OTTO J. SELLE v. CHARLES SELLE, ANNIE DEITZSCHOLD, IDA ELLRICK, LILLIE ELLRICK, HERBERT ELLRICK, FRANK ELLRICK, ALLEN ELLRICK, NELLIE BEEBE and HERMAN DEITZSCHOLD, Administrator of the Estate of JOHN SELLE, Appellants.
Division One
December 18, 1935
88 S. W. (2d) 877
It follows that our preliminary rule is prohibition should be made absolute, and it is so ordered. All concur.
Division One, December 18, 1935.
Pross T. Cross, Gerald Cross and R. H. Musser for respondent.
BRADLEY, C.— This is an action for specific performance of an alleged verbal contract between plaintiff and John Selle, deceased, by which contract, it is alleged that deceased agreed to give eighty acres of land in Clinton County, Missouri, to plaintiff, if plaintiff would take care of John Selle for the remainder of his (John Selle‘s) life. The chancellor granted the relief sought and defendants appealed.
It is alleged in plaintiff‘s petition that John Selle died intestate in Clinton County, Missouri, September 5, 1932; that he was never married; that he left surviving, no direct descendants; that his sole heirs at law were plaintiff, a nephew, defendants, Charles Selle and Annie Deitzschold, a brother and sister; defendants, Ida, Lillie, Herbert, Frank and Allen Ellrick, nephews and nieces, and Nellie Beebe, a niece; that defendant, Herman Dietzschold, was the administrator of the estate of John Selle, deceased; that at the time of his death, deceased owned the eighty acres of land, describing it, which is the land in question. It is further alleged that on the ____ day of August, 1932, plaintiff and deceased entered into a verbal contract whereby the deceased “then and there promised and agreed with plaintiff that if he, plaintiff, would take him (the said John Selle) into his (plaintiff‘s) home and there keep him, provide for him, board him, nurse him and care for him and give him a home as long as he (the said John Selle) should live, that then plaintiff, upon the death of the said John Selle, should have and was to have and the said John Selle would give and leave to him, absolutely and in fee simple” the land described. It is alleged that plaintiff performed the alleged agreement and that deceased left sufficient personal estate to pay all debts and funeral bills, and that all such were paid. Plaintiff prayed judgment to the effect that the court find and adjudge that the contract was made as alleged; that plaintiff had fully performed and that it be adjudged and decreed that he, plaintiff, was the owner in fee of the land described.
Defendants in a separate count set out the interest, from their viewpoint, of plaintiff and defendants in the land described, and asked for partition. Plaintiff replied by denying generally the new matter.
The chief contention is that under the facts plaintiff was not entitled to specific performance. The deceased, John Selle, was seventy-one years old at the time of his death and for many years lived alone on the farm in question. Plaintiff and his family had for twenty years lived on a farm owned by deceased until a short time prior to his death, and plaintiff and his family were still on this farm at the time of the death of deceased. It was about a half mile “across the woods” from plaintiff‘s home to the home of deceased. August 24, 1932, plaintiff and other members of his family, having learned that deceased was sick, went to see about him, and it is claimed that the alleged contract was made on that day at the home of deceased. On that day deceased was moved to plaintiff‘s home where he was taken care of by plaintiff and his family, and other relatives and friends, until his death on September 5th.
