94 N.J. Eq. 82 | New York Court of Chancery | 1922
The object of this suit is to enforce a gift of land. The facts are these: When Mrs. Horsfield was a little girl of nine, at the death of her mother, she went to live with her aunt and uncle, who raised and educated her, and after she married she and her husband lived with them until 1912.
“Why we wouldn’t think >of having you move away from us. We have all this land here. We will give you that corner there for yourself, and aunty said she would help build a house for me—contribute towards it; because she had her own money from the sale of this property that she had sold,in Brooklyn.”
The house was built on a piece of the tract, the boundaries of which were well defined, the aunt furnishing the money, $1,800, and when it was finished the Horsfields moved in and ¿remained in undisturbed possession until recently, when the present Mrs: Gedicks, to whom the land had been conveyed by her husband, began an action of ejectment. Thereupon this bill, was filed to restain the suit and to compel a conveyance of the land which had been promised. The Horsfields had contributed some little towards the original construction of the house, and later on made improvements at an outlay of five or six hundred dollars. I have not the least doubt that Mr. and Mrs. Gedicks intended to and promised to give the house and lot to Mrs. Horsfield—to convey it. Even the defendant Gedicks’ testimony indicates that
I will advise a decree ordering a conveyance of the land by the description established at the trial, and suggest that the bill be amended describing the land to a certainty, and a prayer to conform to the decree.