Landrum v. Rivers

98 S.E. 477, 148 Ga. 774, 1919 Ga. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 14, 1919
DocketNo. 756
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 98 S.E. 477 (Landrum v. Rivers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landrum v. Rivers, 98 S.E. 477, 148 Ga. 774, 1919 Ga. LEXIS 64 (Ga. 1919).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

1. The plaintiff in error submitted a large number of written requests to charge, which the court refused to give, and error is assigned upon the refusal to give in charge these requests. Among them was the following: “It is not every parol contract which the court will specifically enforce. It will never enforce any parol contract for the sale of land or the making of a will or the testamentary disposition of property, unless the party who is seeking such performance will be defrauded if the contract is not enforced, even if all other elements are shown to exist which would entitle a party to such relief.” The court did not err in refusing to give this charge. This charge is not in harmony with the doctrine laid down in other cases decided by this court, that a contract to make a will will be [777]*777specifically performed, where the evidence establishes the contract with the requisite degree of certainty (a subject to which we will allude further on in this opinion), and it is shown by the evidence that the party claiming the right to specific performance fulfilled and performed his part of the contract.

2. Another written request to charge, which the court refused to give, was as follows: “The court instructs you, that, since the law has provided what disposition shall be made of the estate of one who dies, the court favors the disposition fixed by the law, and will not, except when a strict compliance is had, permit it to be diverted from the channel so prescribed by the law. The law is very strict in requiring that its provisions for the proper disposition of the estate of the dead shall be observed, and the safety of the estate of every one depends upon their observance. So long as one lives, he is presumed to be able to look after his estate; when he is dead, the law steps in and undertakes to care for it and see that it is legally and properly disposed of. It will see it reaches his heirs at law, or go to his legatees under his last will and testament. The law has thrown around the estates of those who die every safeguard to protect it. It is in the faith of' this fact we all labor and toil to accumulate property, feeling that when we die our estates will be safe. It is the duty of the court and jury to exercise great care and extreme caution in the effort to see that the estate of one who is dead shall not be diverted from the channels and removed from the safeguards of law. You see this suit is an effort to take this estate out of the channels prescribed by the law, and that by a parol contract. While such an effort, under the law, may succeed, it can do so only when, under the evidence, which is so strong and convincing and satisfactory that the jury to a reasonable moral certainty are convinced of its truth, and not to enforce it would result in a fraud on the plaintiff, because it is not practical to make her whole by awarding in money the value of her performance or part performance. It is a very serious proposition, after one dies, for an outsider, one who under the law. would have no. rights or interest in the dead man’s estate, to set up a parol agreement, had with the man who is now dead and unable to speak, whereby not a part of his estate, but his whole estate, belongs to her, and not to those upon whom the law cast it. You must realize, gentlemen of the jury, such an effort [778]*778is a very dangerous thing, and one that threatens all estates. While the law does not declare such a thing may not succeed, but, on the contrary, it is the law such a contract may be made and may be specifically enforced, yet in its wisdom it has imposed on the party who seeks to enforce such a contract a very heavy burden, in that the contract must be so certain, definite, and clear, and so precise in its terms, as that neither party can reasonably misunderstand them, and prove it by evidence so strong and cogent as to convince the jury to a reasonable moral certainty it was made, and not to enforce it specifically would be a fraud on the plaintiff, because she could not be easily and adequately compensated in money for the performance or part performance of the contract by the plaintiff. In other words, the court will not enforce such a contract save in cases where specific performance is the only remedy that will afford the plaintiff adequate relief and prevent a wrong and injustice to the plaintiff. Therefore, gentlemen of the jury, you see that, under the law, unless the evidence is so strong and convincing as to satisfy you to a reasonable moral certainty the contract was made as alleged, that the plaintiff cannot be compensated easily and adequately in money for the performance or part performance, and that it would result in a fraud upon her if not specifically enforced, then you should not interfere with the laws disposing of this estate, but let it go as the law directs, and leave the plaintiff to her remedy to recover the compensation for the services she claims she rendered, in money.” The court did not err in refusing to give this charge. It would have been error for the court to have instructed the jury in the language just quoted. In the first place the charge is argumentative—strongly so. In the next place it is in conflict with the doctrine which is briefly stated in the preceding division of this opinion. Thirdly, it is not law in this State that a contract to make a will will not be enforced specifically unless the refusal to specifically enforce it would be a fraud on the plaintiff, on the ground that she could not he easily and adequately compensated in money for the performance or part performance of the contract by the plaintiff; nor is it law that the court will not enforce such a contract save in cases where specific performance is the only remedy that affords the plaintiff adequate relief and prevents a wrong and injustice to the plaintiff. The case of Heery v. Heery, 144 Ga. [779]*779467 (87 S. E. 472), in all the controlling features, is nearly identical with the present case. - The differences on the facts of that case and the instant case are differences that do not tend in any way to weaken the claim of defendant in error, but rather to strengthen it, as appears from, a careful reading of the record in that case. Among the eases there cited is that of Banks v. Howard, 117 Ga. 94, (43 S. E. 438), and apparently is one of the cases upon which the court based the decision in the Heery case. It was said in the Banks case: "Contracts under which one of the contracting parties agrees with the other, for a valuable consideration, that he will make a will giving to the other property, either real or personal, have been sustained and enforced in America from the earliest times, and the validity of such contracts seems now to be beyond all doubt.” In the case of Gordon v. Spellman, 145 Ga. 682, (89 S. E. 749, Ann. Cas. 1918A, 852), it was ruled: "An oral contract to devise lands falls within the operation of the statute of frauds; but where the party in whose favor the will is to be made has performed his part of the contract; and the other party dies leaving a will in which no devise is made pursuant to the oral contract, the disappointed party may apply to a court of equity for specific performance of the contract, if it is one of such a nature that a court of equity would require specific performance.”

3. Requests to charge were also made in writing as follows: (5) Here the law is very strict.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.E. 477, 148 Ga. 774, 1919 Ga. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landrum-v-rivers-ga-1919.