Resor v. Schaefer

74 P.2d 917, 193 Wash. 91
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1937
DocketNo. 26749. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 917 (Resor v. Schaefer) 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
Resor v. Schaefer, 74 P.2d 917, 193 Wash. 91 (Wash. 1937).

Opinion

Steinert, C. J.

This is an action to compel specific performance of an oral contract of a decedent. The administrator of the decedent’s estate answered by general denial and also cross-complained for affirmative recovery of rent due the estate. Trial by the court without a jury resulted in findings and conclusions, on the basis of which the court decreed specific performance and, in effect, denied recovery on the cross-complaint. The administrator has appealed.

William P. Draper and Hannah M. Draper, an elderly couple, lived in Vancouver, Washington, in a home owned by them and valued at about two thousand dollars, with household furnishings therein of the value of about five hundred dollars. Respondents, a much younger couple, with one child, lived in a rented house about four blocks distant from the Drapers. The acquaintance between the two families began about May, 1934. In December of that year, Mrs. Draper died, intestate and without issue.

Thereafter, Mr. Draper continued to live in the old home until his death in February, 1936. He had, for some time prior to that, been afflicted with cataracts which rendered him almost totally blind, and also with diabetes and Bright’s disease which ultimately resulted in his death.

*93 In January, 1935, Mr. Draper went to a hospital in Portland for an operation upon one of his eyes and remained there for several months. The respondents allege in their complaint that, at the hospital, on March 10,1935, Mr. Draper and they entered into the oral contract upon which this action is based.

According to the terms of the contract as pleaded, respondents agreed to move into Mr. Draper’s house, put the same in livable condition and thereafter maintain it as a home for Mr. Draper during the remainder of his life, also to prepare his meals, nurse and care for him as long as he should live; in consideration of these things, Mr. Draper agreed to devise and leave to respondents all his property, real and personal, after payment by them of his medical bills and the expenses of his burial.

Shortly after March 10, 1935, respondents moved into Mr. Draper’s house and prepared it for his return from the hospital. No contention is made by appellant that respondents did not fully and satisfactorily perform all the services required of them under whatever agreement they may have had with Mr. Draper. The question before us is not one of adequate performance of services, but simply whether the contract as alleged was actually made between the parties.

It further appears that, during all of the times above mentioned, Mr. Draper had a bank account which, by reason of the deposit therein of a monthly income that he had, increased from $901 on September 3, 1935, tó $1,364.73 on February 18, 1936. Sometime after March 10, 1935, the exact date not being definitely fixed, Mr. Draper, accompanied by Mr. Resor, went to the bank and there made arrangements whereby checks signed by Mr. Draper and presented by Mr. Resor would be honored and paid by the bank. On February 18, 1936, two days before his death, Mr. Draper signed a chéck *94 payable to Mr. Resor in the exact amount of his balance then in the bank. The check was cashed on the same day and deposited to the credit of Mr. Resor. After Mr. Draper’s death, Mr. Resor paid from the funds held by him all debts owing by Mr. Draper, together with the expenses of his last sickness and burial, leaving in Resor’s possession a balance of $1,137, which respondents now claim by virtue of the oral contract.

Mr. Draper died February 20, 1936, intestate and without issue. At the time of his death, he had made no conveyance or transfer to the Resors of any of his property except by the check above mentioned. His nearest relatives are a brother and a sister living in distant states, and whom he had not seen for many years.

Appellant assigns as error (1) the entry of the decree reciting that an oral agreement to devise and bequeath property had been made by the deceased, (2) the admission of certain testimony concerning privileged communications, and (3) the denial of relief under the cross-complaint for rent alleged to be owing by respondents and accruing subsequent to Mr. Draper’s death.

It has become settled law in this state that oral contracts to devise or bequeath property are enforceable. Velikanje v. Dickman, 98 Wash. 584, 168 Pac. 465; Alexander v. Lewes, 104 Wash. 32, 175 Pac. 572; Olsen v. Hoag, 128 Wash. 8, 221 Pac. 984; Perkins v. Allen, 133 Wash. 455, 234 Pac. 25; Avenetti v. Brown, 158 Wash. 517, 291 Pac. 469.

Although such contracts are not favored in law, and are viewed with suspicion by the courts, they are not summarily rejected simply because they have not been reduced to writing or are not supported by some kind of written evidence. The right and power to make a valid agreement to dispose of property by will in a par *95 ticular way and the correlative obligation arising under such an agreement have long been recognized. If the terms of the contract, the intention of the parties, and the adequacy of consideration are established to the satisfaction of the court, by the degree of proof required, and no fraud, overreaching or other inequitable circumstance of controlling effect is shown, the court will uphold the contract. In the very nature of things, therefore, each case must rest upon its own particular facts and circumstances.

However, the courts also recognize that such contracts are easily fabricated and hard to disprove. As noted in our own decisions, alleged oral contracts to devise property have become so frequent in recent years as to occasion alarm and cause courts to become very conservative, and even strict, with reference to the nature of evidence required to establish such contracts, which operate to the detriment and disinheriting of lawful heirs who would otherwise be entitled to the estate. Wall v. McEnnery’s Estate, 105 Wash. 445, 178 Pac. 631.

This court has, therefore, very definitely and firmly adopted the rule that an oral promise to make a will or an oral contract to devise or bequeath property must be established by evidence that is conclusive, definite, certain, and beyond all legitimate controversy. Alexander v. Lewes, 104 Wash. 32, 175 Pac. 572; Frederick v. Michaelson, 138 Wash. 55, 244 Pac. 119; Henry v. Henry, 138 Wash. 284, 244 Pac. 686; Lohse v. Spokane & Eastern Trust Co., 170 Wash. 46, 15 P. (2d) 271; Clark v. Crist, 178 Wash. 187, 34 P. (2d) 360. See, also, Lager v. Berggren, 187 Wash. 462, 60 P. (2d) 99.

With these rules to guide us, we proceed to a consideration of the evidence bearing upon the making of the contract.

Respondents could not, of course, testify on that sub *96 •ject because of the inhibition of Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1211 [P. C. § 7722]. They did, however, produce two witnesses who testified specifically and definitely thereon.

One of the witnesses testified as follows: On March 10,1935, Mr. Resor telephoned to him from the hospital at Portland, where Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 917, 193 Wash. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/resor-v-schaefer-wash-1937.