Foltz v. Boone

107 Ohio St. (N.S.) 562
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1923
DocketNo. 17616
StatusPublished

This text of 107 Ohio St. (N.S.) 562 (Foltz v. Boone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foltz v. Boone, 107 Ohio St. (N.S.) 562 (Ohio 1923).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The single question involved in this case is this: Is an administrator who defends an action for specific performance of a contract to make a will alleged to have been made by his decedent, if unsuccessful in the defense, entitled to reimbursement for attorney fees and other expenses incurred by him in the contest?

[565]*565It is the 'well-settled rule in Ohio that the executor who unsuccessfully defends a will contest cannot charge the expense of the defense to the estate. (Andrews’ Exrs. v. Andrews’ Admrs., 7 Ohio St., 151.) And this is true even though under the statute the executor is a necessary party to the suit. (Thurston v. Ludwig, 4 Ohio App., 486.) This holding is based upon two grounds: First, that those who are entitled to the estate should not be compelled to pay the expenses of their opponents, as well as their own, in conducting the very suit which vindicates their claim; second, that an executor is entitled to defend the trust estate, but not the trust relationship, and in defending the will contest he is endeavoring to maintain the trust relation.

Plaintiff in error claims that this is a case analogous to a will contest. She urges that the same reasons for disallowing the expenses of unsuccessfully defending a suit exist when an administrator fails in his defense of a suit for specific performance of a contract to make a will as exist in a will contest, and that therefore the administrator cannot be reimbursed for attorney fees expended in the suit for specific performance. The defendant in error maintains that the suit is not a suit for specific performance, but a claim for breach of contract to make a will, which fact requires him to defend this claim against the estate just as he would any other contract claim; that he believed a will would be discovered later, and was therefore forced, on behalf of possible legatees under the will which' might be found, to defend the action brought by Eebecca Foltz; and that he defended in good faith and is therefore entitled to reimbursement.

[566]*566The question first arises whether plaintiff in error’s suit against the heir and administrator was one for breach of contract, and not a suit for specific performance, as defendant in error claims in his endeavor to emphasize the difference between this action and a will contest.

Examining the petition for the purpose of deciding this point, we find that the petition alleges that the decedent, Mary Snyder, twice proposed to plaintiff to transfer and convey to plaintiff, to be effective at her (Mary Snyder’s) death, her real and personal property in consideration of plaintiff’s care and service already performed and to be performed in boarding and caring for her (Mary Snyder) during the balance of her life; that Mary Snyder twice told plaintiff in the presence of witnesses that at her death whatever she had was plaintiff’s; and that in completion of the contract, on or about August 15, 1917, Mary Snyder wrote and signed the following statement, which, however, was not executed as a will:

“I by rights will my entire estate to Rebecca Foltz for the good kind care she gave me.

“ [Signed] Mrs. Mary M. Snyder.”

The prayer of the petition asks that the defendant William Morris be declared trustee of the real estate formerly belonging to the decedent, charged with the duty of conveying the same to plaintiff, and that the defendant J. C. Boone, administrator, be ordered to turn oyer to plaintiff in compliance with the contract that share of Mary Snyder’s estate that should remain in his hands for distribution after the payment of the debts and costs of administration.

[567]*567Upon the facts as alleged in the petition, the plaintiff had three remedies open to her. She could sue upon quantum meruit for the reasonable value of her services; she could sue for damages for breach of contract, the damages being the value of the property at the time that it should have been conveyed to her under the contract; or she could sue for specific performance of the contract. That she chose the latter remedy is evident upon a cursory reading of the petition, which alleges every fact necessary to set out a case for specific performance. It alleges the execution of the contract, the performance by plaintiff, the default by defendant, and specifically describes the property claimed. It does not ask for damages, but asks that the heir and the administrator be ordered by the court to do the identical thing which Mary Snyder promised should be done. This is the very essence of specific performance.

The court, therefore, holds that the suit was one for specific performance, and not for breach of contract.

The question next arises whether a suit for specific performance to make a will for services is analogous to a will contest, so that the rule in Andrews’ Exrs. v. Andrews’ Admrs., supra, applies, and the administrator cannot be reimbursed for expenses of the defense, or is merely analogous to a suit upon a contract for services, or to a suit in specific performance of a contract to convey property in return for services, which the administrator would be required to defend, and in which defense he would be entitled to reimbursement for his expenses. Taking the question in the light most favorable to defendant in error, wherein does the difference lie be[568]*568tween defending a suit for specific performance of a contract to will all of decedent’s estate after payment of debts, in return for services to be performed,- and a suit, either at law or in equity, to énforce a contract made by decedent to pay so much for services, or to convey so much property in return for services, that the estate would be exhausted by payment of that specific claim? Prom certain aspects the difference seems only minor. The action for specific performance of the terms of a proposed will is necessarily based upon the principle of breach of contract, and so is the action for services, whether brought at law for damages or in equity for specific performance.

In each case, assuming that the proper steps to enforce the contract were taken, the balance of the estate, after the payment of other claims, in their proper order, would pass- to the person who had rendered the service to the decedent; and in each case the entire resources of the estate, after such payment of prior claims, would be applied to the extinguishment of a claim for services.

But, after all, there is a basic difference between a contract to make a will and a contract which creates a simple debt or ordinary obligation against the estate. Such a contract to make a will as Mary Snyder made creates a right to the estate; the contract which creates a debt creates a right to the assets of the estate. In a suit for specific performance of a contract to make a will, the attack is not made upon the assets. They are neither increased nor diminished by the suit. The assets of the estate remain the same in resource and in amount, but if the suit is successful the right to the assets may [569]*569vest elsewhere than it would vest under an intestacy, in accordance with the terms of the will which the decedent agreed to make.

In a suit upon a contract for services, on the other hand, or in a suit for specific performance of a contract to convey property in return for services, the attack is made upon the assets themselves.

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Related

Turnipseed v. Sirrine
38 S.E. 423 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1901)
Groff's Estate
64 A. 783 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1906)
Bolman v. Overall
80 Ala. 451 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1886)
Thurston v. Ludwig
4 Ohio App. 486 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1915)
Ralston v. McBurney
6 Ohio App. 303 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 Ohio St. (N.S.) 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foltz-v-boone-ohio-1923.