In re the Estate of Lord

175 Misc. 921, 25 N.Y.S.2d 747, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1493
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 175 Misc. 921 (In re the Estate of Lord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Lord, 175 Misc. 921, 25 N.Y.S.2d 747, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1493 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

The question here presented relates to the enforcibility against the estate of the promisor of a subscription agreement signed by this decedent, which reads as follows:

“ New Library Fund for Hillsdale College
“ Appreciating the need for building and endowing a new library at Hillsdale College, and in consideration of the gifts of others to a fund for this purpose, I hereby subscribe to Hillsdale College the sum of One thousand Dollars two memorial windows note payable in eight quarterly payments commencing 1937 or payable at my convenience as follows:
“ $1000.00 Name Rivington D. Lord “ Address 379 Washington Ave “ Date May 21 ’37 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Please make checks payable to Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Michigan.”

The portions of the foregoing which are italicized were demonstrated to be in the handwriting of the deceased. The remainder is printed.

Evidence was offered and admitted, in part over the objection of the accountant, respecting the transactions surrounding and following the execution of this document. As thus adduced, the record demonstrates that the decedent had long been interested in the welfare of Hillsdale College; that he had been solicited by the chairman of the centennial committee, organized to raise funds for a new library building, to contribute to this object and consented to donate $1,000 for the purpose, on the agreement that two memorial windows should be placed in the building in honor of his parents. Assent was given to this stipulation, whereupon the decedent signed and delivered the quoted, document, which was thereupon forwarded to the college. The latter thereafter employed and paid architects to draw plans for the projected building; the work in connection with which is now in progress.

The memorandum filed on behalf of the executor indicates that it felt under obligation to require a judicial evaluation of the validity of the claim predicated upon the subscription agreement, wherefore the issue has been submitted to the court for adjudication. This attitude is not surprising in view of the implied criticism of the adoption of a contrary course deducible from the observations of the Court of Appeals in Matter of Taylor (251 N. Y. 257, 262).

Examination of the authorities discloses that questions of this type have been a prolific source of litigation for generations. Particularly in the early cases, the courts experienced no little difficulty with the element of consideration for an agreement to pay such a [923]*923subscription. Obviously, on basic principles of contracts, if no element of quid pro quo could be spelled out of the transaction, the promise to pay was void and unenforcible. (Allegheny College v. National Chautauqua County Bank, 246 N. Y. 369, 372.) Since, however, dictates of public advantage were almost invariably involved in transactions of this variety, defenses of want of consideration were customarily viewed with disfavor (Barnes v. Perine, 12 N. Y. 18, 24; Allegheny College v. National Chautauqua County Bank, supra, 374), with the result that the usual tendency of the courts was to attempt, on some more or less plausible theory, to sustain such agreements with at least a modicum of lip service to the usually applicable principles of contracts.

The first preliminary step toward adjudications that binding obligations might be spelled out of subscription agreements is found in the early determination that parol evidence is admissible both for the purpose of demonstrating the existence of a consideration for the promise embodied in the pledge, and to show the acts of the promisee which had been performed in reliance thereon. (Barnes v. Perine, supra, 25; Presbyterian Church of Albany v Cooper, 112 N. Y. 517, 522; Keuka College v. Ray, 167 id. 96,101; Dougherty v. Salt, 227 id. 200, 202; I. & I. Holding Corp. v. Gainsburg, 276 id. 427, 432, 433; Matter of Taylor, 236 App. Div. 571, 573.) Typical of such decisions is that in Reuka College v. Ray (supra, 101) which states: “ Where the question is one between the original parties to the instrument, * * * proof may be made of the consideration and of such facts, attending the making and delivery of the note, as are not inconsistent with the instrument.”

With all elements of the critical transaction disclosed upon the record, recovery upon subscription agreements has become the rule rather than the exception. Analysis of these adjudications indicates the presence of three different rationes decidendi for the attainment of this result, the first being the spelling out of an ordinary bilateral contract; second, the completion of a contract which was initially unilateral; and third, the invocation of an approximation of the equitable doctrine of estoppel.

Approaching an analysis of the adjudications which have professed to predicate their results upon the law of contracts, the distinction between bilateral and unilateral contracts is important of recollection. A bilateral contract is, of course, a promise in consideration of a counter agreement. This matures into an enforcible obligation at the instant the so-called “ meeting of the minds ” of the parties occurs; in other words, at the time the mutual promises are exchanged. A unilateral contract, on the other hand, usually creates no obligation at its inception. It is [924]*924merely a promise to do something in the future provided the promisee performs some specified act either within a stipulated period, or, in the absence of any precise specification in this regard, within a reasonable time. No enforcible obligation will be imposed upon the promisor unless the specified act is thus performed, but if performed, the contract matures, and the original promise is capable of enforcement.

In the decisions which have based their results on the law of contracts, whether of the bilateral or unilateral variety, it has been the general tendency to imply a return promise as a counter consideration in the former (Keuka College v. Ray, supra, 99, 100; Barnes Perine, supra, 24) and to imply a request for the performance of arfad in the latter (Trustees of Hamilton College v. Stewart, 1 N. Y. 581, 583; Barnes v. Perine, supra, 29; Presbyterian Church of Albany v. Cooper, supra, 523; Keuka College v. Ray, supra, 100), even though no express counter promise or request for the performance of an act was demonstrated, provided an intention to that effect was reasonably capable of deduction from the demonstrated acts of the parties.

This principle of implication of a return promise or request is voiced with especial clarity in Keuka College v. Ray (supra, 99, 100) as follows: “ the discussion is reduced simply to this, whether the agreement which is sought to be enforced, and which is a voluntary promise on the part of the defendant, expressly, or impliedly, either imposes upon the promisee some obligation, which is assumed, or requests of the promisee the performance of services, which are to be performed upon the strength of the promise.

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Bluebook (online)
175 Misc. 921, 25 N.Y.S.2d 747, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-lord-nysurct-1941.