Hunt v. . Hunt

64 N.E. 159, 171 N.Y. 396, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 867
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 10, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 64 N.E. 159 (Hunt v. . Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. . Hunt, 64 N.E. 159, 171 N.Y. 396, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 867 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

*399 Werner, J.

This action was brought to compel the specific performance of an oral ante-nuptial contract which was entered into between, the plaintiff and Wilson Gr. Hunt, the testator of the defendants, prior to their intermarriage in October, 1896. Under said contract, and in consideration of plaintiff’s promise to marry said Wilson Gr. Hunt, the latter orally agreed to give the former, at once, the sum of five thousand dollars in money, the further sum of two dollars and fifty cents per week, the income of a house and lot in the city of Geneva, N. Y., to convey to her another house and lot in the same city, and to make a will giving her all of his property except a watch and two hundred dollars. The making of this contract, the subsequent intermarriage of the parties thereto, and the still later breach of the agreement by said Wilson G. Hunt, are established by the findings of the learned trial court, and upon these findings it based the conclusion of law that plaintiff is not entitled to recover because said contract is void under the Statute of Frauds. Under the unanimous affirmance of the learned Appellate Division the only question brought to this court by the appellant is whether an oral ante-nuptial contract, founded upon no other consideration than marriage, can be specifically enforced in a court of equity.

The statute provides that every agreement or undertaking made upon consideration of marrige, except mutual promises to marry,” shall be void unless such agreement or undertaking, or some note or memorandum thereof, be in writing and .subscribed by the party to be charged therewith, or his agent. (R. S. chap. 7, tit. 2, secs. 2 and 8.) The learned counsel for the' appellant concedes that the contract in suit falls within the scope of this broad statute, but argues that the intermarriage of the parties to the contract is such a part performance thereof as to invest a court of equity with the powér of specific enforcement. The argument for the respondents may be compressed into the single statement that the same act of performance which brings the contract within the sweep of the statute cannot be relied upon to exclude it therefrom. The most notable feature of the statute above quoted is its *400 simplicity and directness of language. All contracts founded upon consideration of marriage, except mutual promises to marry, shall he void unless the commands of the statute are obeyed. Mutual executory promises to marry are expressly excluded from its operation. All other contracts, founded upon consideration of. marriage, are as clearly within its terms. These two diverse provisions of the statute, standing in juxtaposition to each other, so plainly disclose the legislative intent as to render construction unnecessary if not impossible. The letter of the law bears its' own interpretation. This view of the statute is not original. Pomeroy in his work on Contracts, under the head of specific performance ” (2d ed. sec. Ill), states it most forcibly as follows: When a verbal contract is made in relation to or upon the consideration of marriage, the marriage alone is not a part performance upon, which to decree specific execution. This rule, which is firmly established, is based upon the express language of the statute. A promise made in anticipation of a marriage, followed by a marriage, is the exact case contemplated by the statute. It is plain that the marriage adds nothing to the very circumstances described by the statutory provision which makes a writing essential; in fact, until a marriage takes place, there is no binding agreement independent of the statute, so that the marriage itself is a necessary part of every agreement made upon consideration of it which the legislature has said must be in writing.” Beach in his Modern Equity Jurisprudence (Sec. 622) says, “ It is well settled that marriage is not an act of part performance which will take a parol contract out of the statute: for the statute expressly provides that a contract in consideration of marriage shall not be binding unless it is in writing.” This is also the view of the statute entertained by the courts of England and the courts in . other jurisdictions where the English Statute of Frauds has been copied. (Caton v. Caton, L. R. [2 Eng. & Ir. App.] 127, affg. S. C., 1 Ch. App. 137; Taylor v. Beech, 1 Ves. Sr. 297; Dundas v. Dutens, 1 Ves. 196 ; Lassence v. Tierney, 1 McN. & G. 551; Warden v. Jones, 23 Beav. 487; Peek v. Peek, 77 *401 Cal. 106; Bradley v. Saddler, 54 Ga. 681; McAnnulty v. McAnnuity, 120 Ill. 26; Henry v. Henry, 27 Ohio St. 121.)

In our own state the trend of the decisions is in the same direction. In Brown v. Conger (8 Hun, 625) it was held that equity cannot enforce an oral contract for the conveyance of lands made in consideration of a marriage subsequently consummated. In Dygert v. Remerschnider (32 N. Y. 629) this court enforced, as against the creditors of the husband, an oral ante-nuptial contract under which the latter conveyed lands to his wife, but the decision was based upon the distinct ground that the payment by the wife of some of the husband’s debts created an independent consideration for the transfer, and in his discussion of that fact-Judge Davies said: “ Hnder the authorities, I think she (the wife) had no right based solely upon the consideration of marriage which courts, either of law or equity, could have enforced.” To die same effect are Lamb v. Lamb (18 App. Div. 250); Ennis v. Ennis (48 Hun, 11); Whyte v. Denike (53 App. Div. 320); Reade v. Livingston (3 Johns. Chan. 481); Borst v. Corey (16 Barb. 136) and Matter of Willoughby (11 Paige, 257). In none of these cases, except Brown v. Conger (supra) was the question presented in precisely the same form as in the case at bar, but in all of them the validity of an oral ante-nuptial contract was a pertinent and underlying question upon which the courts have held, with unvarying uniformity, that marriage is not such a part performance of an oral ante-nuptial contract as to take it out of the operation of the Statute of Frauds. Counsel for the appellant, vigorously contends that in the case at bar the Statute of Frauds is being used by the respondents as an instrument of fraud, and that this is a consummation that equity never tolerates. In support of this position we are referred to such cases as Freeman v. Freeman (43 N. Y. 34); Winchell v. Winchell (100 N. Y. 159); Winne v. Winne (166 N. Y. 263); Ahrens v. Jones (169 N. Y. 555); Goldsmith v. Goldsmith (145 N. Y. 313); Dunckel v. Dunckel (141 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E. 159, 171 N.Y. 396, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-hunt-ny-1902.