Kirkpatrick Home for Childless Women v. Kenyon

119 Misc. 349
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 119 Misc. 349 (Kirkpatrick Home for Childless Women v. Kenyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirkpatrick Home for Childless Women v. Kenyon, 119 Misc. 349 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Brown, J.

Defendant’s testatrix entered the home of the plaintiff August 16, 1920. On September 11, 1920, the plaintiff and defendant’s testatrix, who will hereinafter be styled the decedent, executed a written contract wherein the decedent agreed “ to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $5,000.00 to become due and payable upon the execution of this instrument and the party of the second part [the plaintiff] agrees to furnish a home for party of the first part [decedent] at the Kirkpatrick Home for Childless Women in the Village of Cuba subject to the rules and regulations heretofore adopted by the Board of Directors of said home.” The rules and regulations referred to in the written contract provide “an entrance fee of at least twenty-five hundred dollars will be required. A probation period of two months will be allowed an inmate after entering the home. If for any reason an inmate leaves, or is dismissed by the Board of Directors during that period the sum of ten dollars per week for board will be deducted from the entrance fee, and the remainder returned.”

Decedent died September 18, 1920. The entrance fee of $5,000 was not paid, the defendant rejecting the plaintiff’s claim therefor and this action was brought to recover the same. Defendant denies liability under the contract for any sum in excess of $10 per week for decedent’s board for five weeks from August 16, 1920 to September 18, 1920, the date of her death.

The contract providing that the entrance fee would be returned to the decedent upon the happening of one of two event's, decedent’s leaving or decedent’s dismissal, and the entrance fee not having been paid, it is believed that the plaintiff’s right to recover the $5,000 entrance fee must be determined by the same rules that would determine the plaintiff’s right to retain such money had it been paid.

The contract bound decedent to pay to the plaintiff $5,000 upon condition that in the event she left the plaintiff’s home within two months from the 16th day of August, 1920, that is, on or before the 16th day of October, 1920, she was to pay $10 per week for the period she remained in the home, to be deducted from the $5,000 and the remainder thereof to be returned to her.

The contract bound the plaintiff to furnish a home for decedent during her lifetime upon condition that in the event the board [351]*351of directors of the plaintiff dismissed the decedent from the plaintiff’s home at any time within two months from August 16, 1920, the entrance fee of $5,000 was to be returned to decedent, deducting therefrom the sum of $10 per week for board for the period that she was an inmate of the home during the two months.

It must be conceded that upon the happening of the event of decedent’s leaving the home on or before October 16, 1920, or of plaintiff’s board of directors dismissing decedent from the home, in either of such events the obligation on the part of decedent to pay the $5,000, and the obligation on the part of the plaintiff to furnish a home for decedent would be of no validity.

It is very clear that decedent’s obligation to pay the $5,000 was conditioned upon her failure to leave the home before October 16, 1920; it is equally clear that plaintiff’s obligation to furnish a home for decedent was conditioned upon the failure of plaintiff’s board of directors to dismiss, decedent as an inmate from the home before October 16, 1920.

Decedent died September 18, 1920, one month before the expiration of the time within which the event could have happened that was to determine whether the obligation of decedent to pay the $5,000 was absolute and final, and also whether the obligation of plaintiff to furnish a home for decedent was certain and complete. There was no absolute obligation on the part of decedent to pay; there was no fixed obligation on the part of plaintiff to furnish a home for decedent. There was no mutual obligation between the plaintiff and decedent specified in the contract. The plaintiff’s right to the $5,000 does not depend upon its subsequent readiness to perform and furnish a home for decedent, but upon its original obligatory character. Decedent’s obligation to pay if she did not leave secured to her no positive fixed right to have a home. Such right was dependent upon the failure of plaintiff’s board of directors to dismiss her on or before October 16, 1920. Plaintiff’s obligation to furnish a home in the event decedent was not dismissed did not secure to it the absolute right to the $5,000; such right was dependent upon decedent not leaving the home on or before October 16, 1920. Whatever right either party secured by this contract was dependent upon events that might or might not happen. It can never be ascertained whether decedent would or would not have left the home during the two months had she lived that period. It can never be ascertained whether plaintiff’s board of directors would or would not have dismissed decedent from the home had she lived until October 16, 1920. Death has prevented the happening or non-happening of the events upon which the legal right of the plaintiff to recover the $5,000 depended. It has [352]*352not been proved and it never can be proved that any sum of money is due under the contract beyond the $10 a week for board of decedent. The fact that decedent died September 18, 1920, or that she said to someone that she was going to remain in the home is no proof that she would not have left the home before October 16, 1920, had she lived. The fact that the board of directors of the plaintiff did not dismiss decedent from the home before September 18, 1920, is no proof that they would not have dismissed her before October 16, 1920. The decedent had the legal right to leave the home at any time before October 16, 1920, and thus relieve herself from any obligation to pay any sum of money above $10 a week. The plaintiff had the legal right to dismiss the decedent from its home at any time before October 16, 1920, and thus relieve itself from any obligation to furnish a home for decedent. Decedent had no legal right to be furnished a home until the expiration of the time within which the plaintiff had the privilege of dismissing her as an inmate. Plaintiff had no legal right to the $5,000 until the expiration of the time within which the decedent had the privilege of leaving the home.

For want of a mutual obligation the contract became unenforcible by reason of the death of decedent preventing the non-happening of the events upon which the promise to pay and the promise to provide a home depended. The happening or non-happening of these two events could only be determined by the continued living of the decedent through the entire period of two months.

The agreement of decedent to pay the $5,000 in the event that she did not leave the home within two months was dependent upon her living during that period. The agreement of the plaintiff to furnish decedent a home in the event that its board of directors did not dismiss decedent as an inmate within two months was dependent upon decedent living during that period. The right of decedent to leave within two months could not be exercised in the event of her death; it could only be exercised in the event of her living. The right of plaintiff to dismiss decedent as an inmate of the home could not be exercised in the event of her death; it could only be exercised in the event of her living. A dead person could not leave the home, neither could a dead person be dismissed from the home. The performance of the contract is thus seen by its terms to be dependent "upon the decedent living for the two months.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 Misc. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkpatrick-home-for-childless-women-v-kenyon-nysupct-1922.