14 Wash. 426 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought this action against the defendant, as executor of the last will of one Orley Hull, deceased, to compel said executor to perform an alleged parol agreement entered into between the plaintiff and said Hull, whereby he agreed to devise to her one-fourth of his estate at the time of his death.
- This action was first tried to a referee in the superior court of Walla Walla county, who found against the plaintiff, but his findings were set aside by the judge of said court, and a decree was rendered in her favor, from which this appeal is proscuted by the defendant. Several sets of briefs have been filed herein and the cause has been twice argued in this court. A number of difficult questions have been presented and ably argued on both sides, but we have not found it necessary to discuss all of them in arriving at a determination* owing to the view we have finally taken of the law applicable to the case.
The making and terms of said contract, as alleged by the plaintiff, were as follows: “That during the pendency of the proceedings aforesaid, upon the part of plaintiff and Mrs. Swezea, to have the other property added to the inventory of their mother’s, estate, and ofi their appeal to the supreme court from the action brought by their father to have the homestead declared his separate property, her father proposed to her and Mrs. Swezea that if they would discontinue all further proceedings in the prosecution of said appeal and all further proceedings to have said other property added to the inventory of her mother’s estate and would agree to a settlement and termination of
The making of this contract is disputed by the defendant, but little or no testimony was introduced to contradict the testimony upon the part of the plaintiff. The attack of the defendant was mainly directed against the validity of the contract under the statute of frauds re-enacted here, and the important question
It satisfactorily appears to all the members of this court who sat upon the trial of the cause that some kind of a contract was entered into between the parties at the time alleged. The parties were at that
One of the strongest circumstances in support of the making of the contract as alleged is the fact that Mrs. Swezea, whose interests were directly and adversely affected by it, if a valid one was entered into, was not called by the defendant to dispute it or testify in relation thereto. The circumstances connected therewith all go to show that one was entered into, and that the plaintiff is acting in good faith in the transaction, for if advocating a false claim she would probably have fixed a different time for the making of the contract, and not one when Mrs. Swezea was present and participated therein; and, considered only from the standpoint of the apparent truthfulness of the testimony, the claim made by the plaintiff appeals to the court so strongly that relief would be gladly extended were we authorized to do so under the law.
But, conceding that the contract was entered into as testified to by the plaintiff’s witnesses, was there a sufficient part performance to avoid the statute of frauds? If .not, and conceding also that there was a substantial performance upon the part of the plaintiff, it is difficult to conceive what more could have been done during the life time of the father to give it effect against the statute, unless the making of the will would have relieved it of the objection, even if after-wards revoked. But no definite time was fixed for the making of such will, and there was no proof that any will was made other than the one probated. The law is well settled that a party may enter into a valid contract to make a will in favor of another party, and also that a parol contract to make such a will may be sufficiently performed during the life time of the parties, so that a court of equity will compel a specific performance. But there is a conflict in the cases where the kind and degree of part performance necessary for such a purpose is considered. Some of the cases cited by the plaintiff support her contention that there was a sufficient part performance to avoid the statute of frauds. One of the strongest is probably that of Johnson v. Hubbell, decided in New Jersey in 1855, 10 N. J. Eq. 332 (66 Am. Dec. 773); although th e facts in that case showed a greater degree of part
Van Dwyne v. Vreeland, 12 N. J. Eq. 142, decided in 1858, also supports the contention of the plaintiff, although the court in that case found that there had been a partial performance of the contract by the other party.
• Another case is that of Maddox v. Rowe, 23 Ga. 431 (68 Am. Dec. 535), where a father agreed with his son that, if the son would convey to him a lot of land, he would devise to the son two other lots of land. The court decreed a specific performance of the contract. In that case, however, the father undertook to give effect to the contract by executing a will which was held to be void. But the court considered it as evidence in support of the contract.
We shall not undertake to review the cases cited by the plaintiff, but content ourselves with saying that none of the others to which our attention has been called are as nearly in point as the ones above mentioned. Many of them make use of the same general expression that a court of equity will decree a performance where a non-performance will result in a fraud upon the other party, and that the statute of
■ The cases cited that do support the plaintiff’s contention are overborne by the weight of authority, and the rule seems to be well settled that to enforce a parol contract to make a will there must have been at least some substantial thing done by the testator in his life time in pursuance of that contract. This •seems to be required for the purpose of placing the proof of the contract beyond all legitimate controversy, and bears directly upon the question of the proof. The fraud to be prevented is the danger of the fraudulent establishment of such contracts, and this is the purpose of the provision of the statute; and the cases which hold that a performance upon the part of one party alone is sufficient seem to lose sight of this fact and assume that the contract can as well be established by the acts of one party alone, against the statute; although the case of Van Duyne v. Vreeland, supra, holds that the defendant may admit the making of the •contract and yet make use of the statute to defeat it.
If the contract is void as to the real estate, the plaintiff cannot enforce it as to the personalty either, for being void in part it is void as a whole. Ellis v.
Some of the courts at different times have expressed a regret that the exceptions to the rules laid down by the statute of frauds have been established, and the disposition at the present time is very general against any further relaxation. By the weight of authority at this time the rule seems to be settled that in order to enforce specific performance of a parol contract to convey land, possession must have been transferred. The supreme court of the United States, in Purcell v. Miner, 4 Wall. 513, decided in 1866, strongly support this doctrine. Pond v. Sheehan, supra, decided by the supreme court of Illinois in 1890, holds that delivery is essential. Many other cases are cited in the opinion there rendered. Johns v. Johns, 67 Ind. 440, holds likewise, and the supreme court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Pugh v. Good, 3 Watts & S., 56 (37 Am. Dec. 534), holds that delivery of possession pursuant to the contract is the test of part performance. We shall not call attention to all of the cases so holding, but there is another line which, while not directly passing upon this question, holds that a part performance by one of the parties is not sufficient and that there must have been a part performance by the other party also. Some of them are Wallace v. Long, 105 Ind. 522 (55 Am. Rep. 222, 5 N. E. 666); Austin v. Davis, 128 Ind. 472 (25 Am. St. Rep. 456, 26 N. E. 890); and Ellis v. Cary, supra.
That payment and acceptance of the purchase price is not a sufficient part performance is now well settled by the later cases. Pomeroy, Contracts, § 112, and cases there cited. See, also, Gould v. Mansfield, supra, and Hale v. Hale, (Va.) 19 S. E. 739, in relation to parol
In this case nothing was done by Hull in pursuance of this contract. The possession of no property was tránsferred thereunder to any of the parties. He had actual possession of all of. it except much the smaller part of the personalty which was in the hands of the administrator, and in which Hull had an interest. This was amicably divided between the parties as aforesaid. But, as seen, such division and transfer was no part performance of the contract alleged by the plaintiff, for the terms of the contract did not call for it.
If the making of a previous will in pursuance of the contract would not have been a sufficient part performance by Hull, then the nature of this contract was such that it would not admit of a sufficient part performance to make it valid, for there was nothing else for him to do in the premises. Conceding all that the plaintiff claims with reference to the proof, we are still forced to the conclusion, under the authorities, that she is not entitled to a decree for a specific performance, for we are not disposed to add to or extend the exceptions to the rule established by the statute to meet the seeming hardships of a particular case. The fault rests with the parties in not putting their contracts in writing. The rule should not be infringed as freely after the death of one of the parties as in cases where the contract was to be performed during his life time. If a period of years had been fixed by the contract for the conveyance of this property by Hull to the plaintiff, instead of a devise, and the parties were all living, under the overwhelming weight of authority there was not a sufficient part
Reversed.