Sparne v. Altshuler

90 A.2d 919, 80 R.I. 96, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 12, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 919 (Sparne v. Altshuler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sparne v. Altshuler, 90 A.2d 919, 80 R.I. 96, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 13 (R.I. 1952).

Opinions

[97]*97O’Connell, J.

This cause is before us on complainant’s appeal from a final decree of the superior court, denying and dismissing the bill of complaint and granting affirmative relief to respondents Louis I. Altshuler and his son Milton 5. Altshuler, copartners doing business under the name of Altshuler Genealogical Service.

The bill of complaint seeks primarily the cancellation of two agreements dated- September 24, 1948 between complainant and respondents Altshuler and a declaration by the court that said agreements are null and void.

The first agreement reads as follows:

“Whereas, the Altshuler Genealogical Service of Boston, Massachusetts, a copartnership, has certain information concerning a possible inheritance, of which I had nor have any knowledge, and
Whereas, the Atlshuler Genealogical Service has [98]*98spent time and money in tracing the genealogy of my family, and
Whereas, additional services have to be rendered in the preparation of charts, the obtaining of vital records, and other data;
Now Therefore, the Altshuler Genealogical Service of Boston agrees to disclose to me information concerning an Estate from which I may share a possible inheritance. For the disclosure of such information to me and for any further services rendered to me by the Altshuler Genealogical Service of a genealogical nature in order to establish my inheritance, I hereby agree to compensate the Altshuler Genealogical Service in an amount equivalent to one-third of whatever proceeds I may receive from said estate by way of distribution as an heir-at-law.
Witness my hand and seal this Twenty fourth day of September 1948
(signed) Harry W. Morse (signed) Maud E. Sparne Witness Seal”

The second agreement reads:

“I hereby acknowledge that subsequent to the execution of the contract by me, dated Sept 24, 1948 the Altshuler Genealogical Service disclosed to me that the estate from which I may receive a possible inheritance as an heir-at-law, of Mabel Walker of Providence County Providence State of Rhode Island With full information concerning the source of the inheritance, I now ratify and confirm the aforementioned contract in every respect.
Witness my hand and seal this Twenty fourth day of September 1948
(signed) Harry W. Morse (signed) Maud E. Sparne Witness Seal”

The principal grounds relied upon for the cancellation of these agreements are that they are without consideration; that they are against public policy; that they were signed under a mutual mistake of fact; and that they were procured by unconscionable conduct on the part of the respondents.

Service was duly made upon all respondents and each filed [99]*99an answer to the bill. The complainant filed a replication to the answers and the cause was then heard on such pleadings and proof thereunder. The justice who heard the testimony died before he could render his decision, and a stipulation was entered into by the parties to the effect that the cause could be assigned to another justice of the superior court for his decision on the basis of the transcript, exhibits and arguments of counsel without further testimony or evidence, such decision by the successor justice to have the same effect, insofar as allowed by law, as though rendered by the justice who heard the cause originally. Pursuant to the terms of said stipulation and the order based thereon, the cause was referred to another justice of the superior court who, on February 19, 1952, entered the decree appealed from.

It appears from the transcript of testimony that the complainant is a widow about seventy-five years of age. In September 1948 she was living alone and in reduced circumstances in her own home in Longmeadow, Massachusetts. She was dependent mainly on the bounty of the town. Her husband had been dead for many years and she rarely visited or heard from whatever relatives she had.

The Altshulers are self-styled investigators and genealogists who are engaged in tracing and locating missing heirs. Their practice is to periodically examine the probate records of New England cities and if they find a sizable estate in which it appears that there may be potentially missing heirs or heirs whose residence is unknown, they begin an examination of pertinent records. When they succeed in locating a person whom they believe to be entitled to a share in such estate they approach him or her with a proposal to exchange their information for a share in the expected estate.

About the middle of July 1948 the son, Milton S. Altshuler, and his brother-in-law Harry W. Morse, then an employee of the Altshuler Genealogical Service and now a copartner therein, were in Providence examining the records [100]*100of the probate court. During such examination they came upon a petition for administration of the estate of Mabel Walker of Providence, which had been filed on June 15, 1948. It appeared therefrom that she had died on March 24, 1948, leaving personal estate estimated at $40,000 and naming two cousins as the only known and listed heirs at law. It did not appear whether such cousins were on the maternal or paternal side.

Sensing that there might be other heirs of the deceased, the younger Altshuler and Morse, upon the advice of respondent Louis I. Altshuler, made an intensive and exhaustive search of cemeteries, libraries, historical societies, probate courts, city and county registries of deeds, births, marriages and deaths in Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. The completed search finally took them to Maine and New Hampshire and also led them to make inquiries in the city of Washington, D. C. Their investigation was ultimately so successful that they were able as witnesses to establish the fact that complainant was a lawful heir of Mabel Walker.

As a result of their preliminary search respondents, about September 17, 1948, became conclusively convinced that complainant was an heir of Mabel Walker and entitled to a share in her estate. On September 24 respondent Louis I. Altshuler, accompanied by his son-in-law Harry W. Morse, visited complainant at her home in Longmeadow. As a result of such visit and the interview which ensued, complainant signed the two agreements which she’ now seeks to have cancelled.

The complainant’s testimony and that of respondents Altshuler is somewhat conflicting. The former testified she had last seen Mabel Walker when the latter was ten or twelve years old; that Mr. Altshuler told her “there was some money that I would get or that- he could have for me, he could get for me”; that he was a genealogist and that “when he found it all, why he took it to the people who he had in mind * * that “he was going to get it” [101]*101but “He didn’t say that, but I took it as that, that that was his business”; that he left with her a copy of the ratification agreement; and that she signed only one paper.

On cross-examination she admitted that she signed both agreements; that before she signed Mr.

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Sparne v. Altshuler
90 A.2d 919 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 919, 80 R.I. 96, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparne-v-altshuler-ri-1952.