Piffard v. Adenaw

153 N.Y.S. 400
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 14, 1915
DocketNo. 7212
StatusPublished

This text of 153 N.Y.S. 400 (Piffard v. Adenaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piffard v. Adenaw, 153 N.Y.S. 400 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

CLARKE, J.

This decree is based upon the finding that on or about the 30th day of October, 1898, at Geneseo, Livingston county, N. Y., the said Pauline A. Piffard and the said M. Emeline McMillan entered into an oral contract and agreement conditioned upon the subsequent purchase by said Pauline A. Piffard of the Piffard homestead, wherein and whereby it was mutually agreed by each of the parties as followsr

The said Pauline A. Piffard, on her part, agreed at her own cost and expense to purchase for a home a certain residence and property at Piffard, Livingston county, N. Y., known as the Piffard homestead, and containing about 40 acres, together with an additional nearby parcel of land containing upwards of 18 acres, providing the same was [401]*401sold at such a price as to come within her means; to put the said homestead in good repair and maintain the same as a home for herself and the said M. Emeline McMillan during the latter’s lifetime; to give the said M. Emeline McMillan first choice of the rooms in the said house for use as her private apartments, as well as the general use of the premises as one of the family; to provide the said M. Emeline McMillan with bam room for carriage and wagons; to provide stabling for the horses of the said M. Emeline McMillan and to support these horses for her, charging her no more than the actual cost of so doing; to cater and provide for the table so as to meet with the needs and desires of the said M. Emeline McMillan; to provide and keep a man on the premises, whose duties should be those of a gardener, chore man in and about the house and farm, and when the man needed additional help in carrying on the work on and about the place, in the way of men and teams, to provide the same at her own expense; to purchase and maintain on said place a sufficient number of cows to keep the establishment in milk, cream, and butter, and a sufficient number of fowls to supply eggs and young poultry for the said home; to manage a large garden upon the said place containing about an acre and a half of land, so as to supply the said family with all necessary vegetables, small fruits, and flowers for their support and comfort; to provide all necessary additional furniture to comfortably furnish the said house after the said M. Emeline McMillan had placed therein the furniture and other household belongings she had in the Colt house, in Geneseo, N. Y. ; to maintain such furniture in good repair, and from time to time, as the same became worn or unfit for use, to replace them at her own expense; and to provide th$, necessary help to maintain and run said household.

The said M. Emeline McMillan, upon her part, contracted and agreed, in the event said Pauline A. Piffard should purchase the said Piffard homestead, to go to the said Piffard homestead with the said Pauline A. Piffard and her family and make her home there during the balance of her life; to pay the said Pauline A. Piffard $100 a month for eight months of each year for the maintenance of said home, and, if the said M. Emeline McMillan remained therein for a greater period of time than eight months in any one year, to further pay the said Pauline A. Piffard at the rate of $100 per month for each month of such overtime; to place in the said home the furniture and other household belongings which the said M. Emeline McMillan then had in the said Colt house, in Geneseo, N. Y., and contribute them so far as they would go toward the furnishing of said new home; to leave such furniture there during her lifetime, and that, at the death of said M. Emeline McMillan, the said furniture was to become the property of the said Pauline A. Piffard, excepting such articles of furniture and bric-a-brac as the said M. Emelinfe McMillan wished to give away to other members of her family and friends for keepsakes; that she should not cause to be removed from any one room for that purpose a sufficient amount of furniture to deplete the furnishing of that room; to keep a maid to wait upon and take care of her (the said M. Emeline [402]*402McMillan), and to have the said maid do a sufficient amount of work in the said household to pay for the said maid’s board; to purchase horses and a carriage with-the necessary equipment for the same and to maintain them and to employ a coachman for the general use of the said family; and, when she (the said M. Emeline McMillan) died, to leave to the said Pauline A. Piffard a sufficient amount of property by will to produce an annual income equal in amount to the sum which she was to contribute annually towards the support of said home so that the said Pauline A. Piffard could continue the said home after the death of the said M. Emeline McMillan in the same fashion as during the latter’s lifetime, and for that purpose to leave to the said Pauline A. Piffard the equivalent, in cash or other securities, of the value of one-half of a 287/i2oo undivided interest in the aforesaid real property, located at 152 Broadway, in the city of New York, reserving the privilege or option, however, of satisfying this obligation by leaving to the said Pauline A. Piffard, instead of such cash or other securities, one-half of the said undivided interest in said real property itself, and that she had, as petitioner then knew, theretofore 'made a will in which she had given petitioner one-half of her interest in the real estate known as No. 152 Broadway, New York City.

Mrs. Piffard was a niece of Mrs. McMillan, and, if she had died intestate, would have been entitled to one-half of her estate. Mrs. McMillan was bom in 1832. In 1885 Mrs. McMillan and her niece, then Pauline Arthur, were together in Rome, Italy, where Pauline’s mother had died. For many years thereafter she and her niece traveled and lived together. They had at one time a family home in Washington, D. C., which was broken up by several deaths. They had a home in Geneseo, N. Y., which Mrs. McMillan maintained and conducted, to the upkeep of which the niece contributed. In February, 1898, Miss Arthur married D. Halsey Piffard. The contract set forth supra was alleged to have been made in November, 1898. It involved the purchase of the property known as the Piffard estate by Mrs. Piffard for some $5,000, the repair and furnishing thereof which cost about $6,000 more, and the setting up of a joint home; Mrs. McMillan to pay $100 a month for at least eight months in the year, and $100 a month for any of the other four months in which she might remain there, and with provisions in regard to horses and carriages and a maid. The property was bought and repaired. Mrs. McMillan took her furniture there. Mr. and Mrs. Piffard and Mrs. McMillan moved into the house in May, 1909, and lived on this property from that time down to October, 1902, when Mrs. McMillan went away, apparently for a visit, taking a few of her things. She never returned to reside there. She died in 1907, leaving a will in which no mention was made of Mrs, Piffard. All her property was left to her other relatives.

In 1904 Mrs. Piffard’s attorney 'sent to Mrs. McMillan the following written demand:

“The undersigned, hereby demands from you that you fulfill and carry out your contract, made with her on or about November 2, 1898, and that you pay to her the sum of $1,750, with interest thereon from the first day of June, 1904, as an amount due under the aforesaid contract, the items of which may be more particularly set forth as follows:
[403]*403To maintenance or contribution toward the home at the rate of $100 ■ per month for eight months....................................... $800

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.Y.S. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piffard-v-adenaw-nyappdiv-1915.