Schempp v. Beardsley

75 A. 141, 83 Conn. 34
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 75 A. 141 (Schempp v. Beardsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schempp v. Beardsley, 75 A. 141, 83 Conn. 34 (Colo. 1910).

Opinion

Baldwin, C. J.

In 1885 Agnes Coffey, a single woman of sixty-five, who had not heard from any of her relatives for *36 thirty years and did not know that any of them were still alive, orally agreed with Adam Schempp and his wife that if they would live with her in a house which she was ready to buy for that purpose, and there support her properly as long as she should live, she would give them all her property when she died. She bought a house, a few weeks later, and they, relying on the agreement, moved into it, and supported her there properly as long as she lived. A few years after the purchase she had their oral agreement put in writing, signed it, and had Adam Schempp sign it; telling him that the effect of this paper would be to give him and his wife all her property upon her death. After her death, fragments of this paper were found in her room, but not enough to form a memorandum in writing which would avoid the effect of the statute of frauds. She died March 19th, 1907, leaving a will executed in 1906 and a codicil executed in 1907, which gave all her property to certain relatives. The existence of such a will she fraudulently concealed from the Schempps, and they first learned of it after her death. The value of the support which they furnished her was $12,500. So much of it as was rendered during the last six years of her life was of the value of $8,200. They put in a claim against her estate for $17,000, for services rendered her from 1885 to 1907 upon her express agreement to leave them all her property, estimated by them as being worth that sum. Demurrers, to the statement of claim and afterward to the answer were filed and overruled, and the case heard on issues of fact. One of these issues was as to the truth of the averment that so much of the cause of action as was alleged to have arisen prior to March 19th, 1901, did not accrue within six years next before the death of Agnes Coffey and the presentation of the claim to the executor of her will.

The Superior Court ruled that the agreement under which the Schempps claimed was within the statute of frauds and absolutely void; that if any recovery could be had, it must *37 be upon a quantum meruit only; and that, on the latter basis, they could recover for all the support furnished since 1885.

Of the three reasons of appeal that merit discussion, one is that the trial judge was bound, on the question of the statute of limitations, to follow a decision previously made by another judge in disposing of a demurrer. The law is otherwise. Wiggin v. Federal Slock & Grain Co., 77 Conn. 507, 516, 59 Atl. 607.

Another reason of appeal is the allowance of the claim for services performed more than six years prior to the death of Miss Coffey.

Her contract being in part for the conveyance of real estate, the plaintiffs can support no action upon it. It was not, however, a mere nullity. While the Superior Court has found that it was void, we understand this to be simply a mode of stating that it was within the statute of frauds. Such an agreement may be available for some purposes as a factor in constituting a defense. It may also, under certain circumstances, avail to avoid a defense. Such circumstances are presented in the case at bar.

If the plaintiffs had sued Miss Coffey, during her lifetime, for the reasonable value of support furnished her, she could have set up the oral agreement in defense, to show that it had been furnished under a special contract which fixed a precise compensation, and postponed payment until her decease. Clark v. Terry, 25 Conn. 395, 401.

The law calls on no one to perform a nugatory act. As such a suit could not be maintained, to bring it would have been useless. The statute of limitations assumes the existence of a cause of action and also of what, were it not for the statutory prohibition, would be a right of action. The oral agreement between Miss Coffey and the Schempps purported to give them what would constitute, on due performance of their part of it, a cause of action against her personal representatives for damages, should it be found, *38 upon her death, that she had not done what she, on her part, had agreed to do. So long as she lived, in the absence of repudiation by her, the plaintiffs could not have sued upon the contract, for there would have been no breach; nor for the reasonable value of the support which they had furnished, because that was, by the contract, to be paid for, not by payment of what it was worth, but by a transfer of what she might be worth at her decease, whether more or less than such reasonable value.

The contract never was repudiated by Miss Coffey during her lifetime. It could not be, so as to affect their rights, without notice of such repudiation to the Schempps. The execution of her will in favor of others she never made known to them; nor would its execution have prevented her from subsequently doing what her agreement with them required.

No right of action, therefore, of any kind, by the Schempps against Miss Coffey, existed during her lifetime. Upon her death a right of action arose, not for damages measured by the value of the estate which she had left, because no action on the special contract could be maintained, but for damages measured by the value of the support furnished. As a foundation for recovering these latter damages, the special contract was material, because it showed that the support was furnished under circumstances which excluded the supposition that either party regarded it as gratuitous. Grant v. Grant, 63 Conn. 530, 542, 29 Atl. 15; Hull v. Thoms, 82 Conn. 647, 74 Atl. 925. It furnished also a sufficient answer to the defense of the statute of limitations, by showing that no action brought earlier could have been maintained. That being so, the right of action did not accrue, either in whole or part, more than six years before Miss Coffey’s death, and the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the whole value of the whole support furnished, provided they had made due claim for it.

The remaining reason of appeal is sufficient. It is, that *39 more was recovered than was demanded. The statement of claim, as amended, was as follows:—

To services rendex’ed and materials furnished
From September 1st, 1885, to September 1st, 1890, inclusive, at $700 a year,.......$3,500
From September 1st, 1890, to September 1st, 1897, inclusive, at $750 a year,....... 5,250
From September 1st, 1897, to September 1st, 1902, inclusive, at $900 a year,....... 4,500
Fi’om September 1st, 1902, to September 1st, 1905, ixxclusive, at $1,000 a yeax*,...... 3,000
From September 1st, 1905, to September 1st, 1906, inclusive,............ 1,100
From September 1st, 1906, to Mai’ch 19th, 1907, at $100 a month, ........'. . 660
Total,...........$18,010

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Bluebook (online)
75 A. 141, 83 Conn. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schempp-v-beardsley-conn-1910.