Finn v. Finn's Adm'r

244 S.W.2d 435
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 21, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 244 S.W.2d 435 (Finn v. Finn's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finn v. Finn's Adm'r, 244 S.W.2d 435 (Ky. 1951).

Opinion

STANLEY, Commissioner.

The judgment is that there was no contract by Mrs. Katie Finn, deceased, to devise her estate to Miss Rose Finn in consideration that she board and care for her needs during the rest of her life and pay the expenses of her burial.

Mrs. Finn was the widow of the brother of Misses Rose and Bridget Finn. She was a native of Louisville but had lived in Chicago about twenty years. Since the death of her husband, Mike Finn, about eight years before, she had operated a rooming or boarding house. She had no children or close relatives. In fact, she had stated that she only had a cousin and her husband but both were dead. The warning order attorney in this suit to settle the estate could find no heirs. Eight months after the present judgment, 28 distant cousins were located and came in.

Mrs. Katie Finn was 72 years old, Miss Rose was 62, and Miss Bridget 74. Rose worked at the city general hospital and Bridget looked after their home. These ladies had always been congenial and friendly. The deceased and Bridget had gone to school together. A few weeks before June, 1948, Mrs. Finn wrote Bridget, asking if she could come and make her home with them. She wrote her to come, saying, “our doors were all open.” Mrs. Finn sold her property in Chicago' and had a bank deposit of $5,529 and postal savings certificates of $400. She came to Louisville to live with her sisters-in-law on June 16, 1948, and died suddenly on June 30, 1948. During this brief period Mrs. Finn lived with them in their cottage and enjoyed all their care and comforts. She suffered with heart trouble. The court sustained exceptions to the testimony of Miss Rose Finn as to transactions with the decedent, Sec. 606, Civil Code of Practice, but the competency of Bridget’s testimony is not questioned. Fields’ Adm’r v. Perry County State Bank, 214 Ky. 24, 282 S.W. 555. Concerning the agreement, we briefly summarize her evidence. A few days after Mrs.' Finn came into their home, at the supper table she and Rose agreed that the latter would give her a home, take care of her as long as she lived and provide her *437 with all the things she needed, and Katie would make a will leaving all her property to Rose. Being pressed upon cross-examination for the exact language used, Bridget quoted it as being, “Rosie, take care of me and then after I am gone I will will you my money.” Mrs. Finn turned her savings certificates and bank book over to Rose and suggested that if she would leave the money there she would get $100 interest on it. The reason Bridget was not a party to the agreement was that she was in poor health, was much older than Rosie who would probably live longer. Specifically, “I told her I just didn’t want it. She knew Rosie would take care of me and that was all about it.”

The reason why a will had not been made was related by Rosie, but, as stated, exceptions were sustained to her testimony, and it was excluded.

In Wides v. Wides’ Ex’r, 299 Ky. 103, 184 S.W.2d 579, we took note of the several classes of cases where there was a contract to devise a share or the entire estate of a deceased person, including a contract whereby one agreed to take care of the promisor as long as he lived. We have a long line of decisions that an oral agreement based upon an adequate consideration is valid and enforceable. This is based upon the recognition that, generally speaking, a person is just as free to contract to leave his property to a particular person by will as he is to contract to sell it to such person. Sturgeon’s Adm’r v. McCorkle, 163 Ky. 8, 173 S.W. 149.

The appellee relies on Maloney v. Maloney, 258 Ky. 567, 80 S.W.2d 611, in which it is held that an oral agreement to execute mutual wills is unenforceable in relation to real estate by the Statute of Frauds, now KRS 371.010(6), and in relation to personal property by what is now KRS 361.040, a part of the Uniform Sales Act. That section makes unenforceable a contract to sell or a sale of “any goods or choses in action of the value of five hundred dollars or upwards” unless certain things shall have been done. A reconsideration of that case leads us to the conclusion that it is erroneous in this particular. We do not think such a transaction as that, or such a contract as is claimed and proven in the instant case, comes within the meaning of a sale as defined by KRS 361.010 or within the purview of the Uniform Sales Act. The Uniform Sales Act is not applicable where the transaction is but the creation of a debtor-creditor relation. Libaire v. Feinstein, 133 Misc. 27, 231 N.Y.S. 3. We cannot conceive a contract to provide a home for another as the sale of “goods or choses in action.” Conversely, as said in Exchange National Bank of Tampa v. Bryan, 122 Fla. 479, 165 So. 685, 686, to uphold the theory that one who agrees to maintain another occupies the position of buyer and the other party who promised to make a money provision in his will occupies the position of a seller “would destroy and throw into confusion the law of sales contracts in this state.” The Act has also been held inapplicable to a claim of a contract to bequeath personal property in consideration of services rendered. Matter of Seifried, 130 Misc. 229, 224 N.Y.S. 275. Accordingly, Maloney v. Maloney, supra, 258 Ky. 567, 80 S.W.2d 611, is overruled to the extent indicated.

A claim brought 'forward after death of an agreement to distribute the decedent’s estate in a different way from that provided by law is regarded with some suspicion, particularly where there is no writing evidencing it. Broughton v. Broughton, 203 Ky. 692, 262 S.W. 1089. The courts do not lose sight of the difficulties under which the representatives of the dead labor. At the same time, we should not lose sight of the difficulties which the law raises against the living claimant. It is well settled, however, that proof of an oral contract of this kind is weighed carefully. It must be clear and certain that there was in fact an agreement, positively definite and mutually understood. Skinner v. Rasche, 165 Ky. 108, 176 S.W. 942; Broughton v. Broughton, 203 Ky. 692, 262 S.W. 1089; Jordan’s Adm’x v. Burton, 281 Ky. 309, 135 S.W.2d 684. In determining whether such contract was made, the weakness or the strength of the direct evidence often depends upon the circumstances. The ele *438 ment of reasonable probabilities must enter into the solution. Whether the claimed contract accords with what is natural or unnatural in common experiences and observations is perhaps of most importance. But this rule of clear proof does not require the exclusion of any controversy. In the present case there is no controversy. The testimony of Bridget stands undenied and unchallenged

The circumstantiaF evidence supports this direct uncontradicted testimony. The claimed agreement is very reasonable and a natural one.

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244 S.W.2d 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finn-v-finns-admr-kyctapphigh-1951.