Frantz v. Maher, Exr.

155 N.E.2d 471, 106 Ohio App. 465, 7 Ohio Op. 2d 209, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 750
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1957
Docket547
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 155 N.E.2d 471 (Frantz v. Maher, Exr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frantz v. Maher, Exr., 155 N.E.2d 471, 106 Ohio App. 465, 7 Ohio Op. 2d 209, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 750 (Ohio Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Hornbeck, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendant upon the pleadings.

Plaintiff pleads that he is the sole heir at law of Anna M. Schaefer, deceased; that the defendant is the duly appointed and acting executor of her last will and testament; that Emma Schaefer died in 1942, leaving plaintiff and decedent, Anna M. Schaefer, as her sole heirs at law and that the estate of Emma *466 Schaefer was distributed to the plaintiff and decedent, Anna M. Schaefer, in equal proportions. The foregoing, averments are admitted in the answer of defendant.

Plaintiff avers that subsequent to the settlement of the estate of Emma Schaefer, he and Anna M. Schaefer entered into a contract, which later appears to have been oral, wherein to accommodate the wishes of Anna M. Schaefer to reside in certain real estate located in Springfield, and which she and plaintiff jointly inherited from Emma Schaefer, and upon the agreement that Anna would not dispose of such real estate during her lifetime, or upon her death, and would do no act which would prevent such real estate from descending to plaintiff upon the death of Anna M. Schaefer, plaintiff agreed to and did deed his one-half interest in said realty to her. ' It is further averred that as a part of the same agreement, and upon the solicitation of Anna M. Schaefer, she and plaintiff entered into a further agreement with reference to the personal property which plaintiff had inherited from Emma Schaefer, deceased; that plaintiff would at no time revoke his last will and testament in which he should bequeath all such personal property to his own wife (they having no children), absolutely but with the condition to be made part of the will, that if plaintiff and his wife were killed in a common accident, or if such wife should die within 30 days after plaintiff’s death, both leaving Anna M. Schaefer surviving them, said will should contain a clause bequeathing any remaining portion of the Emma Schaefer estate, which plaintiff had inherited, to decedent, Anna M. Schaefer, absolutely and in fee simple; that in consideration of the performance by plaintiff of his part of the agreement, Anna M. Schaefer agreed that she would make no disposition whatsoever during her lifetime of any of the personal property which plaintiff had inherited from decedent, Emma Schaefer, nor would she attempt to dispose of any part of same upon her death by a last will and testament; but, on the contrary, she would permit all such personal property to descend to plaintiff under the Ohio law of intestacy; “and that she would do no act or thing which would prevent any balance remaining of any personal property after the death of decedent, Anna M. Schaefer, from descending back to plaintiff, as her sole heir at law. ’ ’

*467 Plaintiff avers that he duly performed all the terms and conditions of the agreement on his part to be performed; that he executed his will in conformity with the agreement and delivered it to Anna M. Schaefer and her counsel where it remained unrevoked and unchanged at the time of her death; that he executed and delivered a quitclaim deed for his undivided one-half interest in the real estate in Springfield, Ohio, which deed was delivered to and accepted by Anna M. Schaefer. It is averred further that Anna M. Schaefer in violation of the terms of her agreement and fraudently and in bad faith executed her last will and testament wherein, after a minor bequest to plaintiff, the residue was left to others.

The answer, after the admission of the allegations of the petition hereinbefore stated, generally denied each and every other allegation and as a second defense pleaded “that if there was any agreement by decedent not to make a will or to die intestate that the same is null and void for the reason that the same was not in writing. ’ ’ Plaintiff moved to strike this quoted part of the second defense. The motion was overruled and thereafter plaintiff filed a reply to the second defense of the answer denying that the agreement pleaded in the petition was null and void for the reason that it was not in writing, and averring that by reason of the fraudulent conduct of Anna M. Schaefer toward plaintiff, she, if alive, would have been completely estopped from making such defense as to her claim and that such estoppel is binding upon the defendant as'well as upon the beneficiaries named in the will of Anna M. Schaefer.

It was upon this state of the pleadings, after a demurrer had been filed to the reply and sustained, that the judgment was entered for defendant on the pleading^.

At the outset, our attention is drawn to the brief of defendant-appellee wherein it is urged that as the demurrer searches the record, it is evident from a reading of the petition and reply that the oral contract averred is so vague, uncertain and indiffereht as to be incapable of enforcement. As this specific question was not presented, argued or determined in the trial court, we would hesitate to adopt the theory of the defendant unless no other conclusion could be reached. We, therefore, indulge every presumption which the pleadings permit in favor of the pleader, the plaintiff.

*468 We are concerned about some of the allegations of the petition which are repeated in the reply and, indeed, have difficulty in reconciling them.

The prayer of the petition is for a money judgment for the full amount of the personal estate of Emma Schaefer, deceased, less court costs and debts. The petition and the reply in one aspect leave the impression that all the personal property of which Emma Schaefer died seized was the subject matter of the contract pleaded, upon the theory that Anna M. Schaefer had come into ownership thereof by reason of the death of Emma Schaefer and the relinquishment by plaintiff of his interest therein. But, an examination of one of plaintiff’s briefs in the Common Pleas Court discloses that atAhe time of the death of Emma Schaefer, Anna M. Schaefer inherited but one-quarter of the whole estate and the plaintiff, a like amount.

The averments most difficult to reconcile are found in the following language of the petition, the first full paragraph, wherein plaintiff alleges that Anna M. Schaefer had “entered into a further agreement with reference to the personal property which this plaintiff had inherited from his ancestor, Emma Schaefer-, to wit, that he, this plaintiff, should make, execute, publish and át no time revoke his own last will and testament, in which he should bequeath all such personal property to his own wife, # * # absolutely, but with this condition to be made part of his will, that if this plaintiff and his wife Isabelle, were killed in a common accident, or if such wife should die within thirty days after the plaintiff’s death, both leaving decedent, Anna M. Schaefer, surviving them, said will should contain a clause bequeathing any remaining portion of the Emma Schaefer Estate, which the plaintiff had inherited, to the decedent, Anna M. Schaefer, absolutely and in fee simple.”

From this clause, it appears that the plaintiff owned and possessed and was making disposition of that part of the Emma Schaefer personal estate which he had inherited from her.

In the second full paragraph of the petition, plaintiff says:

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Bluebook (online)
155 N.E.2d 471, 106 Ohio App. 465, 7 Ohio Op. 2d 209, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frantz-v-maher-exr-ohioctapp-1957.