Perkins v. Allen

233 P. 655, 133 Wash. 455, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1215
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1925
DocketNo. 18901. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 233 P. 655 (Perkins v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. Allen, 233 P. 655, 133 Wash. 455, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1215 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

A noticed motion by respondents to dismiss the appeal, passed hy us to the consideration of the case on the merits, is now denied because of our determination on the merits.

*456 The action is one to enforce specific performance of a verbal contract between the decedent and respondents to make a will and to establish a trust upon the estate in favor of respondents.

In their amended complaint respondents alleged that, on or about January 1, 1919, D. L. Getty entered into an oral agreement:

. . by the terms and conditions of which it was provided that the probate of the estate of decedent (referring to the deceased wife of D. L. Getty, whose estate was then about to be probated) should be carried on as if she died intestate, and D. L. Getty should serve as administrator thereof, and in the course of such proceedings all of the property, real and personal, belonging to the said estate should be set off and awarded unto said D. L. Getty as his sole and separate property and estate, the said plaintiffs as heirs of decedent orally agreed to remise and release in said probate proceeding unto said D. L. Getty all right, title and interest acquired by them or either of them by reason of the said will or as heirs of the said decedent, and in consideration thereof the said D. L. Getty orally promised and agreed to hold in trust for the said plaintiffs the title to said premises for the period of his life, and thereafter the said real and personal property and all estate acquired by the said D. L. Getty should by will pass to and become the property of plaintiffs; and further orally agreed to execute a valid will disposing of all of said estate as follows: One-fifth to plaintiff Eva Wivell, two-fifths to plaintiff R. F. Perkins, and two-fifths to plaintiff John L. Perkins.”

Upon the trial below, findings, conclusions and a judgment were made for respondents. A motion for a new trial was unsuccessfully made, this appeal resulting.

D. L. Getty and Harriet E. Getty were married in 1896, and lived as husband and wife, without issue, until December 22, 1918, when Harriet E. Getty died, *457 leaving' as her only heirs her husband, D. L. Getty, a daughter, Eva Wivell, and two sons, Robert T. and John L. Perkins, the children being issue of a former marriage of herself. It appears that, in 1903, D. L. Getty deeded to his wife a certain forty-acre tract of land in King county, which comprised twenty acres, the major portion of the property involved in the former probate proceeding of the deceased wife, and in this proceeding. It would appear, therefore, that .the twenty acres involved was the separate property of the deceased, Harriet E. Getty, at the time of her death. On July 19, 1915, Harriet E. Getty and D. L. Getty had both made their wills. The will of the wife purported to give a life estate in her property to D. L. Getty with the remainder to her sons and daughter, the devise to her husband being as long as he lives, and after his death her estate to be divided as follows: Five per cent to her daughter, and the balance equally to her two sons. D. L. “Getty was a witness to the will of Harriet E. Getty, and there not being two other witnesses, and he being a beneficiary named in the will, after her death the will was not filed for probate, but a petition was filed by D. L. Getty for letters of administration which recited that the decedent left no will, the instrument filed with the petition being defective. The present attorney for respondents was the attorney for Getty when the petition for letters of administration upon the estate of his wife was filed. The superior court,.in probate, made an order appointing Getty as administrator, which order found that Harriet E. Getty died interstate. Her estate was appraised by appraisers at $2,600. Thereafter, on March 20, 1919, D. L. Getty filed his petition to have all of his wife’s estate of less than $3,000 set aside to him in lieu of homestead. On March 20, 1919, Eva Wivell, John L. Perkins and Robert T. Perkins executed a re *458 ceipt of a copy df the petition to set aside the property as a homestead to D. L. Getty, and a release and consent to the entry of an order setting the property aside as petitioned. Due notice was given of the hearing on the petition, and on March 31, 1919, the court entered a decree awarding all of Harriet E. Getty’s property to D. L. Getty absolutely, and the estate was thereupon settled and closed. On the same date (March 31, 1919), D. L. Getty executed a will leaving his property, one-fifth to Eva Wivell, two-fifths to Robert T. Perkins, and two-fifths to John L. Perkins. On January 12, 1920, D. L. Getty made another will, leaving $150 to Eva Wivell, $25 to Robert T. Perkins, $25 to John L. Perkins, and distributing the remainder to the three daughters of John L. Perkins and to the brothers and sisters of D. L. Getty. Georgia Verne Allen was nominated and after his decease, qualified as his executrix.

One of the principal contentions of appellants is that the evidence in support of the alleged oral contract is not sufficiently definite, clear and certain to justify the finding of the court that the oral contract was made. In view of the fact that “cases of this kind are not favored, and when the promise rests in parol are even regarded with suspicion, and will not be enforced except upon the strongest evidence that it was founded upon a valuable consideration and deliberately entered into by the decedent” (Waterman, Specific Performance, § 41; Alexander v. Lewes, 104 Wash. 32, 175 Pac. 572), we have examined the entire record with great care; but as was said in the above cited case, “while not favored and rarely enforced upon oral proofs, the power to make a valid agreement to dispose of property by will in a particular case has long been recognized.”

*459 We have also declared that such a will as is here asserted was contracted to he made was a mere will and revokable at pleasure and was revoked by the execution of the subsequent will; yet the subsequent will could do no more than any other alienation of the property, and if the property was subject to an enforcible trust, it also could have no effect. Olsen v. Hoag, 128 Wash. 8, 221 Pac. 984.

The evidence is practically undisputed that there was a contract between Getty and respondents that respondents were to relinquish all interest in or under the will of their mother and-let the entire estate go to D. L. Getty in consideration of the reciprocal promise by Getty that he would will the property to them, or such of the estate as remained at his death. In the testimony of witnesses there is nothing shown as to what portions of the remainder of the estate should be willed to respondents. Respondents, of course, were barred from testifying to the particulars by the force of § 1211, Rem. Comp. Stat. [P. C. § 7722]. But there is evidence of that in the will itself, which was made by Getty in their favor. Although not conclusive, it also is corroborative of the contract itself and of its terms.

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Bluebook (online)
233 P. 655, 133 Wash. 455, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-allen-wash-1925.