Opinion
Argued March 23, 1911
Decided April 25, 1911
Eugene M. Ashley for appellants.
William F. Canough for respondents.
The action was brought against the heirs at law, administrators and next of kin of Alma M. Taylor to specifically enforce a contract alleged to have been made by the deceased whereby she promised upon her death to devise and bequeath to the plaintiffs all the property that she had received under the will of her late husband, Dr. Judson J. Taylor, the father of the plaintiffs. The Special Term decided in favor of the plaintiffs and that decision has been affirmed at the Appellate Division by a divided court.
The circumstances of the case and the relations of the parties are as follows: In June, 1895, Dr. Judson J. Taylor, the father of the plaintiffs, married the defendants' intestate, Alma M. Robinson, at the city of Syracuse, where both the parties resided, and lived with her until his death on July 23rd, 1897. A short time prior to the marriage Alma M. Robinson obtained in the territory of Oklahoma a decree of divorce from her husband, William Robinson, on service of process by publication. So far as appears by the record this decree was clearly void, the parties being residents of New York state, neither living in Oklahoma, and the defendant not appearing in the suit. Dr. Taylor, however, was aware of the defect in the divorce proceedings, and so the trial court has found. At the time of the marriage referred to, Dr. Taylor transferred and conveyed to the plaintiffs property to the value of at least $15,000. The estate possessed by him at his death seems to have been less than $20,000, of which by his will he gave to his wife Alma property worth between ten and eleven thousand dollars, about $2,500 to each of his daughters, and some legacies or devises to other relatives and connections.
The claim of the plaintiffs is that they being dissatisfied with the terms of the will and threatening to contest its probate, the widow, Alma, promised in consideration of their allowing the will to go to probate, to leave to them on her decease all the property she had received from her husband. The evidence to establish this agreement is of a most unsatisfactory character. No objections had been filed to the probate of the will, nor does there seem any ground on which even a plausible contest might have been made. There is no claim that Dr. Taylor was in any way incompetent to make a will, and the trial court has found not only that he was of sound and disposing mind and memory, but that the execution of the will was not procured by reason of any undue influence. That the invalidity of Alma's divorce would not affect the validity of Dr. Taylor's testamentary dispositions seems clear. ( Gelston v. Shields, 78 N.Y. 275.) It does not appear that the plaintiffs ever consulted counsel, but confined themselves to expressions of dissatisfaction with the provisions of their father's will. It is probably true that plaintiffs, as heirs at law of their deceased father, could have objected to the probate of the will, and the withdrawal of opposition would afford some consideration for the support of a promise on behalf of their stepmother, still it is evident that in this case the consideration was of the most unsubstantial character. The testimony to establish the agreement contended for was that of Mrs. Beckham, a sister of Dr. Taylor, and Mrs. Treat, a sister of the plaintiffs' mother. Mrs. Beckham was a beneficiary under the doctor's will to the extent of some $900, and Mrs. Treat's husband was also a beneficiary, but to what amount does not appear in the evidence. It would not be practicable to quote in detail the testimony of these witnesses. Mrs. Beckham seems to have carried on most of the negotiations on behalf of the plaintiffs. She testified that she commenced the conversation with Mrs. Taylor, at which the daughters were present, by saying: "Girls, I wish to know your decision in the matter before I return home. I shall remain true to my promise that I will will you all the property left by my brother to me upon my death." Then Mrs. Taylor said: "Now girls, if you will drop this matter, give it no further thought and take no proceedings, be perfectly safe in the statement I made at the beginning, that at my death your father's property which was willed to me will be willed to you. That was a promise I made with your father," and to this the girls assented. This is the most direct testimony of an agreement between the parties. Mrs. Treat's testimony is of the same general character. Much of the testimony consists of admissions by Mrs. Taylor. Other witnesses were produced to prove various statements by Mrs. Taylor of her intention to dispose of the property to the plaintiffs, but the unreliability of such testimony is made apparent by the evidence of one witness for the plaintiffs who states that Mrs. Taylor told her that she intended to remodel the homestead and that it was to be so arranged that upon her death it should go to the plaintiff Lillian, but if Lillian died first, then it should go to herself — an agreement or plan entirely inconsistent with the alleged agreement that all the property obtained from her husband should go on her death to the two plaintiffs.
In Hamlin v. Stevens ( 177 N.Y. 39) Judge VANN, speaking for the court and referring to agreements of the character here sought to be enforced, said: "Contracts of the character in question have become so frequent of recent years as to cause alarm, and the courts have grown conservative as to the nature of the evidence required to establish them, and in enforcing them, when established, by specific performance. Such contracts are easily fabricated and hard to disprove, because the sole contracting party on one side is always dead when the question arises. * * * Such contracts should be in writing, and the writing should be produced, or, if ever based upon parol evidence, it should be given or corroborated in all substantial particulars by disinterested witnesses." (p. 47.) In Rosseau v. Rouss ( 180 N.Y. 116) the same judge, again speaking for this court, said: "Thus, the evidence relied upon to establish the contract is, first, the testimony of the mother, who tried to swear $100,000 into the pocket of her own child, and, second, the testimony of witnesses who swear to the admissions of a dead man. The former is dangerous; the latter is weak, and neither should be acted upon without great caution. We have repeatedly held that such a contract must not only be certain and definite and founded upon an adequate consideration, but also that it must be established by the clearest and most convincing evidence." (p. 120.) Tested by these rules it seems to me the plaintiffs did not establish their case.
But if I should err in this view there is one plain error in the admission of evidence for which the judgment should be reversed, as it is apparent that the evidence so admitted influenced the decision of the trial court. After Mrs. Beckham had narrated her story of the transactions and conversations between the parties the trial judge asked her, over the objection and exception of the defendants' counsel, whether she had made her will leaving to the plaintiffs the $900 which she had received from her brother's estate. She answered in the affirmative. The incompetency of this testimony is clear. The witness could not corroborate her evidence by her own acts. There are certain cases in which, when a witness has been impeached, he may be sustained by showing previous declarations to the same effect as his testimony on the stand. The evidence admitted does not fall within any such rule, and the rule itself applies only to declarations made by the witness before any dispute or litigation has arisen. It does not appear when the witness made her will and at any time she was at liberty to change it. But chiefly, no declaration of the witness that she intended to leave property to her nieces, nor any act of hers in conformity with such declaration, would tend to prove that the deceased had made a similar promise or agreement as to her property.
The learned counsel for the respondents contends that this is a case of unanimous affirmance, and, therefore, we are precluded from examining the evidence. This view is erroneous. The order recites that two of the justices dissented upon the authority of Hamlin v. Stevens ( supra). It is urged that this dissent was on a question of law. Assuming that the dissent was on a question of law, that would not at all aid the plaintiffs in their contention. That a judge dissents on a question of law does not show that he affirms the disposition on the questions of fact. But beyond this, the reference of the dissenting justices to Hamlin v. Stevens clearly shows that their dissent was upon questions of fact.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
GRAY, HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER and COLLIN, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed, etc.