Middleworth v. . Ordway

84 N.E. 291, 191 N.Y. 404, 29 Bedell 404, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1074
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 84 N.E. 291 (Middleworth v. . Ordway) 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
Middleworth v. . Ordway, 84 N.E. 291, 191 N.Y. 404, 29 Bedell 404, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1074 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The judgment now before us for review enforces a contract relating to the right of inheritance so as to take away from the natural heirs of a dead man a large portion of his property and confer it upon a stranger to his blood. The contract, however, in this case differs from those made with a similar purpose which we have recently condemned so severely, in that it was in writing and the writing was proved beyond question and without dispute. Yo claim of fabrication or fraud is made by any one. There is no law, except that which protects the right of dower, to prevent a man from making a contract in his lifetime affecting the disposition of his property after his death, but as we have repeatedly held such contracts should be in writing, or established by disinterested witnesses, and should be fair and equitable or a court of equity will not enforce them. (Hamlin v. Stevens, 177 N. Y. 39; Rosseau v. Rouss, 180 N. Y. 116; Roberge v. Bonner, 185 N. Y. 265; Holt v. Tuite, 188 N. Y. 17, 22.) A father unable to provide for his infant child, may transfer the custody, control and the right to the services thereof to another, subject to the right of a court of equity to interfere in the interest of the child. The mutual promises, therefore, of the parties to the instrument before us furnished an adequate consideration to support it.

In pronouncing judgment in this case we shall wholly dis *412 régard the parol contract found by the trial court, and confíne our attention exclusively to the written agreement, without resorting to the oral evidence for any purpose except to discover the situation and conduct of the partiés' when they wrote what we are now called upon to construe. "(Thomas v. Scutt, 127 N. Y. 133, 141.)

By that agreement the father, who was the sole surviving parent, transferred the light to the custody, control and services of his infant daughter for a limited number of years. The consideration named for the transfer is a covenant to adopt the child and to support, educate and maintain her until she reached a certain age. The contract further provided that the child should remain with Ordway and wife, and submit to their government until she became eighteen years old, when,” to repeat the words of the parties, she shall be entitled to her dower right to the property of the said James and Mary Ordway, the same as though she wTore their own legitimate offspring.”

While the contract is not binding upon Mrs. Ordway because she did not' sign it, since it was executed and delivered by Mr. Ordway and' Mr. Stanton as a complete instrument, it was binding upon them and also upon the child, for it was authorized by law. It was duly performed by both father and daughter and Mr. Ordway was bound to perform, at least to the extent within his power. He could not adopt the child without the consent of his wife and it does not appear that she ever consented. (L. 1873, ch. 830, § 3; L. 1896, ch. 272, § 61.) At all events no order of adoption was made by the court having such matters in charge, and the child was not legally adopted. The rest of the contract was kept by Mr. Ordway as long as he lived, but upon his death the question arose as to what the parties meant by the clause quoted above. The difficulty in learning the meaning springs from the word dower,” as used in the covenant of Mr. Ordway. The contract was not drawn by one learned in law and obviously that word was not used in its ordinary sense, for even an own daughter can have no dower right in the prop *413 erty of her father. Dower ordinarily means the interest which the law gives to a widow in the lands of her deceased husband and it can have no application to the relation of parent and child. It is frequently used to express an inchoate right, which does not ripen until death. If limited to its technical meaning it would confer no right whatever, yet the parties intended that • some right should be created thereby and that right related to the property of Mr. Ordway. Under these circumstances we must search the context and look at the situation of the contracting parties for a solution of the question.

What subject were they dealing with ? Clearly not with the right of a widow, but with the right of a clqld. The rights of the natural father were being transferred to a foster father and provision was being made for the welfare of the foster child. Her support and education had been provided for in the forepart of the instrument, and the parties evidently intended to make some provision for her with reference to the property of Mr. Ordway. Thenceforward she was to sustain to him the relation of a daughter and he was to sustain to her the relation of a father, “the same as though legitimately ” his “ own child.” This suggests the nature of the provision intended, but the subject is not left to suggestion merely, for a phrase immediately follows which shows what the parties meant. “Her dower right to the property” of Mr. Ordway was to be “ the same as though she were their (his) own legitimate offspring.” Thus the right conferred is first defined by the word “ dower ” used as an adjective, which, as we have seen, in its technical sense is without practical meaning, and it is also measured by the phrase just quoted, which is, in effect, a definition by comparison. “ Her dower right,” therefore, was to be such a right “ to,” not in, the property of Mr. Ordway “as if she were his own legitimate offspring.” What is that right ? Simply the right of inheritance, which a child has according to the laws of the state, provided the father dies intestate. A father may make a will and disinherit his child, but if one is not made the law takes *414 its course and his child succeeds to his property. Mr. Ordway could have made a will and left the plaintiff nothing, for the contract did not prevent it. He could have made a will and left her something, the same as if the agreement had not been entered into, but he was under no obligation to make a will, for he had not agreed to. If he made no will, however, his agreement, as we read it, was that his foster child should have the same right of inheriting his property as if she were his own child. Thus the right which Mr. Ordway intended to confer upon the plaintiff was that of a legitimate child to inherit from him if he died without a will, not an exclusive right, but the right to take her aliquot part if he should have children born to him. She takes, hot by the law of succession, but by contract, to the same extent that a natural child would take according to the law of succession. The context, the situation of the parties and their general purpose in making the contract show that the words “her dower right ” mean the right of the plaintiff to inherit the same as if she had sprung from his loins or had been lawfully adopted, as he agreed she should be. Whether we ignore the word “ dower ” altogether as meaningless, or give it the definition that the parties gave it by using the phrase which they regarded as equivalent in meaning, the same result follows.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.E. 291, 191 N.Y. 404, 29 Bedell 404, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middleworth-v-ordway-ny-1908.