Lozier v. Hill

59 A. 234, 68 N.J. Eq. 300, 2 Robb. 300, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 31, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 59 A. 234 (Lozier v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lozier v. Hill, 59 A. 234, 68 N.J. Eq. 300, 2 Robb. 300, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C.

Without undertaking to discuss in detail all of the questions raised in this case, I shall endeavor to state the main points, the consideration of which has led me to the conclusion that the complainant’s bill should be dismissed.

1. The proof of a legal contract, as distinguished from a mere declaration of a testamentary intention, is unsatisfactory. Leaving out of view, for the present, the mere form of the contract ancl the absence of any written evidence of it, the fact that a verbal contract was made as alleged in the bill of complaint certainly ought to be established with, reasonable certainty.

The talk between the brother and sister, which is alleged to have constituted a legal contract, apparently contained, also, other very different elements involving a benefaction. Mr. Kip paid at least two-thirds the full value of the lot, according to the complainant’s estimate. The house which he contemplated erecting was to be a home for himself. The house, in fact, cost nearly $4,000. Mr. Kip would hardly have regarded his statements as constituting only a legal contract when he was proposing to acquire merely a life estate in the land at a price which the evidence shows beyond all question was a very large price for such life estate, then to increase the value of the property fourfold by the addition of buildings, and, lastly, give the whole at his death to his sister, the complainant.

The witnesses to the conversation, or series of conversations, alleged to have resulted in the oral contract, give their testi,mony from memory twenty-seven years after such conversations occurred.

The only witnesses to the contract are the complainant and her two daughters. One of these daughters was thirteen years of age and the other fourteen and a half years of age when they heard the conversations which they now narrate. Their [303]*303recollection seems to have been refreshed after Mr. Kip’s death, in 1891, which was sixteen years after the conversations occurred, by talking over with their mother “the wrong that had been done” to her by her brother, Mr. Kip, when he failed to make a devise to her in his will in accordance with his alleged promise.

When the conveyance was made to Mr. Kip, in 1875, he was in extremely feeble health, and the expectation of all parties concerned seemed to be that he would only live a short time. This fact makes it probable that Mr. Kip would entertain and express testamentary intentions in regard, to his sister, the complainant.

That Mr. Kip in good faith contemplated devising to his sister the land in question, and so stated, may be fully conceded without finding that he ever made or intended to make a contract which bound him to do that thing, and consequently stripped him of all control over the disposition of the land which he bought and paid for, and the dwelling-house which he erected thereon.

In my. opinion the testimony fairly shows that Mr. Kip paid a full price' — all that the land was worth in 1875 — but also indicates that the complainant, Mrs. Lozier, desired to keep' the lot, not so much for the purpose of obtaining more mopey for it, as for actual use as a site for a new residence which she expected to build. The situation was one where the whole contract between the'brother and sister might have been embraced in the sale of the lot for the sum of $1,000, while both parties ma]’- have recognized that the sister was doing the brother a favor in gratifying his wish to have this particular piece of ground for a home for the few remaining years that he expected to live. Mr. Kip might well have recognized the kindness of his sister in selling the lot even for full value, and might have expressed an. intention to recognize the favor which he had received by a vastly greater favor which he proposed to confer by his will. There is a great deal about this testimony, and particularly the statements of the complainant herself, which suggests that her real grievance was not that her brother broke [304]*304a binding contract which, be bad made with her, but that she had not received any portion of his estate, either under his will or under the will of his widow, who survived him.

The conversation which related to the purchase of the lot for $1,000 bears every appearance of being a business transaction; the conversation in which it is alleged Mr. Kip agreed to devise the lot back to■ his sister, with a dwelling-house erected upon it, lacks many of the marks of a strict business transaction. While the parties contemplated that Mr. Kip would not live very long, tire time of performance was wholly indefinite. Mr. Kip was obliged to build a house upon the lot which would go to his sister at his death, but what the character or value of the house was to be was in no way defined. It is evident that Mr. Kip might have carried out the alleged contract to the very letter in various ways, involving a difference in the value of the pecuniary result to his sister extending over a range of many thousands of dollars.

This is a case where the parties who were talking were very liable to mingle talk about business with talk about courtesies and favors. After many years it may be difficult for witnesses suffering from disappointed expectations to make accurate distinctions between these two very different kinds of talk. There were some significant indications in the testimony of the complainant and her witnesses that the alleged contract was quite distinct from the conveyance, and was not a mere matter of negotiation and agreement. The complainant herself, on cross-examination, testified in regard to her assent to the final proposition as follows:

“We talked it over some time. Brother Isaac [a brother who was present during the conversation] persuaded me to let him have it, as he was ill and needed a home, and we ought to humor him and let him have it: so I did so.”

The husband of the complainant, who attended to the business of drawing the deed, testified, on his direct examination on behalf of the complainant, to a conversation with Mr. Kip, in the course of the business, as follows:

[305]*305“He [Mr. Kip] said he had offered my wife a thousand dollars, and he also said that he had told her that he would make it to her in his will when he died. He gave as an explanation that his health was poor and that there would be enough for his widow, if he left one, and that she had no idea of living in Closter anj'how after he was gone; that she would probably go back to her father, and as he was well to dO' there would probably be enough to take care of her, and therefore he wanted to do something for Larina, and he told her he would leave the place to her when he died.”

Two witnesses for the complainant testified that Mr. Kip stated to them that he had bought the lot and paid $1,000 for it.

This testimony of witnesses for the complainant seems hardly to support the theory that the'proposed devise of the lot was a matter of definite contract obligation.

It may also be observed that within about four years after the alleged contract was made and the lot was conveyed to Mr. Kip the brother and sister became somewhat estranged, and their relations were not cordial during the period of about twelve years that ensued until the time of Mr. Kip’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 234, 68 N.J. Eq. 300, 2 Robb. 300, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lozier-v-hill-njch-1904.