Lacy v. . Getman

23 N.E. 452, 119 N.Y. 109, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, 74 Sickels 109, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1065
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 452 (Lacy v. . Getman) 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
Lacy v. . Getman, 23 N.E. 452, 119 N.Y. 109, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, 74 Sickels 109, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1065 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The relation of master and servant is no longer bounded by its original limits. It has broadened with the advance of civilization" until the law recognizes its existence in new areas of social and business life, and yields in many directions to the influence and necessities of its later surround *112 ings. When, therefore, it is said generally, as the commentators mostly agree in saying, that the contract relations of principal and agent, and of master and servant, are dissolved jby the death of either party, it is very certain that the statefment must be limited to cases in which the relation may be ¡deemed purely personal, and involves neither property rights-[nor independent action. Beyond that, a further limitation of the doctrine is asserted, which approaches very near, to its utter' destruction, and is claimed to he the result of modern adjudication. That limitation is that the rule applies only to-the contract of the servant, and not to that of the master, and not at all, unless the service employed is that of skilled labor pecidiar to the capacity and experience of the servant, employed, and not the common possession of men in general and it is proposed to adopt as a standard or test of the limitation an inquiry in each case whether the contract on the side-of the master can be performed after his death by his representatives substantially, and in all its terms or requirements, or cannot be so performed without violence to some of its inherent elements.

The agitation of that question has kept the present case passing like a shuttle between the trial and the appellate courts,, until it has been tried four times at the circuit and reviewed four times at General Term, and at last has been sent here in the hope of securing a final repose.

The facts are few and undisputed on this appeal. The plaintiff, Lacy, contracted orally with defendant’s testator, McMahan, to work for the latter upon his farm, doing its appropriate and ordinary work for a period of one year at a compensation of two hundred dollars. Lacy entered upon the-service in March, doing from day to day the work of the farm under the direction of its owner, until about- the middle of July, when McMahan died. By 1ns will he made the defendant executrix, but devised and bequeathed to his widow a life estate in the farm, and the use and control of all his personal property whatsoever in the house and on the farm, during the term of her natural life. Lacy knew in a general ivay the. *113 terms of the will. He testifies that he knew that it gave to the widow the use of the farm and that she talked with him about the personal property. It is admitted that- the executrix did not hire or employ him, but he continued on to the close of the year, doing the farm work under the direction of the widow until the end of his full year. He sued the executrix upon his contract with the testator, and has recovered the full amount of his year’s wages. From that decision tlife executrix appeals, claiming that the judgment should have been, limited to the proportinate amount earned at the death of McMahan, and that the death of the master dissolved th@ contract.

It is obvious at once that an element has come into the case as now presented, which was not there when the General Term first held that the contract survived. It now appears that the executrix could not have performed her side of the contract at all after the death of McMahan, by force of her official authority, because she had neither the possession of the farm or personal property upon it, and no right to such possession during the life of the widow. She had no power to put her servant upon the land, or employ him about it, and in her representative character she had not the slightest interest in his service and could derive no possible benefit from it. The plaintiff’s labor, after the death of McMahan, was necessarily on the farm of the widow, by her consent, for her benefit, and under her direction and control, and equitably and .justly should be a charge against her alone. The test of power to perform on the part of the personal representative of the deceased fails in the emergency presented by the facts, except possibly upon proof of the consent of the widow.

"We have then the peculiar case of a contract made to work for McMahan and under his direction and control, which-could not be performed because of his death, transmuted into a. contract to work for Mrs. Getman upon a farm which she did not possess and had no right to enter; and performed by working for the widow and under her direction and control alone ; and this because of the supposed rule that the contract *114 survived the death of the master and remained binding upon his -personal representatives.

It-, is true" that some interest in the personal property on the farina's- claimed to have vested in the executrix, notwithstanding the terms-, of the will, and the inventory filed by her is appealed to, and'the-necessity of a resort to the personal property with which to .pay- debts. There is no proof that the testator owed! any debts, and’ the-inventory covers nothing as to which Lacy’s; labor-was requisite or necessary, except possibly some corn on the ground valued at eighteen dollars. All the grain inventoried was in the barn, needing only to be threshed,, and must be assumed to have been there when testator diedand the other property consisted of farm tools and a cow and horse, to the use of which the widow was entitled and which,, if sold to pay possible debts, would have left the servant without means of doing his work and with nothing to do, unless for the widow, So that the bald question is presented whether the contract survived the testator’s death and bound his executrix,, who was without power or authority of her own to perform,, and had no interest in performance.

It seems to be conceded that the death of the servant dissolves the contract. (Wolfe v. Howes, 20 N. Y. 197; Spaulding v. Rosa, 71 id. 40; Devlin, v. Mayor, etc., 63 id. 14; Fahy v. North, 19 Barb. 341; Clark v. Gilbert, 32 id. 576 ; Seymour v. Cagger, 13 Hun, 29 ; Boast v. Firth, L. R. [4 C. P.] 1.) Almost all of these cases were marked by the circumstance that the services belonged to the class of skilled labor. In such instances the impossibility of a substituted service by the representative of the servant is very apparent. The master lias selected the servant by reason of his personal qualifications,- and ought not, when he dies, .to abide the choice of another or accept a service which he does not want. While these cases possess, with a single exception, that characteristic, T do -not think they depend upon it. Fahey v. North was a contract for farm labor, ended by the sickness of the servant, and quite uniformly the general rule stated is that the servant’s agreement to render personal services is dissolved by his death. *115 There happens a total inability to perform; it is without the servant’s fault; and so further performance is excused and the contract is apportioned.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 452, 119 N.Y. 109, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, 74 Sickels 109, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacy-v-getman-ny-1890.