292 N.Y. 433 | NY | 1944
The plaintiff seeks damages which he asserts resulted from the fraud of William H. Schmidt, the defendants' intestate, hereinafter for brevity referred to as the defendant. The complaint was dismissed upon the defendant's motion on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. From the complaint it appears that plaintiff, in 1935, filed formal objections to the probate of a paper writing which purported to be the last will and testament of Edward C.S. Fleet upon the "grounds that said decedent was under undue influence and lacked testamentary capacity". The plaintiff was the sole heir and next of kin of the decedent. The defendant is the person named "as executor and sole beneficiary" in the paper writing. The plaintiff and the defendant entered into an agreement "by the terms of which, in consideration of the payment by the said William H. Schmidt to the plaintiff of the sum of Five thousand five hundred ($5,500.00) dollars, plaintiff agreed to withdraw his objections and consent that the said purported Will be admitted to probate." Pursuant to the agreement the plaintiff executed a stipulation withdrawing his objections and consented to the probate of the will. The will was admitted to probate and the plaintiff executed a general release to the defendant and received the stipulated consideration. *436
The plaintiff, it is said, was induced to withdraw his objections to the probate by fraudulent representations of the defendant "that the estate * * * was comparatively small and that the value thereof did not exceed the sum of Twenty-five thousand ($25,000.00) dollars, and that in view of the amount involved, it would be advisable and more practical for the plaintiff to withdraw his objections to the probate and accept a settlement, rather than to continue his contest to the probate of said Will." The value of the estate was, it is said, approximately $372,000 and the defendant fraudulently misrepresented the value in order to induce the plaintiff to withdraw his objections to the probate of the will.
The plaintiff, we assume, could, because of these fraudulent misrepresentations, rescind the agreement to consent to a decree of probate or bring an action for rescission. He would then, however, be obliged to return the consideration he has received and would gain no advantage unless the probate proceedings are reopened and he receives permission, belatedly, to interpose objections to the probate of the will of the decedent and can sustain his objections in the probate proceeding. The plaintiff prefers to retain the consideration paid to him and to affirm the agreement, asking in this action for damages caused to him by the defendant's fraud which induced him to make the agreement. Those damages are the value of the right, which he relinquished, to interpose objections to the probate of the paper writing purporting to be the decedent's will. (Reno v. Bull,
Where a wrongdoer fraudulently conceals his wrong from the injured person who agrees, in ignorance of the wrong, to a settlement of the accounts of the wrongdoer and the entry of a judgment or judicial decree in accordance with the agreement, the decree does not defeat an action for damages resulting from the fraud, or preclude the injured party from proving that the settlement of the accounts was induced by fraud. (Verplanck v.Van Buren et al.,
Here, on the contrary, there was no fraud outside of the probate proceeding. The plaintiff pleads that the settlement was procured to prevent a "discovery by plaintiff * * * of all the true facts as to lack of testamentary capacity and of undue influence". There is no allegation in the complaint that the defendant misrepresented the true facts or that he induced the plaintiff to compromise a claim for less than its value or that the court made a decree in accordance with a compromise. The action is solely for damages caused by an agreement to withdraw his objections and to consent to an adjudication that the will propounded by the defendant was valid. The plaintiff cannot affirm that agreement, retain the consideration received upon it and, at the same time, assert that the will which has been probated is not the act of the testator. He was paid the stipulated price for his admission that the will was valid. If no decree had been entered *438 in accordance with the agreement he could not have opposed probate unless he had rescinded his agreement. He cannot affirm his agreement to withdraw his objections and to consent to the entry of a decree and, at the same time, urge that he could sustain those objections and that the adjudication that the will is valid, to which he consented for a price which he retains, is not binding upon the parties to the decree.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
LOUGHRAN, LEWIS, CONWAY, DESMOND and THACHER, JJ., concur; RIPPEY, J., taking no part.
Judgment affirmed.