Kessler v. Olen

281 N.W. 691, 228 Wis. 662, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 233
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 691 (Kessler v. Olen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kessler v. Olen, 281 N.W. 691, 228 Wis. 662, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 233 (Wis. 1938).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed June 21, 1938:

Fowler, J.

We assume that the findings of both jury and trial judge recited in the statement of facts preceding [666]*666the opinion are supported by the evidence. The crucial point of the case is not whether the facts are as found, but whether the facts found constitute a valid contract. If they do the judgment was correct.

The appellant’s principal assignment of error is that, as the decedent’s property consisted partly of real estate, the oral agreement to give it to the claimant by will is void. It is void as to the real estate for want of a writing expressing the consideration signed by the party charged as required by sec. 240.08, Stats., and being void as tO' the real estate and being indivisible, it is void in its entirety and of no force except to rebut the presumption that the services to be performed by the daughter were gratuitous. A long line of cases support this contention. Ellis v. Cary, 74 Wis. 176, 42 N. W. 252; Martin v. Estate of Martin, 108 Wis. 284, 84 N. W. 439; Loper v. Estate of Sheldon, 120 Wis. 26, 97 N. W. 524; Dixon v. Sheridan, 125 Wis. 60, 103 N. W. 239; Laughnan v. Estate of Laughnan, 165 Wis. 348, 162 N. W. 169; Estate of Leu, 172 Wis. 530, 179 N. W. 796; Estate of Brill, 183 Wis. 282, 197 N. W. 802; Murphy v. Burns, 216 Wis. 248, 257 N. W. 136; Estate of Goyk, 216 Wis. 462, 257 N. W. 448. The rule oí these cases has been so firmly established in this jurisdiction by the decisions of this court that there is no need to consider cases to the contrary in other jurisdictions if there be such.

The trial judge in a short written opinion filed, states that he considered the case ruled by Estate of McLean, 219 Wis. 222, 262 N. W. 707, and Torgerson v. Hauge, 34 N. D. 646, 159 N. W. 6, with a note in connection reported in 3 A. L. R. 172. The McLean Case is not in point because the oral contract there made did not involve the statute of frauds. The testator there did not agree by his will to give the legatee any real property. His agreement would be fully met by a bequest of personal property. Moreover, the [667]*667agreement there made was fully executed on both sides. The legatee released his claim for damages and the testator executed the will. The one was the consideration for the other. The case involved no performance of service by the legatee.

In the Torgerson Case, while it involved on the one hand an oral agreement to will a particular farm and on the other an agreement to perform the kind of service here involved, the agreement was followed by the one who. was to perform the service taking possession of the farm, making improvements thereon, and performing the service promised for fifteen years. The ruling in that case was based upon the doctrine of specific performance which takes a case out of the statute of frauds. That case is like that of Estate of Powell, 206 Wis. 513, 240 N. W. 122, where an oral contract to will or convey a farm in consideration of performance of service similar to that here involved was enforced because of specific performance by the promisor of the service by taking possession of the farm, making improvements thereon, and continuance of the service up to the time of the death of the other party to the contract.

Counsel for respondent cites several other Wisconsin cases which he contends support the instant judgment to which we will briefly refer. Dilger v. Estate of McQuade, 158 Wis. 328, 148 N. W. 1085, and Estate of Soles, 215 Wis. 129, 253 N. W. 801, both involved contracts in writing, established by letters, which expressed the consideration for the .transfer of the property, i. e., the services to be performed. Estate of Powell, supra, has already been referred to. Estate of Getchell, 211 Wis. 644, 247 N. W. 859, is like the Powell Case. In Estate of Lube, 225 Wis. 365, 274 N. W. 276, the contract was made by letters. In this case a will was executed by one who promised to transfer all his property, but the will so made pursuant to his promise “ex[668]*668pressed the consideration” as services to be performed, and his signature to the will, and the consideration therein expressed satisfied the statute of frauds although the will itself was void for insufficiency of its execution. The instant will did not express such consideration or any other.

Two cases of joint wills are relied on by respondent as supporting the judgment. In the first, Doyle v. Fischer, 183 Wis. 599, 605, 198 N. W. 763, it is stated as a general proposition :

“Where an agreement is entered into' by two persons, and especially by husband and wife, to make mutual and reciprocal wills disposing of their separate estates pursuant to their mutual agreement, and where mutual and reciprocal wills are made in accordance with that agreement, and where, after the death of one of the agreeing parties, the other takes under the will and accepts the benefits of said agreement, equity will enforce specific performance of said oral agreement and prevent the perpetration of fraud which would result from a breach of the agreement on the part of the one accepting the benefits thereof.”

The second, Allen v. Ross, 199 Wis. 162, 164, 225 N. W. 831, states the rule as declared in the Doyle Case, as follows :

“When two persons enter into an agreement to make, and do actually make, mutual and reciprocal wills by which each bequeaths her estate to the other, if she survives, and the survivor takes under such a will and accepts the benefit of such a mutual will and accepts the benefit of such a mutual agreement, equity will take such action as may be necessary to give effect to the mutual agreement that the property of the survivor shall go to the person designated by such agreement.”

The basis of the rule of these cases is that where joint wills are made and one of the parties, after the other has died with a will in force as agreed upon, has taken the property and received the benefit of the will of the other, to per[669]*669mit the one to do with the property received from the other otherwise than by the other’s will directed would perpetrate a fraud. This is the basis of the rule in cases of void contracts to convey land. Marshall & Ilsley Bank v. Schuerbrock, 195 Wis. 203, 217 Wis. 416; Papenthien v. Coerper, 184 Wis. 156, 198 N. W. 391. For like reason fraud takes cases of promises to devise land outside the statute of frauds, — whatever the circumstances are that would perpetrate a fraud. If under the circumstances of the instant case it would work a fraud upon the claimant to deny enforcement of the oral agreement, she would, under the reason of the rule above stated, be entitled to the judgment entered. But no fraud is practiced upon her if she receives due compensation for the services rendered pursuant to the agreement made. To allow in quantum meruit a different compensation than that agreed upon in a void contract does not work a fraud.

It is true that it is stated in the Doyle Case, supra, p. 608, that:

“It seems scarcely necessary to say that even though the agreement rested in parol and was void under the statute of frauds so far as it related to- real estate, there has been such a part performance thereof that equity will enforce its complete performance.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 691, 228 Wis. 662, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-v-olen-wis-1938.