Ross v. Harden

12 Jones & S. 26
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedApril 1, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Jones & S. 26 (Ross v. Harden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Harden, 12 Jones & S. 26 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

By the Court.—Sanford, J.

The complaint alleges that the services of the plaintiff, for which he seeks compensation, were rendered in and about the custody and preservation of the estate of defendants’ intestate, after his decease, but at his request as well as at theirs ; and that they, in their capacity of administrator and administratrix, promised to pay him therefor. If such services were rendered at the request of the defendants, and not at that of their intestate, the action should have been brought against them in their individual, and not in their representative capacity. For, as was well observed by Freedman, J., when this case was formerly before the court, contracts of executors and administrators, although made in the interest and for the benefit of the estate they represent, if made upon a new and independent consideration, moving between their promisee and themselves, are their personal contracts and do not bind the estate (citing Austin v. Munro, 47 N. Y. 360; Ferrin v. Myrick, 41 Id. 315; Cary v. Gregory, 38 N. Y. Superior Ct. 127).

If, however, a valid contract was, in fact, made with the plaintiff by the deceased, the action may be maintained in its present form, and it may be averred in one count or statement of the cause of action, that both the intestate and his personal representatives promised to pay (Benjamin v. Taylor, 12 Barb. 328). There is, [29]*29however, no authority for joining a cause of action founded upon the contract of an intestate with one founded upon the contract of his personal representatives. In the case last cited, but one contract was set forth, and that was with the testator. No contract with the executor was alleged. Here the averment is that plaintiff’s services were performed at the request both of the intestate and of the defendants, and that both promised to pay for them. There was, therefore, a misjoinder of alleged causes of action, assuming that a cause of action founded upon a valid contract of the intestate is sufficiently set forth.

At the trial no evidence was offered tending to show either a request or promise, made by or on behalf of the defendants or either of them ; and the plaintiff relied solely on the promise, which he claimed as an implication of law, that the defendants would pay for services rendered their intestate’s estate after his decease, upon his request made in his lifetime.

The recovery, therefore, is to be sustained, -if at all, upon the theory, that one may bind his legal representatives for a consideration not1 moving to himself, but to them, and, by a contract, which in its nature and by its terms, is not susceptible of performance by, or of enforcement against, himself; and upon the further theory, that one may delegate to a person or persons, other than those whom the law designates for that purpose, the care, custody and safe keeping of his property after death, not by last will and testament, executed in the manner and with the solemnities prescribed by law, but informally and by mere word of mouth.

The general principle, doubtless, is that for any cause of action arising upon a contract valid in its inception as against the contractor, suit may be maintained against his executor or administrator, irrespective of the question whether such cause of action [30]*30actually accrued and became susceptible of enforcement in his lifetime, or not until after his decease.

But contracts may be made upon which no cause of action can arise against the personal representatives of the contractor after his decease. As, for instance, where the contract is purely personal to the deceased, and can, of necessity, be performed according to the intentions of the parties by no one else. The case of an author, who undertakes to write a specified literary work ; or of a musical composer, who agrees to compose an opera or oratorio ; or of an artist, who promises to paint a portrait, affords an apt and pertinent illustration. In each of these cases the undertaking is personal to the contractor, and can be performed, within the intent of the parties, by no one else. The legal maxim “ actio personalis moritur cum persona” is in such case to be invoked and applied. But, in any case, a contract must be valid as between the parties to it, and must be supported by a good and sufficient consideration, as between them, in order to be sustained and to be susceptible of enforcement between their legal representatives, or between either of them, and the' legal representatives of the other, as no contract can bind the legal representatives of a deceased person, which is not valid and binding upon himself. A contract founded upon an illegal consideration, or supported by no consideration whatever, would bind neither the parties to it nor their legal representatives.

So, if a contract be void as against good morals, or as in conflict with the established policy of law, it can be enforced by neither of the parties to it; and their respective executors or administrators acquire no rights- and incur no liabilities under or by value of it. I am of opinion, that a contract such as is alleged in the complaint as having been made between the plaintiff and defendant’s intestate is void, as between the parties to it, for want of consideration and mutuality; [31]*31and also as conflicting with the settled policy of the law which governs and controls the transmission and devolution of the estates of deceased persons, and the custody and control of such estates upon and after the decease of their original owners. The power of directing, within certain limits, what disposition shall be made of his property after his decease, is accorded by the sovereign power, the people, to every person of suitable age and of sound mind and memory (2 R. S. 60). But that power must be exercised by will, in writing, and not otherwise, excepting in the case of Soldiers in actual military service, and mariners at sea. And every last will and testament must be executed and attested as the law prescribes, or it will have no force or validity whatsoever. According to the older authorities of the ecclesiastical law, the appointment of an executor was essential to a testament, and was said to be its substance, head, true formal cause, and very foundation (Williams on Executors, * 7). Indeed, the common law judges laid down the rule, in Woodward v. Lord Darcy (Plowd. 185), that “without an executor a will is null and void.”

That rule was long since abrogated, and a will may now appropriate the testator’s estate, and apportion it among the objects of his bounty, without specifying the particular individual who shall assume the duty of executing it. On the other hand, the mere nomination of an executor, without legacy or bequest, or direction as to which disposition he shall make of the estate, is sufficient to constitute a will, and, as a will, such nomination must be probated (Williams on Executors,* 124). But in all cases where the custodian of the estate is not nominated by will, the law reserves to itself the right and power of appointment, and charges any one who intermeddles with the goods of the deceased as for a trespass or tortious act, committed in his own wrong. Such intermeddlers or intruders [32]*32were formerly known and dealt with, as executors de son tort; but that office or function is now abolished in this State, by statute.

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Related

Austin v. . Munro
47 N.Y. 360 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Jones & S. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-harden-nysuperctnyc-1878.