58 A. 766 | R.I. | 1904
It appears from the evidence in this case that the complainant, Lincoln Dyer Spencer, and his uncle, Obadiah B. Spencer, carried on a correspondence for several years relating to the disposition of the uncle's property, and it is this correspondence which the complainants rely upon to establish the contract set forth in their bill of complaint. None of the letters on the part of the uncle were written by himself, but they were composed by others, who say that they expressed substantially his ideas. No letters are produced from the complainant, but the complainant and some of this witnesses have testified to their recollection of the contents of letters which were sent to the uncle by or on behalf of the nephew.
The letters which are produced, even if they accurately expressed the intention of Obadiah B. Spencer, come for short of proving any contract between the parties. At the most, we can only find that the uncle had made his will in favor of *238 his nephew, and was disposed not to alter it but to make him his heir if on further consideration the nephew was willing to carry out the views of the uncle with regard to his business and property; but we do not find that the uncle bound himself by any definite contract to make his will in favor of the nephew, or that the nephew made any binding promise on that consideration. After the visit of the nephew and his family to the uncle in 1898, it is clear that the expected arrangement was abandoned. There is evidence that the complainant expressly announced his intention to give up the whole arrangement before he left for his home, and he received without protest, so far as appears, the last letter of the uncle, written two years before his death, which notified him that a new will had been made in favor of a grandson.
The legal questions which are involved in this case were answered by the court in its opinion on the demurrer to the bill,
Our conclusion on the evidence is that the minds of the parties never met in any binding contract, and that negotiations to that end were broken off at the time of the nephew's visit and never resumed.
The bill must be dismissed with costs.