145 N.Y. 158 | NY | 1895
The plaintiff brought ejectment to recover the possession of land and a dwelling thereon, occupied by the defendant and her husband. It was conceded that the legal title was in plaintiff's testator, at the time of his death; but the defendant claimed that she was the owner of the equitable title to the premises, by reason of promises made by the plaintiff's testator to her and of acts done by her in reliance upon those promises.
The facts do not seem to be disputed; but, upon the findings *161 made at the trial term with respect to the facts, the learned judge presiding thereat and the learned justices at the General Term have differed in their conclusions. I will state the facts as they were found. In 1872, Thomas Cornell, the plaintiff's testator, was the owner of the premises in question. He was the half-brother of the defendant and upon his request she and her husband had settled in the city of Kingston. In the year mentioned, Mr. Cornell asked the defendant's husband to build a house for the defendant on a certain piece of his property, at the cost of $4,500, and to bring the bills to him for payment. The house was built at a cost, which exceeded, by about $1,200, the sum named by Mr. Cornell, and the defendant, subsequently, made valuable permanent improvements upon the property; such as building a barn, planting of fruit trees, putting in a heating apparatus, etc.; of all which Mr. Cornell had knowledge. Other facts found were that, after the defendant had contracted to erect a house upon the property, Mr. Cornell had stated that the house was built for the defendant and was hers; and so spoke of it to different persons at different times. Upon one occasion, in the year 1876, upon the defendant's husband informing Mr. Cornell that he had found a business at Yonkers, which he thought it would be a good thing to go into, the latter replied, to the effect, that if they moved away from the property where they then resided the defendant should not have it and that they would lose it. There was this specific finding: "That such improvements, as well as the payment of $1,200, were made and expended on the faith of the promises by Cornell, to give the property to Mrs. Overbaugh (this defendant), and all such moneys were expended, and improvements made, for and on behalf of the defendant and at her request, and under her promise to repay her husband thereafter." There was a finding that the total amount of money expended by the defendant for permanent improvements, repairs, taxes, insurance, etc., and including, also, repairs and expenses, which are incidental to the ordinary care of a house, from the beginning of the erection of the house *162 down to the date of the trial, was the sum of $4,734.26 and that the fair rental value of the property of the defendant during her occupancy, for a period of about twenty years, was $250 per year; amounting in the aggregate to $5,000.
The learned trial justice conceded the existence of the exception to the general rule, that a parol gift of real estate is void, in a case where the donee enters into possession of and improves the property, upon the strength of the promise that it would be given to her; but he did not think that the present case fell within the exception. He was influenced in that view by a consideration of the nature of the acts done by the defendant, in reliance upon the promise of Mr. Cornell. Regarding the equitable rule to be founded in the idea of preventing an injustice being done to a promisee, if the promisor be permitted to avail himself of the statute, and that the application of the rule is in a case where financial injury will be sustained; he, in the first place, considered that as the defendant's acts were only such as an ordinary householder would be expected to make and, in the second place, as the fair rental value of the premises during the twenty years of the defendant's occupation was worth to her, altogether, a sum which exceeded the aggregate of the sum found to have been expended by her, or at her request, during that time, that if the defendant was compelled to surrender possession of the premises, she would not, in fact, be a loser as the result of the entire transaction with Mr. Cornell, but the gainer. Hence he concluded that there was absent here that element of injustice to the donee; which is essential to exist, in order to entitle him to an enforcement of the donor's promise.
We find ourselves unable to agree with the trial justice in his judgment upon this question and we prefer the view taken at the General Term; that where there has been a parol promise to convey, a taking of possession under such promise and the making of permanent improvements upon the property upon the faith thereof, the mere value of the occupation during the time is not to be set off against the expenditures made. I think it would not be within the spirit of the rule *163
in equity, that its application should be made to depend, not upon the fact of a consideration for the promise being shown to have existed and to have been performed, but upon the question whether, when specific performance by the donor is claimed, the use has not compensated the donee and relieved the donor's obligation. In Freeman v. Freeman (
In such a case as this, to constitute a good consideration in equity, it is, of course, essential that it be substantial; in the sense that the promise shall rest upon a performance by the promisee, which evidences acceptance of and reliance upon *164 the promise and consists in expending moneys in permanent improvements upon the land. In this case it may well have been, as found, that some of the expenditures made by the defendant upon the property were such as a householder would ordinarily make, or were trivial in their nature; but they do not influence the character of the others. We have the fact that the house was contracted for upon the promise of Mr. Cornell; that its cost exceeded the sum, which he agreed to be responsible for, by $1,200, and that there were the other improvements of a permanent character, to which I have adverted as being found. There was, in fact, such a consideration for the promise of Mr. Cornell as to have made it obligatory upon him to perform it, in order that the defendant should not be defrauded and injured. It would be very inequitable to deprive the agreement of its obligatory character, merely because, during the time of the occupation of the defendant under the parol promise, the fair rental value of the premises would amount, in the aggregate, to a sum in excess of the amount altogether expended. If there was the promise to give the property, accompanied by the delivery of possession to the defendant and expenditures in permanent improvements made, in reliance upon the promise, injury will be presumed to follow by a failure to perform it. In enforcing such a promise, equity aims at preventing a fraud upon the donee and regards the case as taken out of the operation of the statute by the part performance.
The case supposed by the learned trial justice, of trivial repairs or improvements by a tenant entering into possession of real estate under a promise that it will be given to him, was not the case before him under his own findings.
I think that the defendant fully made out her claim to be the holder of the equitable title and that she could not be ejected from the premises at the suit of the plaintiff.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed and judgment absolute ordered against the appellant upon the stipulation, with costs to the respondent in all the courts.
All concur.
Judgment accordingly. *165