Cushman v. Outwater

159 A.2d 89, 121 Vt. 426, 1960 Vt. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 2, 1960
Docket181
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 159 A.2d 89 (Cushman v. Outwater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cushman v. Outwater, 159 A.2d 89, 121 Vt. 426, 1960 Vt. LEXIS 140 (Vt. 1960).

Opinion

Barney, J.

Robert S. Outwater was furnished funds totalling $15,400.00 by his mother, Alice S. Cushman, toward the purchase of a lot and construction of a dwelling house for himself, his wife Hildur and their children, and containing separate accommodations for Mrs. Cushman. Except for alterations financed out of these same funds in 1955 to provide kitchen facilities in Mrs. Cushman’s portion, the house was completed and occupied by the parties in 1954. The money was furnished by the mother to her son with the understanding that she would be provided with a place to live in the house when in Bennington. She suggested that her other son, Edwin would receive an equivalent sum out of her estate, above and beyond an equal division between her two sons. From 1954 to the fall of 1957 Robert and his wife and Mrs. Cushman residted in the house, Mrs. Cushman, however, spending extended periods in Florida and away from Bennington during this time. In the fall of 1957 Robert and his wife dispossessed Mrs. Cushman by moving her belongings out of her quarters into storage while she was in Florida. She thereupon, as plaintiff, brought her bill in equity seeking to recover only the fair rental value of the accommodations which were to be available to her during her lifetime, and the storage expense. As defendants, Robert and his wife are resisting payment of any amount and have appealed the decree in favor of the plaintiff made below.

In this Court the defendants have challenged only the decree and a certain exclusionary ruling by the chancellor below relating to the materiality of a proposed line of inquiry.

The defendants urge that the money furnished by the plaintiff represented an advancement and claim the findings support their position. They first point to the chancellor’s use of the term "advance” in connection with the money provided Robert. They then refer to the chancellor’s finding *428 that the parties understood that the otherwise equal sharing by Edwin and Robert in the plaintiff’s estate would be adjusted to account for these fluids already furnished to Robert. All this, defendants maintain, amounted to a finding that the transaction was an advancement', which would make the money an irrevocable gift’, not subject to repayment.

A considerable portion of defendants’ brief is devoted to an exposition of the law of advancements. However, this doctrine is governed by statute and, by definition, comes into operation only after a donor has died intestate. 14 V. S. A. §1723. Hence it has no application here. Nor is the reasoning of cases relating to the doctrine helpful since it is concerned with the distribution of an estate as between heirs. 1 Am. Jur. Advancements, §7, p. 718. What we have under the findings is more nearly an agreement for a release of an expectancy. See Simonds v. Simonds’ Estate, 96 Vt. 110, 117 A. 103; also 16 Am. Jur. 932, Descent and Distribution, §151 et seq. This action is not one dealing with the issues raised by such a doctrine, however, so we need spend no time on it.

The defendants further contend the decree is supported neither by the findings nor the pleadings. They argue that the decree presumes the existence of a contractual relationship not raised by the pleadings or established b¡y the findings.

The findings disclose that the chancellor found that the plaintiff furnished the funds she did with the understanding that the construction undertaken was to have accommodations for her use included in it. During construction the plans were altered to enlarge the quarters intended for the plaintiff. After all parties had been living in the dwelling a year, a kitchen was added to her portion of the house at a cost of $1600.00 which she provided. The alteration and construction was supervised by the defendant, Robert Cutwater. The findings are replete with references to the agreement to furnish living accommodations to the plaintiff in return for her financing of a part of the construction cost of the dwelling. Unquestionably, this agreement was acted on by both defendants and *429 plaintiff. Insofar a's the decree requires the support of tacts indicating a contractual arrangement between the parties, the findings supply it. A ceremonial formulation by the parties of the contract terms, either oral or written, is not a prerequisite to the existence of an agreement. The contract and its terms may be implied from the facts surrounding the transaction. Raymond v. Sheldon’s Estate, 92 Vt. 396, 398, 104 A. 106. See also Morse v. Kenney, 87 Vt. 445, 448, 89 A. 865. Furthermore, whenever findings are reviewed, they are aided by rules of construction in favor of support of the judgment where reasonably possible, as set forth in Smead v. Sutherland, 118 Vt. 366, 368, 111 A.2d 335, which is representative of a long line of cases.

With respect to the contention that the pleadings do not support the decree because, the defendants say, plaintiff’s theory of recovery in those pleadings was based on a claim of ownership and not on any contractual arrangement, an examination of the bill of complaint is revealing. Paragraph five reads as follows:

”5. Prior to the beginning of the construction of the plaintiff’s proposed new house and after they had taken title in their own names in the aforesaid building lot, the defendants requested the plaintiff to change the building plans of her proposed house and to enlarge her proposed house so as to permit the defendants and their children to reside in the same together with the plaintiff. In consideration therefor the defendants offered to pay the estimated additional cost of enlarging the proposed house — which estimated additional cost was ten thous- and dollars, and to permit the plaintiff to live in the proposed house the remainder of her life without payment of any portion of the expenses incident thereto— such as taxes, water rents, repairs, insurance premiums, fuel costs, etc.”

The bill further states that the promise to allow her to live in the house was renewed at the time she financed the construction of her kitchen addition. Furthermore, the bill declares the defendants to be the holders of record title to the property. *430 There in the quoted paragraph is the agreement substantially as found by the chancellor. There, also, is the reference to ownership of the premises which the defendants say represents an inconsistency that requires a reversal, when placed alongside the findings. Under her own pleading, however, the only "ownership” the plaintiff could be referring to would be whatever equitable interest she might have acquired through furnishing three-fifths of the construction costs. But the claim of the plaintiff against the defendants does not turn on any claim of ownership, but on the contractual arrangement raised by the pleadings and found by the chancellor. Any allegations of ownership as made in this case are npt an essential element of the equitable claim the plaintiff seeks to establish, and can form no basis for setting aside the decree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 A.2d 89, 121 Vt. 426, 1960 Vt. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cushman-v-outwater-vt-1960.