Hermann v. Ludwig

186 A.D. 287, 174 N.Y.S. 469, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5849
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 7, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 186 A.D. 287 (Hermann v. Ludwig) 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
Hermann v. Ludwig, 186 A.D. 287, 174 N.Y.S. 469, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5849 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Kelly, J. :

The relief demanded in the complaint, that the original last will and testament of the plaintiff and Mary Hermann be established and proved as the last will and testament of said Mary Hermann, deceased, and that letters testamentary be issued to plaintiff as sole executor thereunder, is not in accordance with the views expressed by this court in reversing the decree of the Surrogate’s Court admitting the joint will to probate. We then said, referring to the plaintiff’s claim that the joint will was executed in pursuance of an agreement between the decedent and himself, If such an agreement existed, that fact and its legal results could only be determined by the Supreme Court in an action in equity, and the manner of determination was not to admit a former will to probate, although such former will was the result of a contract between the testator and a third party governing the testamentary disposition of their property, but to sustain the contract, if established by clear and convincing testimony and supported by an adequate consideration and compelling its performance by the heirs of the decedent, or otherwise granting adequate relief.” (Matter of Hermann, 178 App. Div. 182, 189; affd., without opinion, 222 N. Y. 564.) If the plaintiff is entitled to relief, it is not by establishing the joint will of 1895 as the last will of the decedent, because it was not'her last will, but by compelling the performance of her obligations by her children and devisees under the will of 1914. As was said by the Court of Appeals in Phalen v. United States Trust Co. (186 N. Y. [297]*297178): “ The principle upon which such agreements are sustained was stated by Lord Camden as early as the year 1769, in Dufour v. Perraro [Dufour v. Pereira] (Hargrave’s Jurid. Arg. 304), and it was not then new. That was a case of mutual wills, in which the learned jurist said (p. 309) : ' Though a will is always revocable, and the last must always be the testator’s will, yet a man may so bind his assets by agreement that his will shall be a trustee for performance of his agreement. A covenant to leave so much to his wife or daughter, etc. * * * These cases are common; and there is no difference between promising to make a will in such a form and making his will with a promise not to revoke it. This court does not set aside the will, but makes the devisee, heir or executor, trustee to perform the contract. * * * Ho man shall deceive another to his prejudice. By engaging to do something that is in his power, he is made a trustee for the performance, and transmits that trust to those that claim ■under him. This court is never deceived by the form of instruments. The actions of men here are stripped of their legal clothing, and appear in their first naked simplicity. Good faith and conscience are the rules by which every transaction is judged in this court; and there is not an instance to be found since the jurisdiction was established where one man has ever been released from his engagement after the other has performed his part.’ ” And the court said in the case last cited that the principle was fully and firmly established that a man’s representatives shall be trustees of a resulting trust for the benefit of those to whom he has bound his estate. It is upon this principle that plaintiff must rely to establish his right to relief — not to obtain a judgment that the will of 1895 was the last will of the decedent, but that the provisions of that will shall be decreed to be binding upon the estate of Mary Hermann and upon the defendants.

The judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint upon the merits is certainly most drastic in its results to the plaintiff. It not only deprives him of all interest in the estate and property of the woman who had lived with him for thirty-seven years as his wife, to whom he had been married publicly by a clergyman in 1890, twenty-five years before her death, but it adjudges that the real estate held in their joint names as [298]*298husband and wife does not belong to him as survivor. The evidence shows that they had lived and labored together for all these years harmoniously and affectionately. When Mary Hermann’s husband, Goetz, left her in 1878, five years after their marriage, never to return, she had two children, her son Christopher and her daughter Kate, the defendants and respondents here. As she was married to Goetz in 1873, the eldest of these children could not have reached the age of five years at the time of the separation. It was the plaintiff and Mary Hermann who brought them up to manhood and womanhood and who supported and maintained them until they married and went their way. It is true that they now attack the plaintiff and charge him with working them hard in their younger days and with failing to properly compensate them, but it must be remembered that in the effort to deprive the plaintiff of the property of the decedent to which he asserts he is entitled, they have not hesitated to blacken the character of their own mother. The plaintiff alleging in his complaint a lawful marriage to Mary Hermann, is met with the denial in their answers that the marriage was lawful, and an assertion that he knew when he married her that their father was living, and the learned trial judge has so found, although the record may be searched in vain for any evidence to justify such finding. They have discovered their father, who deserted them in their infancy, who never contributed a penny to their support or to the support o"f their mother, and who testified that he had been hving with another woman as bis wife for some twenty years, to testify that Hermann knew of his existence. But Goetz does not testify that the occasions on which he met Hermann were after the remarriage of his wife in 1890. And of course one of the peculiar results of the judgment appealed from might be that the recreant husband would be entitled to some interest in the real property of his wife, although he defaulted and the findings and judgment as made appear to make no provision for him. The court is not trying the morals of Hermann, the plaintiff, and any criticism on his relations with Mary Hermann must apply to her as well as to him. When she made the will of 1914, with the connivance of her son, without notice to Hermann and without his' consent, [299]*299she called him her dear husband ” and expressly stated that the reason she made no bequest to him was that he had ample means of his own and for no other reason.” The learned trial judge refused every request for findings of fact presented by plaintiff save those as to the execution of the two wills and the formal legal proceedings. The plaintiff is certainly in evil case, because if he had predeceased Mary Hermann his entire estate, not only that held in the joint names of the parties and the other property purchased as he says with his money but placed in his wife’s name, but also the “ ample means of his own ” referred to in her second will, would have immediately passed to his wife in absolute ownership by virtue of the joint will of 1895. He never changed it, and during all these years he supported and maintained her as he should, and preserved the estate, with the assurance to her that it would all belong to her if he died before her. The obvious result of the judgment appealed from is such as to invite the scrutiny of a court of conscience governed by principles of equity and fair dealing between man and man.

We think this result should not be allowed to stand.

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Bluebook (online)
186 A.D. 287, 174 N.Y.S. 469, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hermann-v-ludwig-nyappdiv-1919.