Greenleaf v. Blakeman

40 A.D. 371, 58 N.Y.S. 76
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 40 A.D. 371 (Greenleaf v. Blakeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenleaf v. Blakeman, 40 A.D. 371, 58 N.Y.S. 76 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinions

Ingraham, J.:

The action was brought to specifically enforce an agreement made between Louis H. Blakeman, the appellant, as party of the first part, [373]*373Eleanor L. Blakeman, his wife, as party of the second part, and the plaintiff, Thomas Greenleaf, as trustee, party of the third part. The parties of the first and second part were husband and wife, but before the execution of the agreement they had separated and were living apart. The agreement provided that the parties of the first and second parts might live separate and apart, the one from the-other; that the wife (party of the second part) was to have the custody of the two children of the marriage; that the party of the first part (the husband) should pay to the party of the second part (the wife), until her death or remarriage, the sum of $3,500 per annum, in equal quarterly payments, “ which sum or sums are and shall be for the use, maintenance and support of the party of the second part,” such payments to be made to the party of the third part as trustee for the party of the second part, and “ such payments shall be secured, either by bond of sufficient surety, individual or corporate, or by collateral security of suitable character and in market value not less than seventy thousand dollars, placed in the hands of the party of the third part, or his successor in trust, within six months from the execution and delivery hereof.” It was further provided that the payment of $3,500 per annum to the party of the second part is and shall be in full satisfaction for her support and maintenance of and from the said party of the first part, “ and she shall and hereby does release all her claims, present and future, against the said party of the first part for maintenance and support, and all her dower and right of dower in the real estate of said party of the first part of which he is now seized, or which he may hereafter acquire, and any and all rights, present and future, which she now has, or may hereafter have or acquire, of, in or to the estate, real or personal, of the party of the first part, under any statute or statutes of distribution or otherwise, and any right of administration as widow or otherwise of or upon the estate of the party of the first part in the event of his death; ” and that the party of the second part binds herself to execute, acknowledge and deliver any and all. deeds of conveyance, releases and other instruments in writing, sealed or unsealed, which by counsel learned in the law may be advised, and by the other party required, to effectuate and carry out this agreement or any clause thereof, to its full and true intent, meaning and purpose; and that the party of the third part “hereby [374]*374accepts the trust herein imposed upon him, and covenants and agrees to and with the parties of the first and second part and each of them, that he will well and truly pay over to the party of the second part, all moneys received by him from the party of the first part to be paid over to her under and pursuant to the provisions of this agreement, and will use reasonable diligence to collect all moneys due hereunder for the benefit of the party of the second part, and upon demand will take such proceedings as may be proper and necessary to enforce the performance of the covenants contained in paragraphs Fifth, Sixth and Seventh of this agreement;”'and the agreement was to bind the parties, their heirs, administrators and successors.

This agreement, having been duly executed and-delivered,. was in all respects complied with by the wife (the party of the second part), and she subsequently, at the request of the husband, executed a deed releasing her dower in certain of his real estate. The appellant continued to pay the yearly sum required to be paid, but failed to give the security for the payment of such sum required by the 3d clause of the agreement, and this action was brought by the party of the third part (the trustee) to specifically enforce the covenant as to such security. Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff to enforce such covenant, and from that judgment so entered the defendant appeals. The court below found that there was ample consideration for the said agreement; that it was unequivocal and was not misunderstood by the defendant Louis H. Blakeman; that the said agreement was not harsh, unconscionable, unreasonable or oppressive, but was a fair, equitable and valid agreement; that the covenant of the defendant that the payments to be made for the support of his wife and children should be secured by a bond of sufficient surety, individual or corporate, was not too indefinite or uncertain for specific performance ; and directed judgment specifically enforcing this covenant, the form of the bond to be given by the defendant being annexed to the judgment.

The execution of this agreement was preceded by negotiations between the parties conducted through their respective attorneys, and the correspondence through which such negotiations were carried on .was proved upon the trial. From the correspondence it would appear that the attorney for the wife- insisted that security' should be given, and this question was one of the points in difference [375]*375between the parties. The attorney for the appellant, in answer to .a demand for this security, with a suggestion that the husband should 5. give an assignment of his interest in his father’s estate to be held by the trustee as such security, replied : “ As to security I have set forth Mr. Blakeman’s views on that point in the agreement. Ample security shall be given. I am willing to hear yon on the subject of sufficiency, hut as to its form that must he left to Mr. Blaheman. He may.require six months to provide it, and when the agreement is signed he will set about providing it, but not before.” In answer to.this the counsel for the wife insisted that some suitable security should be given “ and not a mere indefinite promise to give security which very lihely could not he enforced even hy a suit for specific performance.” In reply Mr. Meyer wrote : If you think your client’s interest will be safer by having a provision in the agreement that such security will.be given within six months from the' date of the execution of the agreement, otherwise the agreement to he void, I would assent to that, and, meanwhile, pay over to the trustee two installments of the proposed allowance. I have every reason to believe that Mr. B. will provide the surety with promptness after execution of the agreement, and that the surety will be the Lawyer’s Surety Company.” Subsequent to this correspondence, at an interview between the attorneys, the form of the proposed agreement was settled and the agreement in its present form was executed.

It is apparent that it was the intention of both parties that the -defendant should give the security. The whole agreement, Avhich involved the’ substantial abandonment of an action for separation commenced by the wife against the husband, and for the maintenance of the wife and the children of the marriage, was based upon this covenant to give security. The attorney for the husband assures the attorney for the wife that he (the husband) will give such security, and while objecting to any present assignment of property to secure the payments, himself proposes to insert a covenant that such security avüI be given within six months. We could hardly assume that this appellant, when giving this assurance that the security would be given, intended to violate this covenant, basing such intended violation upon an observation made in a letter by the wife’s attorney as to a doubt about the power of a court to specifically enforce such an agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 A.D. 371, 58 N.Y.S. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenleaf-v-blakeman-nyappdiv-1899.