Rue v. Meirs

43 N.J. Eq. 377
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 N.J. Eq. 377 (Rue v. Meirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rue v. Meirs, 43 N.J. Eq. 377 (N.J. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The complainant sues in a dual capacity, in her own right, as well as in that which she holds as the administratrix of her deceased brother, Nathaniel S. Rue, Jr. The foundation of her action is a contract made by her father, Robert 'C. Rue, with the defendants, John G. Meirs and Sarah E. Davis, and which was reduced to writing and signed by her father and the defendants, and which reads as follows:

[378]*378“This agreement, made the 27th of September, 1875, by and between Sarah E. Davis and John G. Meirs, of Cream Ridge, county of Monmouth, state of ifew Jersey, of the first part, and Robert C. Rue, of the same place, as the-representative of his children, L. M. Rue and N. S. Rue, Jr., of the second-part, witnesseth: in consideration of the covenants on the part of the party of the first part hereinafter contained, doth covenant and agree with the party of tlie second part, Robert C. Rue, that we, Sarah E. Davis and John G. Meirs, of the first- part, do agree to pay the sum of $4,000 to R. C. Rue, as the-representative of his children, L. M. Rue and N. S. Rue, Jr., provided R. C. Rue makes no objection to the proof of the will and the settlement of the estate of Lucretia S. Meirs, deceased, so far as said will has reference to said children.”

The complainant’s bill alleges, that this contract grew out of a threatened contest over a paper purporting to be the will of Lucretia S. Meirs, deceased. Mrs. Meirs was the mother of the-defendants, and the grandmother of the complainant and her brother, the complainant and her brother being the children of a deceased daughter of Mrs. Meirs. Mrs. Meirs died on the 9th of September, 1875. By her ivill she made an unequal distribution of her property, giving the defendants much more than two-thirds. The complainant and her brother were-both infants at the time of their grandmother’s death. Their father was present at the reading of her will, and, immediately after he knew its contents, expressed his dissatisfaction with its provisions, and protested against its admission to probate. The bill says, that the defendants, recognizing the unequal distribution which the testatrix had made of her property, and the grounds which existed for contesting her will, they, to induce Robert C. Rue to forbear from contesting the will on behalf of his children, made the promise contained in the contract. The bill further says, that the will of Mrs. Meirs was, three days after the contract was signed, admitted to probate, without contest, and that since then her estate has been settled, and her property distributed in accordance with the terms of her will, without objection on the part of Robert C. Rue, or his children,, but with their acquiescence. But the $4,000 have not been paid, and this action is brought to compel payment.

The defendant Meirs demurs. He disputes the validity of the contract. He says that he and his sister got nothing for their [379]*379promise to pay the $4,000. This contention attempts, as it seems to me, to deny what is manifestly undeniable. The right of Robert C. Rue to file a caveat, as the next friend of his children, against the probate of Mrs. Meirs’s will, stands, I think, free from the least doubt. While an infant is incapable of maintaining a suit or other legal proceeding in his own name, for the protection of his rights, there can be no doubt, that he is entitled to the benefit of every remedy recognized by our system of jurisprudence, and to which an adult of full capacity may resort, the only difference being, that an infant must proceed in the name of an adult as his next friend, while an adult may proceed in his own name. And this is so because an infant, by reason of the immaturity of his mind, is incapable of judging when and under what circumstances he should seek judicial protection or redress, and the courts have, therefore, adopted, as a rule of practice, for the protection of infants, as well as themselves, that no suit or proceeding in behalf of an infant shall be entertained, unless instituted by a person competent to judge whether such step is necessary or proper for the due protection of the infant’s rights. While any person of full .age and sound mind is competent to become the next friend of an infant, his nearest relative is usually preferred. A father, being the natural guardian of his infant child, has a vested right, as it has been called, to act as the next friend of his child in a litigation involving the child’s rights, if the father’s interests are not hostile to those of his child, and he has been guilty of no default or neglect.. This right is regarded as so superior by the English courts, that it has been declared, that the father has a right, even where another person has instituted a suit in behalf of his infant child, and prosecuted it to decree, to have such other person displaced, after decree pronounced, and himself substituted as next friend. Woolf v. Pemberton, L. R. (6 Ch. Div.) 19. It would seem' then to be entirely clear, that the defendants, by removing the opposition which Robert C. Rue intended to make, on behalf of his children, to the probate of the will, and which he had an unquestionable right to make, relieved themselves from the only substantial danger which existed, and that instead of its being true, that they got nothing for their promise to pay $4,000, it is a [380]*380fact, standing free from all dispute, that they have received •everything which the contract stipulated that they should receive. The thing that the defendants were bargaining for, was, that the paper which their mother left, as the testamentary disposition of her property, should be proved as her will, without objection, ■and that their mother’s property should be divided and distributed as her will directed. The will was proved without objection, and the property has been divided and distributed as the ■will directed. The contract, therefore, so far as the defendants were entitled to anything under it, has been fully performed.

The question, whether a promise to forbear suit to enforce a disputed claim or right, where the claim or right is honestly asserted under a belief that it is substantial, although it is in fact wholly unfounded, is sufficient, as a consideration, to support a promise to pay money, has recently been put at rest in this state by a decision of the supreme court. That court said in Grandin v. Grandin, 20 Vr. 508: “ The compromise of a disputed claim, made bona fide, is a good consideration for a promise, whether the claim be in suit, or litigation has not been actually commenced, even though it should ultimately appear that the claim was wholly unfounded — the detriment to the party consenting to a compromise, arising from the alteration in his position, forms the real consideration which gives validity to the promise. The only elements necessary to a valid agreement of compromise are the reality of the claim made, and the bona fides of the compromise.” And what I understand is meant by the phrase, “ the reality of the claim made,” is that the claimant shall assert his claim in good faith, believing that it is real, or, in the language of Lord Justice Cotton, in Miles v. New Zealand Alford Estate Company, L. R. (32 Ch. Div.) 266, “a claim is honest if the claimant does not know that his claim is unsubstantial, or if he does not know the facts which show that his claim is a bad one.”

The court, in deciding Grandin v. Grandin, adopted the principle established by the court of Queen’s Bench, in Cook v. Wright, 1 B. & S. 559.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.J. Eq. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rue-v-meirs-njch-1887.