Plaintiff‘s evidence was substantially as follows: Minnie Selle, wife of plaintiff, testified that during the twenty years she and her husband had lived on the farm of deceased that he had lived alone; did his own housekeeping and cooking, except for the last two years, she had helped him to some extent, had taken “things to him;” that she had done this off and on, but more “the last two winters.” As to the alleged contract, Mrs. Selle testified that deceased, at his home and just prior to being moved to plaintiff‘s home, said to plaintiff:
Frank Peters, a cousin of plaintiff‘s wife, was present at the time of the making of the alleged contract, and testified: “Well, I came in the house and Mr. John Selle says to Otto, he says, ‘Otto,’ he says, ‘I am sick.’ And he says, ‘I am where I can‘t take care of myself any longer.’ And he says, ‘Will you take me to your home and take care of me.’ He says, ‘There is no one takes care of me, but Otto and Min.’ And he says, ‘Will you take care of me as long as I live?’ Otto says, ‘Yes, sir, I will.’ and Mr. John Selle says, ‘If you will take care of me as long as I live, you shall have this eighty acres of land.‘”
Edward Selle, plaintiff‘s son, testified: “Well, he (deceased) said he was awful sick and that he wanted Otto to take him home with him and give him a home, nurse him and take care of him as long as he lived; that if he would, why, he said he could have that eighty acres of land,” and that plaintiff said: “All right, Uncle John, I will; I will take you over there today and give you a home the rest of your life.” Mrs. Edward Selle, who was present at the home of deceased at the time of the making of the alleged contract, testified: “Well, when he (deceased) looked up and saw Mr. Selle come in, he said, ‘Otto, my boy, I am very sick.’ And he said that he didn‘t have anyone to care for him but Mr. and Mrs. Selle, and he wanted Mr. Selle to take him into his home and care for him as long as he lived, and he told Mr. Selle if he would take him into his home and care for him as long as he lived, he said, ‘I shall give you this 80 acres when I die,’ and that plaintiff said, ‘I will, Uncle John.’ He told him he would take him into his home, care for him and do the best he could for him as long as he lived.” On cross-examination, Mrs. Edward Selle testified: “He (deceased) told Mr. Selle (plaintiff) he said that they all seemed like they were ashamed of him; he didn‘t mention any names, and he said, ‘You and Min are the only ones I can depend on.’ And he wanted them—he asked Mr. Selle if he wouldn‘t take him into his home. Mrs. Selle wanted him to—well, she told him he should have the care, and that if he could not come there, he should go to the hospital, and he didn‘t want to go to the hospital.”
The evidence for defendants was, so far as pertinent here, as fol-
Dr. Vancil James testified that, shortly after the death of deceased, he had a conversation at his office with plaintiff and that in this conversation plaintiff asked him what he thought it would be worth to take care of deceased as he had, and that he told plaintiff, “I don‘t think $100 would be out of the way;” that plaintiff said nothing about “a contract to get 80 acres of land in payment.” Plaintiff also made inquiry of Dr. J. E. Bowman who treated deceased in his last illness as to what Dr. Bowman thought would be a fair charge for taking care of deceased. Noah Long testified that in a conversation with plaintiff “right after the death” of deceased, plaintiff told him about moving deceased to his (plaintiff‘s) home; and said that deceased did not want to move; that “they just had to load him up and bring him over.” Fred Deitzschold, son of Herman and Annie, and cousin of plaintiff, testified that he lived near plaintiff; that he was at plaintiff‘s home during the last illness of deceased, except the two days before he knew his uncle was sick; that
We revert to the evidence of Herman Deitzschold, the administrator of the estate and brother-in-law of deceased. He had known deceased for fifty years, and said that the relations between his entire family and deceased were friendly; were always friendly; that he, witness, “would take him (deceased) home to dinner and my wife always sent a box of eats with him every time he came, and gave him blankets and bedding, and I gave him suits of clothes, and a good overcoat so he would have something to wear.” The brother-in-law, Deitzschold, held a mortgage on the seventy-acre farm of deceased, which plaintiff had occupied for twenty years; and said that deceased owed $800 to a nephew in California, and that the nephew “wanted his money;” that deceased came to him, but Deitzschold was not permitted to tell what the deceased said. This was, as we understand the record, in the late Spring of 1932, prior to the death of deceased the following September. Deitzschold told deceased that the debt secured by the mortgage was due and that he, deceased, “ought to do something.” Deitzschold did not foreclose, but found a buyer for the land and the nephew and Deitzschold were paid. All the witnesses, where the subject is mentioned in their evidence, say that the relation between deceased and his relatives were friendly, and there is nothing to the contrary, except what may be inferred from the remark of deceased that he did not have anyone to take care of him, except plaintiff and his wife. There was evidence tending to show that the land in question was worth around $2000 and that the reasonable value of the services rendered deceased by plaintiff, after the date of the alleged contract, was $100 to $150.
