Betterly v. Granger

87 N.W.2d 330, 350 Mich. 651, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 309
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1957
DocketDocket 50, Calendar 47,340
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 N.W.2d 330 (Betterly v. Granger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Betterly v. Granger, 87 N.W.2d 330, 350 Mich. 651, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 309 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is another case in which the aid of the chancellor is sought.in obtaining specific performance of an alleged oral contract to leave “everything” to the plaintiff, who is here named Burl Bet-terly. In spite of the alleged promise, when the will was read, it was found that the bulk of the estate had gone to others,"Burl receiving only a life estate in the farm. He thereupon brought his bill in chancery for specific performance of the alleged contract. In the Ingham county circuit court he prevailed.

Burl Betterly and his wife, Helen, were married in the year 1921. Helen was a second cousin of the alleged promisor, the then Mrs. Mary Clements. As a child she had often stayed with the Clements, and she felt that she was, among her brothers and sisters, possibly the favorite of the older couple. After Helen’s marriage a close relationship continued. She and her husband visited back and forth with the Clements. On one such occasion, in the winter of 1927-1928, Mr. and Mrs. Clements asked the young couple to move onto their farm and operate it. At this time- the - Clements had a tenant farmer but his time had about expired and “they were looking for someone to come on, some young person that could *653 come to tlieir home or to their farm and stay and work it, and when they come to the place where they were needing help as they grew older, they would have someone to take care of them, come and stay there and care for them.” The substance of this proposal was repeated shortly afterwards. The Clements had gone to the Betterlys early in the day, Mrs. Clements wanting to give the Betterly’s 3-month-old baby, Dawn, her morning bath. (It was in Dawn’s bedroom, many years later, that Mrs. Clements was to die.) They stayed on for their noon meal and, as they were leaving, the subject was again broached. The Clements were looking forward, they said, to the Betterlys coming to the farm the “ ‘next year and staying there with us and working the farm and staying there as long as we live and caring for lis.’ ” At this time Mr. Betterly replied that he would “come there the next year.”

So, in fact, he did. At this time the Betterlys had made a substantial start in life. Burl was 29 years of age, with a wife and infant daughter. He had been farming for several years, both as tenant and as owner. He owned a 17-acre berry farm of his own, with house and garage. He had farm tools sufficient to work a farm, horses and cattle, and four or five hundred dollars in the bank. He was looking forward to the purchase of his own farm. The Clements, on the other hand, were no longer young. He was in his sixties and his wife slightly younger, 58 or 60. They owned a farm of 119 acres, and were childless. Their need has been described in their own words. The advantage to the Betterlys, if everything worked out, was not insubstantial. At any rate, the Betterlys moved to the Clements farm.

This case departs from the norm at this point. Usually, because of the very nature of these cases involving the family relationship, testimony comes only from the family itself. Here we have, from *654 time to timé, the testimony of'neighbors. Snch we have at this point with respect to the circumstances under which the Betterlys moved to the Clements farm. Mr. Bert Mastic, whose farm was across the road, testified for plaintiff Betterly. He (Mastic) had had a conversation with Mrs. Clements about the time of the' move. She had been to the mailbox, and, being neighborly, had stopped and talked with him.

“Q. You tell us, as best you recall, what that conversation was between you and Mary Clements.
“A. Well, we passed the time of day and about the weather and such things as people will talk about, and then I brought the subject up about changing the renters. She said, ‘Yes, we’re' going to change renters.’
“Q. How did you happen to know that they were changing renters ?
“A. Because Burl was moving tools on there at that time. * * *
“A. And she says, ‘Yes, we are changing renters. John and I haven’t got any children, and we’re going to get things fixed up so we know where our property is going when we get, done with it,’ or words to that effect. I don’t know if that is exactly the way she said it or not.
“Q. All right. Did she say anything further in regard to what'she meant by that? * * * '
“A. She said that Burl is a nice young fellow and Helen is a nice young girl, and as I understand it, I think Helen and Mary were cousins. * * *■
“A. And she said, ‘We have made up our mind if we get them on the farm, that if they take care of the farm, take care of us as long as we lived, that they could have what we got when we got through with it.’ ”

Initially there seems to have been a period of adjustment, of trial, of mutual feeling-out. With a lifetime relationship involved this would seem neither *655 unwise nor unusual. But that fall, after the corn' had been cut, and while plaintiff was setting up'his; corn shocks, he was approached by Mr. Clements. Mr. Betterly relates the conversation in these terms:

“John said to me, he said, after we had been visiting, .‘What do you think, Burl?’ I looked right at him, ‘What do you think? What do you mean, John?’ ‘Why,’ he said, ‘You know that we said that we would make it worth your while if you would come over and work this farm for us and take care of us.’ I said, ‘Yes,’ and he says, ‘Now, do you want to stay?’ I said, ‘Sure, I want to stay,’ Then he says, ‘We will go and have the papers fixed up for you.’ ”

Such, also, was the tenor of a dinner-table conversation between the 2 families at a subsequent date. Mrs. Betterly is testifying:

“As we sat around the dinner table after dinner, why John said to Burl, T have talked with you and have asked you if you were satisfied and would like to stay on,’ and Burl told him he was, and he said, ‘So, we have gone and fixed our papers • so when the last one is laid away, what is left that we have will be yours.’
“Q. Was there any further conversation? * * *
“A. Yes, Burl said, ‘Well, John, you have brothers and sisters? How about that?’ And John said, ‘My brothers have enough of their own, and they.have made like situations. They have made like agreements with the men on their farms,’ and Mary said, ‘People will say, you are here looking after their money, but what do we care? We have to have someone to care for us, and we can help you.’
“Q. Did Burl say anything, indicating any assent or refusal of this proposition?
“A. Yes, he said that he would stay and look after them as long as they lived. * .* *
“Q. Helen, you said that they said they would make it worth your while, is that right?
“A. Yes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W.2d 330, 350 Mich. 651, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betterly-v-granger-mich-1957.