Johnston v. Tomme

24 So. 2d 730, 199 Miss. 337, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 202
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1946
DocketNo. 35888.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 730 (Johnston v. Tomme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Tomme, 24 So. 2d 730, 199 Miss. 337, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 202 (Mich. 1946).

Opinions

Alexander, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree overruling a general and two special .demurrers to a bill in equity and is allowed to settle the controlling principles in the case. These demurrers remand us to the allegations of the bill for the following assumed facts.

Thomas S. Johnston,.who was a paralytic and physically unable to take care of himself, made an oral agreement with the appellee that if she would take him into her home and assume the.care of him, seeing that he did *344 not suffer for the lack of that attention which was essential, he would make his will in her favor leaving her his entire estate. Mr. Johnston’s crippled condition required minute and constant attention.

This agreement was performed by the actual execution of the will in favor of appellee who took him into her home and cared for him constantly for a period of two and one-half years until his death. During this period appellee was required to be with him continually as he could not be left alone and needed attention at all times.

Subsequent to the execution of the will as agreed upon, the testator added a codicil changing its terms so that appellee was given only a life estate, with remainder to appellant. At a still later date, about three months before his death, he executed a new will leaving all his property to appellant. The appellant is a nephew of the testator who was living in the home of former in Florida at the time the aforesaid agreement was entered into. Because of the displeasure of the wife of appellant at the testator’s continued presence in her home in his helpless condition, the testator was moved to make the contract with Mrs. Tomme, whose home was in Mississippi. Both wills were, if not prepared by solicitors for appellant, witnessed by them. It is alleged that the alteration of the first will, and the execution of the second, constituted fraud by the testator against appellee.

The second will was probated. The bill, filed by Mrs. Tomme, seeks cancellation of the second will, the establishment of the original testament, or in the alternative for possession of the entire estate. Appellee probated a claim for personal services on a quantum meruit basis in the sum of $9,870.

In view of the right of the complainant to establish at least her claim quantum meruit, the chancellor was right in overruling the general demurrer. Ellis v. Berry, 145 Miss. 652, 110 So. 211; First Nat. Bank v. Owen, 177 Miss. 339, 171 So. 4. The special demurrers set up the statute of frauds as a bar to the action as an attempt to assert oral *345 conveyance of the personal property and the real property respectively.

The controlling principle to he decided is this: Is a will, executed in compliance with an oral agreement to execute it, irrevocable by the testator who had received the services and care agreed upon as a consideration therefor ?

The discussion of course assumes the existence of the facts set out in the bill and above summarized, and we shall not forecast the nature of proof essential to invoke and meet the principles to be herein declared.

An offer to enforce an oral contract, whose result is to transfer lands, compels careful pause while adverse first impressions are examined and the efficacy of the statute of frauds is anlyzed. As in Ragsdale v. Ragsdale, 68 Miss. 92, 8 So. 315, 11 L. R. A. 316, 24 Am. St. Rep. 256, we readily disavow any inclination to engraft exceptions upon the statute or to endorse any trust arising from the mere breach of an oral contract.' Yet we must make forthright acknowledgment of the power and duty of equity to assay such agreements for traces of fraud discoverable in the conduct of the parties. This principle is given prominence also in Horne v. Higgins, 76 Miss. 813, 25 So. 489, and in Lewis v. Williams, 186 Miss. 701, 191 So. 479. In the former case an oral agreement by a grantee in a deed to hold property in trust for the grantor was held to be within the statute. While a demurrer was sustained on such ground, the cause was remanded to allow a showing of fraud. In the latter case an oral agreement to reconvey lands was held to be unenforceable specifically, but the Court pointed out two exceptions to the rule; (1) where the oral declaration amounts to a constructive trust, and (2) where there is fraud upon the promisee. That the equities arise not out of the oral contract, but are- found in the conduct of the parties, is shown in 49 Am. Jur., Statute of Frauds, Sec. 524, p. 823; Id., Sec. 526, p. 825. See also the later case, Schweizer v. Patton (Mo. Sup.), 116 S. W. (2d) 39.

*346 O.ur attention is 'directed at the outset to Anding v. Davis, 38 Miss. 574, 77 Am. Dec. 658. Davis was heavily indebted to Anding. For the purpose of securing payment of the debt, Davis executed a deed absolute on its face to Anding, including therein real and personal property. It was agreed that Anding would take possession of the property, and from the proceeds of its operation pay the expenses thereof and apply any profits to the indebtedness. When fully paid, the property was to he conveyed to the children of Davis. This agreement was oral. It was further so agreed that Anding would execute and keep on hand a will' leaving the property to these children, but later destroyed it. The debt to Anding was, through his operations, fully paid. The bill was filed by the heirs of. Davis against the heirs of Anding who were holding the deed from Davis. The court responded to the contentions that an oral trust could not be enforced, that the deed could not be shown to he a mortgage, and that the action was barred by limitations. With these we have no present concern save to mention that our original statute of frauds, then in force but not so when the agreement was made, was discussed.

Upon the effect of the agreement to make and keep a will, the Court stated: “But, independently of these considerations, these objections are obviated by the facts stated in this bill. The hill alleges, in effect, that it was .agreed between the parties, that Anding should execute and keep on hand a will, reconveying the property to the complainants on the payment of the money intended to be secured by the deed; that this agreement was cbmplied with by him, hut that either' he destroyed the will in his lifetime, or that it has never been produced by his representatives, if in existence. If these allegations he true, — as upon demurrer they must he taken to be,— •there was a compliance with the agreement on his part in writing; and the destruction of the instrument by him, •or its suppression by his representatives, is such a fraud as would entitle the complainants to relief, on that *347 ground, in a court of equity.. .He was bound, as ..a, matter of contract to execute..and'keep a will reconveying tbe property; from wbicb he and bis representatives cannot claim to be absolved on tbe ground tbat it was to be done by will, wbicb is generally revocable. For-the-contract was tbat be should perform bis agreement in that manner, Upon tbat consideration in part and for tbat purpose, be bad received tbe deed, and tbe agreement bad tbe force of a contract; and tbe will, when executed, was, as to bis property irrevocable.”

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 730, 199 Miss. 337, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-tomme-miss-1946.