In an equity case we are not bound by the finding below on the facts, but we should and do give great weight to the finding by the chancellor. He had the witnesses before him and was better able to arrive at the true facts than are we. It was found that the contract was made as pleaded and we adopt that finding. In cases similar on the facts to the present case, each case has had to rest on its own facts. In some instances the Statute of Frauds has been regarded as a bar while in others, the statute has not been permitted to defeat recovery. In Berg v. Moreau, 199 Mo. 416, 97 S. W. 901, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 157 (specific performance granted); Russell v. Sharp, 192 Mo. 270, l. c. 285, 91 S. W. 134, 111 Am. St. Rep. 496 (specific performance denied); Sutton v. Hayden, 62 Mo. 101, l. c. 112 (specific performance granted); Gupton v. Gupton, 47 Mo.
Cases have arisen in this and other jurisdictions on contracts like and similar to the one here, where to have denied specific performance would have resulted “in a deep seated wrong.” Such a case was Sutton v. Hayden, 62 Mo. 101, supra, and other cases there cited. In the Sutton case it appears the services were performed over a period of about fifteen years and were “menial and in themselves arduous and disagreeable, such as the helpless and invalid condition of Mrs. Green rendered necessary; that all such services were performed . . . with tenderness and affection.” The services rendered in the Sutton case are characterized as such that “money cannot buy; a thousand nameless and delicate services and attentions, incapable of being the subject of explicit contract, which money with all its peculiar potency, is powerless to purchase.”
One obstacle in the path of plaintiff, seeking specific performance is that the service rendered by him can be easily compensated in money. In 25 Ruling Case Law, page 307, section 122, it is stated: “Although the courts are not in harmony on the proposition as to whether or not the performance of services, or furnishing of support, under a contract to devise realty in consideration thereof, is sufficient part performance to satisfy the Statute of Frauds where no possession of real estate is taken under such contract, the weight of authority holds that, if the support to be furnished, or services to be rendered, are of such a character as to be capable of an approximately accurate estimate, and their value liquidated in money, so that the promisee may be made substantially whole, specific performance will not be decreed. But this limitation of the rule has no application where the consideration for the contract is that the promisee shall assume a peculiar and domestic relation to the promisor, and render to him services of such a peculiar character that it is practically impossible to estimate their value by any pecuniary standard.” Forrister v. Sullivan, supra, was an action to enforce specific performance of a verbal contract to convey certain land before the death of the promisor, the consideration being for services rendered the promisor by the promisee. The relief sought was denied. In discussing the requirements as to such contracts, in order to successfully invoke the power of a court of equity for specific performance, it was ruled (231 Mo. 374) that “the contract must be grounded on an adequate and legal consideration, and it
Contracts similar to the present one have been enforced in some jurisdictions, although the time of service was for a short, or comparatively short duration. [See Howe v. Watson, 179 Mass. 30, 60 N. E. 415; Woods v. Dunn, 81 Ore. 457, 159 Pac. 1158; Lothrop v. Marble, 12 S. D. 511, 81 N. W. 885, 76 Am. St. Rep. 626; Bryson v. McShane, 48 W. Va. 126, 35 S. E. 848, 49 L. R. A. 527; Watson v. Mahan, 20 Ind. 223; Dingler v. Ritzius, 42 Idaho, 614, 247 Pac. 10.] However, in some of these cases it is pointed out that no point was made on the inadequacy of the consideration, which is not the
In Lothrop v. Marble, supra, specific performance was granted on
We do not deem it necessary to further prolong this opinion. Under the facts, plaintiff is not entitled to specific performance, but he should not be cast without reasonable compensation for the services he rendered. When a court of equity is rightfully possessed of a case, it will not relinquish jurisdiction “short of doing complete justice.” Rockhill Tennis Club v. Volker, 331 Mo. 947, 56 S. W. (2d) 9, l. c. 20, and authorities there cited. Plaintiff did not offer any evidence as to the value of the services rendered. He stood on the contract, and it appears that he was not satisfied with the value of the services suggested by the administrator. The time for filing claim in the probate court has expired. The answer in a separate count asks for partition. We see no reason why all questions raised by the pleadings cannot be disposed of in this case, and to that end, the judgment awarding plaintiff specific performance should be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to ascertain the reasonable value of the services rendered by plaintiff under the contract, unless agreed upon, and to make such amount as found, a lien upon the land described in the pleadings and to proceed in partition if such is desired by defendants. It is so ordered. Ferguson and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion by BRADLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
