, by signing the paper, that he did in fact owe D. L. Price the $4,000, and, if this be so, then D. L. Price had a cause of action, and could have instituted suit and recovered judgment against S. Price for the $4,000; and S. Price also had the right at that time to have paid $4,000, and thereby discharged' his indebtedness to the said D. L. Price. But it seems that neither party desired an immediate payment or -settlement,and, instead'of D. L. Price proceeding to collect the $4,000, he made the agreement shown by the two papers on file. S. Price seems not to have desired to pay the-
We deem it unnecessary to determine the plea of the statute of limitations, f>or the reason that, under the views already expressed, it is unnecessary to decide that question.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with direction to sustain the demurrer to the first paragraph of plaintiff’s petition, and to overrule plaintiff’s demurrers to appellants’ answer and amended answer, an)d for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Opinion by Judge Hobson overruling petition for rehearing :
, A bare promise, without consideration, by a creditor, to give his debt to- his debtor at his death, is unenforceable. Knott’s Adm’r v. Hogan, 4 Metc., 99. But if a creditor holding a debt of $4,000 should agree with the debtor to release the debt for an annuity of $500 a year as long as he lived, the agreement would be valid; for a
Such being the construction of the contract, is it valid? It is, in substance, an undertaking of S. Price to- pay D. L. Price an annuity of $250 a year in quarterly installments in consideration of the release of the debt -of $4,000 due by him. The contract to pay the annuity was not •one for the use or forbearance of money. The annuity was not paid for the use of the money, -or for forbearance • of D. L. Price to collect it. The -consideration of the payment of the annuity was the satisfaction of the debt. No question of usury, therefore, arises. If the agreement was made in compromise of matters of difference and dispute between the two brothers, this was a sufficient consideration; and by section 472, Kentucky Statutes, the real consideration of a writing may be shown. But, independently of the question of -compromise of disputed
The petition overruled.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting opinion.
I dissent from the reasoning of the court, but agree that the case should be reversed. The fundamental error in thie opinion and response consists in the assumption that when parties to the contract said1 one thing they meant another. The opinion, in effect, holds that when S. Price In plain terms says, “I owe” D. L. Price $4,000, that he meant to and did say that “I do not owe him $4,000.” When both parties to the writing said that the $62.50 which was to be paid quarterly, as interest on $4,000
It is contended by eounsel for appellee that it will be in contradiction of the writings if appellants are allowed to prove the alleged compromise and agreement. It is elementary that t'he terms of a written contract can not be varied or contradicted by parol testimony without alleging fraud or mistake. The proposition of appellants is not to contradict the terms of the writings, and thus destroy a promise to pay, but to show the real considera