Grant v. Bradstreet

33 A. 165, 87 Me. 583, 1895 Me. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 18, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 33 A. 165 (Grant v. Bradstreet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Bradstreet, 33 A. 165, 87 Me. 583, 1895 Me. LEXIS 101 (Me. 1895).

Opinion

Peters, C. J.

On the trial of this cause in equity the jury found, as a matter of fact, that the respondent, William W. Bradstreet, verbally promised his brother, Peter G. Bradstreet, during the last sickness of the latter, and but a few days before [596]*596his death, that, if Peter should die intestate, leaving him, William, as his sole heir and next of kin to succeed to all of Peter’s estate, he would pay, out of the estate soto be inherited by him, to William S. Grant, the complainant, one thousand dollars annually during the complainant’s natural lifetime.

That such a promise, if fully and absolutely proved, may be enforced by a court of equity as a charge upon the estate of the intestate, however hazardous or impolitic such a precedent may to some minds seem to be, is an established doctrine in this State, as carefully elucidated and maintained in the late important case of Gilpatrick v. Glidden, 81 Maine, 137. Evidently, the risk of accepting and acting upon such doctrine consists mainly in the temptation which judges and juries are subjected to through sympathy or misunderstanding to allow these irregular dispositions of property to be established upon untrustworthy and insufficient evidence.

Therefore, when those legal formalities which are usually observed for conveying or transmitting property are to be dispensed with in favor of equitable rules on the subject, the facts upon which the equitable superiority is to be allowed should be established by clear and indubitable evidence. And this requirement applies with great force in the present case, where the complainant’s claim could be legally proved only by a will signed by the donor and attested by three witnesses, whilst it is proposed to be equitably proved mainly by the testimony of a single witness without being evidenced by any writing whatever. Equity herself assures us that in such a case the evidence must be strong and certain enough to produce conviction in every reasonable mind. The very ground upon which equity obtains jurisdiction in this class'of cases is the .plea set up by her that it would be unjust and fraudulent to require that parol gifts shall fail of effect merely for want of legal formalities to uphold them, when in equity procedure the necessary facts can be justas surely though differently proved. The argument in behalf of the equitable jurisdiction is that the only object of strict legal forms is to attain a high degree of certainty in such important matters, and that just as much certainty can be assured in equity as by the legal requirements.

[597]*597Whether the evidence adduced in support of this claimant’s case can stand the test, which we make the standard forjudging this case and all such cases, is the question here. The complainant is obliged to rely greatly on the testimony of Augusta Fairbanks, who undertakes to reproduce the substance of a part of a conversation between the two Bradstreets which she overheard when in a room adjoining the one they were in at the time referred to. Most of the circumstances attending the situation of the parties at the time are not disputed.

The interview between the brothers took place Friday forenoon, September 13, 1889; Peter’s death occurring on the Tuesday next afterwards. William was then seventy-two years old. Peter was the elder of the two, and never was married. He died intestate, leaving his brother the inheritor of all his property. They had been partners in business for nearly a lifetime, and had acquired large estates both jointly and individually. They had the confidence of the community as business men, and each had an unlimited - confidence in the integrity and business ability of the other. The complainant was a second cousin of Peter Bradstreet, as also was Peter Grant, whose name will appear hereafter. Another prominent figure in the sketch was Eliza Ferguson, who had been a faithful and trusted housekeeper for Peter Bradstreet for many years.

Miss Fairbanks, the witness, a resident of West Gardiner, and evidently a person of mature character and of more than ordinary intelligence and education, for one in herstation in life, commenced to do house-work for Peter in February, 1889, continuing in that employment exclusively, until Peter was taken sick, about three weeks before his death, when she took charge of him as his nurse and continued in that capacity until he died. On the morning of the day in question, William came to his brother’s room, as he was in the daily habit of doing, and left word that his brother should see no callers that morning as he was to do some business with him, which would require all his brother’s strength. Miss Fairbanks, thereupon, bolstered up the sick man with pillows under his head in readiness to see William, and she then retired to her own room in the rear of the sick[598]*598room, not seeing William when he came in the room nor during the time he was there, but hearing him. She left the doors open between the two rooms so that she could hear if she should be called for anything, and was lying, during the conversation between Peter and William, on her back upon her own bed for the purpose of obtaining rest.

The house is an old-fashioned two-story dwelling facing the Kennebec river in the city of Gardiner, with four rooms both above and below, and Peter’s bed was in the south-east corner of the front room up stairs, the corner farthest off from the passage-way between his room and the room of Miss Fairbanks. Her bed was in the south-west corner of her room, in the rear of his, being the corner of her room the most distant from such passage-way. So that the whole distance between the two beds was the greatest attainable in the two rooms, excepting that neither bed was exactly in a corner, as a space was left between the bed and the walls in either room wide enough to allow a person to get around the beds. The rooms -were of rectangular shape, his measuring fifteen feet four inches by fourteen feet one inch, and hers measuring fifteen feet four inches by twelve feet ten inches. The space or passage-way between rooms measures about three feet in length. A light-stand in his room, mentioned in the testimony, was about three feet by eighteen inches.

The foregoing statement leads up to the testimony of Miss Fairbanks touching the main issue in the case, and we quote from her direct examination :

" Q. Just before William returned to the room did Peter give you any directions as to where to go or what you should do ? A. Yes, sir, he did.
" Q. In consequence of the directions that you received from him then what did you do and where did you go? A. I went into my room and laid down on the bed, ready if he called me to go in, as I expected he would.
" Q. While you were lying down on the bed who came into Peter’s room, if anybody ? A. William Bradstreet.
[599]*599" Q. And what, so far as you bnowr, did he first do when he went into the room ? A. First, I remember of his moving a stand out and heard him handling paper on the stand, and he sat down and talked with Peter Bradstreet for sometiihe. I heard him call several names, but I did not hear the first part of the conversation because I did not interest myself in it; I could not repeat it.
"Q. What was the first conversation that you recollect and that you noticed? A. First, I heard them talking about having Mr. Ellis come down that day, telegraphing for him to come down.

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Bluebook (online)
33 A. 165, 87 Me. 583, 1895 Me. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-bradstreet-me-1895.