Hoyt v. Thomas

195 P. 260, 50 Cal. App. 329, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 36
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3440.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 P. 260 (Hoyt v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. Thomas, 195 P. 260, 50 Cal. App. 329, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 36 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Appeal from a judgment awarding to the plaintiff the relief demanded in his complaint.

Defendants are the heirs and distributees of the estate of Hattie Mclntire, deceased. Hattie Mclntire died intestate in September, 1917, leaving an estate consisting of real and personal property which was appraised at the sum of $4,043.77. The value of the property distributed after settlement of the estate accounts is stated in the briefs to have been the sum of $3,469.12. This plaintiff presented and had allowed in his favor against the property of the estate two claims, one for rugs purchased, $20, and a second for money advanced, $85.30. Immediately upon the order settling the estate being made and distribution being had, plaintiff commenced this action. In his complaint he alleged that in March, 1903, a contract was entered into between plaintiff and Hattie Mclntire, widow of William F. Mclntire, whereby the said plaintiff promised the said Hattie Mclntire that he would attend to her business affairs, particularly her said real estate, and perform such personal services for said Hattie Mclntire as she should from time to time request during the remainder of her natural life; that in consideration thereof the said Hattie Mclntire promised and agreed that all of the estate of which she died possessed should thereupon be and become the property and estate of the said plaintiff, Frank C. Hoyt; that said Hattie Mclntire then and there promised and agreed that she would, prior to her death, execute a last will and testament, or such other papers as should be necessary to carry out the terms of said contract on her part, and to assure the possession of said property to said Frank C. Hoyt; that said Hattie Mclntire died on or about the nineteenth day of September, 1917, without having executed said will or other papers, and without having transferred said property or any part thereof to plaintiff. That said agreement was and is just, fair, and equitable in all its terms and conditions, and the consideration moving to the said Hattie Mclntire from plaintiff was and is adequate. That said plaintiff fully kept and performed each and every of the terms and agree *331 ments on his part to be kept and performed from the making of said contract until the death of said Hattie Mclntire; that during all of said time he had charge of her business affairs and the management of her property, and performed all such personal services as the said Hattie Mclntire required from time to time, and remained in" charge of - her said property after her death until he delivered possession of the same to the public administrator. That all of said services so performed by plaintiff for said Hattie Mclntire in her lifetime were and are of the reasonable value of $3,500 or thereabouts. The allegations which we have referred to comprise all of the substantial averments of the complaint. The trial judge, under those allegations, made, among others, this finding: “That certain of the said services so performed by plaintiff for said Hattie Mclntire in her lifetime were of a nature and character not to be compensated for by money alone, and that all of said services so performed by plaintiff for said Hattie Mclntire in her lifetime, so far as the same can be valued in money, were and are of the reasonable value of thirty-five hundred dollars ($3500) or'thereabouts.”

One of the points made is that the judgment cannot be sustained because it is predicated upon a complaint which fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a good cause for the equitable relief demanded and adjudged. The particular point of this objection goes to the question as to the right of a plaintiff in the circumstances alleged to have specific performance if it appears that he might have been adequately compensated in money. It will be noted that nowhere in the complaint is there a statement -of what the particular alleged “personal services,” which plaintiff asserted that he had rendered to Hattie Mclntire, were. ' He affirmatively alleged that the services as rendered were worth $3500 or thereabouts.” This allegation follows a general one that the contract was fair and equitable in all its terms and conditions and that the consideration was adequate. [1] As we understand the law, it is settled that in a complaint in an action to enforce an agreement to make a will and devise property in favor of the plaintiff, it must appear, either by direct averment, or from a description of the character of the services rendered, that a money payment would not furnish adequate compensation to the plaintiff. [2] *332 The fact that the plaintiff has fixed a definite sum as being the value “or thereabouts” of the services rendered would not alone vitiate the statement of a good cause of action for the relief demanded, provided the complaint had contained such a description of the services which were performed as to enable a court to say that the value of such services could not be adequately measured in money terms. We quote from the decision in Flood v. Templeton, 148 Cal. 374, [83 Pac. 148] : “Equity, it is true, does entertain contracts for specific performance to convey the whole or any portion of the promisor’s property by will, but it decrees such performance, first, only upon clear proof of fairness, justness and adequacy, and where the rights of innocent third parties are not imperiled; and second, it does so only where the plaintiff cannot be compensated in money. These cases usually arise where the service is of some extraordinary nature which cannot be, and in the contemplation of the parties was never expected to be, paid for in money, as where home ties are broken, and minors go to live with an adult upon his promise that he will stand in loco parentis and will to'them his property in return for their filial services during his lifetime. ... So it will be found that in all of the cases in which specific performance of these agreements to leave property by will has been decreed by the courts, there has been present the element of peculiar personal services, fully performed and incapable of compensation in money” (citing authorities). In Morrison v. Land, 169 Cal. 580, [147 Pac. 259], the supreme court, by the chief justice said: “There is no dissent in the authorities from the proposition that one may make a valid contract with another to devise or bequeath property by his last will in a certain specified way. It is clear that in the event of a breach of such a contract, the party damaged has an action at law for the damage caused by such breach of the promisor, and in some cases this, by reason of the circumstances, may be his only remedy, for a resort to any equitable remedy can be had only where the circumstances are such as to make the case one within the well-settled principles relative to the proper exercise of equitable jurisdiction. Where the party damaged is restricted to his remedy at law for the breach,, he must necessarily proceed upon the theory that he is a ‘creditor’ of the deceased, having a ‘claim *333 against the estate arising upon contract,’ within the meaning of those words as used in our probate law, ...” [3]

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Hoyt v. Thomas
207 P. 1038 (California Court of Appeal, 1922)
Hackleman v. Lyman
195 P. 263 (California Court of Appeal, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
195 P. 260, 50 Cal. App. 329, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-thomas-calctapp-1920.