139 A. 665 | R.I. | 1928
The action is assumpsit to enforce a written agreement made by the defendants with one Mary McCarthy. The grounds of demurrer to the declaration are (1) that the agreement was testamentary and not properly executed as a will; (2) that it was not such an agreement for the benefit of a third person as would be enforced in a suit by the beneficiary. The demurrer was sustained. Plaintiff's exception to this decision is the only question raised in the bill of exceptions.
The agreement is as follows:
"AGREEMENT.
*76"Agreement entered into this eighteenth day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen by and between Mary McCarthy and Ernest J. Cormier and Catherine G. Cormier, all of the City and County of Providence in the State of Rhode Island.
"WITNESSETH: First. The said Mary McCarthy does hereby loan the said Ernest J. Cormier and Catherine G. Cormier the sum of one thousand dollars for the period of six years from the date hereof at the rate of six per centum per annum payable every six months at the residence of said Mary McCarthy when due.
"Second, At the end of six years from date, should I in the meantime depart this life the said sum of one thousand dollars shall be paid by the said Ernest J. Cormier and Catherine G. Cormier to my lawful husband, Daniel P. McCarthy during his lifetime of said City, County and State at his residence in Providence, Rhode Island, and the interest payable semi-annually as aforesaid, in the event of my decease shall be payable to him the said Daniel P. McCarthy when the same becomes due from time to time under this agreement.
"Third. Should I depart this life pending this agreement and should my said lawful husband Daniel P. McCarthy depart this life pending this agreement, then the said interest accruing from time to time hereunder together with the principal of one thousand dollars due and payable six years from the date hereof, the same shall then become the property of Annie Sliney, my lawful niece resident at the City of Hartford in the State of Connecticut, which title shall vest in the principal and interest of said sum upon the death of the survivor of myself and the said Daniel P. McCarthy, my lawful husband aforesaid.
"In witness whereof we have subscribed our signatures and affixed our seals to these articles of agreement on this eighteenth day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fourteen at Providence, Rhode Island.
Signed and sealed in the her presence of MARY x McCARTHY MARIE C. McAVAY mark
ERNEST J. CORMIER CATHERINE G. CORMIER."
Plaintiff avers that the loan was made pursuant to the agreement; and that November 19, 1920, by agreement of Mary McCarthy with defendants the agreement was extended for a period of six years.
Mary McCarthy and her husband died before the end of the extended time for payment. This suit was begun after the loan was due, defendants having refused to make payment to the plaintiff.
The question whether the instrument is testamentary or contractual is to be decided by the character of its contents rather than from its title or any formal words with which it may begin or conclude. If it is a contract, its binding force comes from the meeting of the minds of the promisor *77
and the promisee; whereas, if it is of a testamentary character, its binding force, if any, comes from the fact that it is the last expressed purpose of the maker with respect to the disposition of her property after her death. Cawley's Appeal,
136 Pa. St. 628. The language of this instrument, except in the subscription clause, is Mary McCarthy's. By the terms of the instrument the interest and the principal of the loan were to be paid to Mary McCarthy if she was living when any payment was due. If she died before maturity of the loan, her husband, if living, was to receive the interest from time to time and the principal sum at maturity; but if both she and her husband deceased before maturity of the loan, then any interest payable thereafter and the principal sum was to become the property of and the title thereto was to vest in her niece, the plaintiff. In ascertaining whether a written instrument was intended to operate as a will or otherwise, words which may not change the legal effect of the instrument, and therefore may be immaterial on the question of construction, may be significant in the determination of the character of the instrument. Smith v. Eason,
It is not necessary to consider the other grounds of demurrer.
The plaintiff's exception is overruled. The case is remitted to the Superior Court with direction to enter judgment for the defendants.