Lally v. Cronen

159 N.E. 723, 247 N.Y. 58, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1040
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 159 N.E. 723 (Lally v. Cronen) 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
Lally v. Cronen, 159 N.E. 723, 247 N.Y. 58, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1040 (N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

Pound, J.

The action is in equity. Plaintiff is a half-sister of the defendant Cronen and a stepdaughter of the latter’s mother, Catharine M. Lally, deceased. She is a member of the New York bar and was in active practice for some years before and after the year 1901. The complaint alleges a contract made between the plaintiff, the defendant Cronen and Catharine M. Lally, deceased, whereby “ it was mutually agreed that all property belonging to any or either of them should pass upon the death of any or either of them to the survivors and that they would execute mutual wills, and not revoke the same during their lifetime without notice to the others.” It further alleges the execution of such wills by the three parties to the agreement and that Catharine M. Lally, with the knowledge and consent of defendant Cronen, made a new will in breach of the agreement in favor of defendant Cronen without notice to plaintiff and in violation of her rights. Judgment by way of specific performance is demanded for one-half of the property of the deceased Mrs. Lally, now in the hands of the defendant individually or as executrix of her mother’s will.

On April 18, 1901, the parties made identical wills. Each left her property to the other two. In 1908 new wills were made, to the same effect. In 1913 Mrs. Cronen and Mrs. Lally made their wills leaving plaintiff out. Mrs. Lally left all her property to Mrs. Cronen. Plaintiff was not notified of the change but subsequently learned of it. On March 28, 1922, she obtained Mrs. Lally’s signature to a new will which again provided for her and Mrs. Cronen equally. Mrs. Lally was, however, incompetent to make a will and after her death, on *61 January 8, 1923, probate was refused the later will and the Cronen will was admitted to probate. Plaintiff thereupon brought this action.

Although plaintiff claims to have rendered valuable professional services to her stepmother and half-sister and that such services, as well as mutual love and affection, were the consideration for their contract to make mutual wills in her favor, her claim is, not that the wills were irrevocable, but that they were irrevocable without notice to the others.

The contract to make mutual wills and the consideration therefor are established as to Mrs. Cronen by plaintiff’s evidence of conversations between plaintiff and her-half-sister. Some of these conversations were in the presence of the testatrix Mrs. Lally, some perhaps, were not. They were evidence against Mrs. Cronen in either event but they were evidence against Mrs. Lally in neither event, either because she was absent or because incompetent under section 347 of the Civil Practice Act, as evidence of personal transactions of plaintiff with a deceased person against whose estate she is asserting a claim. (Matter of Kelly, 238 N. Y. 71.) It is sought to establish acquiescence and consent of the dead woman from her presence and silence on these occasions. The evidence has no other purpose.

As against the sister, the evidence is of an agreement based on a consideration to make a mutual will that neither could change without notice to the other. The competent evidence against the mother, Mrs. Lally, consists of her admissions. They are testified to by two witnesses. Abner Stupel was a clerk in plaintiff’s law office. In June, 1901, he was fifteen years old. He says that he then had a talk with Mrs. Lally about the legal services that plaintiff was rendering for herself and the others and the absence of plaintiff from her office and business in connection therewith. She said: “ You know Pinky [Mrs. Cronen], Vinie [plaintiff] and *62 myself made wills, mutual wills, and we can’t change those wills without the consent of the others, and whatever she loses by reason of being in California (on the business of the family) she and Pinky will make up when I die, of whatever money I leave.”

Tillie C. Cook heard a conversation in August, 1901, between her father and Mrs. Lally in San Francisco. The subject was the legal services rendered by plaintiff for her benefit. The fact of a will was mentioned. The witness testified that Mrs. Lally said: Vinie (plaintiff] will not put in a bill for compensation, because we talked it over before we came out here and there was a will, drawn at that time before we left New York.” Witness’ father suggested that a will could be changed. Mrs. Lally replied Why no. We can’t break our wills. These wills are mutual wills and we can’t break them without consulting and advising with the other one too.”

Giving to the evidence of these two witnesses their fullest probative force, it establishes an agreement on the part of Mrs. Lally to make a will irrevocable without the consent of plaintiff and Mrs. Cronen. Plaintiff relies on a mutual agreement to make wills irrevocable without notice to the others.

The question is whether the agreement to make mutual wills has been competently established. No doubt a sufficient consideration has been shown for ' such an agreement and mutual wills were made in reliance upon some kind of an agreement between the parties. Plaintiff must, however, furnish proof that the minds of the parties met on the precise terms of the agreement under which the mutual wills were executed.

“ As a will an instrument is revocable at pleasure, but as a contract, if supported by an adequate consideration, it is enforcible in equity.” (Rastetter v. Hoenninger, 214 N. Y. 66, 71.) The evidence required to show a contract by one deceased, to dispose of his property in a certain manner after his death, must be clear and convincing, or *63 it will not be regarded as sufficient.” (Wallace v. Wallace, 216 N. Y. 28, 39.) The agreement depended upon for the award of the relief demanded must be clearly and definitely established by full and satisfactory proof. “ To attribute to a will the quality of irrevocability demands the most indisputable evidence of the agreement, which is relied upon to change its ambulatory nature, and that presumptions will not, and should not, take the place of proof.” (Edson v. Parsons, 155 N. Y. 555, 568.)

An agreement to make mutual wills revocable only by consent is not the same as an agreement to make mutual .wills revocable on notice. Mrs. Lally may have been willing to make a will on consideration that the wills of plaintiff and Mrs. Cronen should not be revoked without her consent. She may have been willing or unwilling to make a will in their favor when they reserved the power to revoke their wills in her favor upon notice. We take the intention of Mrs. Lally from the language she used. Mutual assent is essential to the formation of a contract. It is not established that Mrs. Lally assented to an agreement to make mutual wills revocable on notice. The result is that element of mutuality of assent is lacldng. One contract is proved as to her; another as to Mrs. Cronen.

The plaintiff was, as we have indicated, disqualified as a witness in her own behalf against the executrix of her mother’s will under section 347 of the Civil Practice Act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.E. 723, 247 N.Y. 58, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lally-v-cronen-ny-1928.