Swan v. Shahan

1 Ohio C.C. 216
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio C.C. 216 (Swan v. Shahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swan v. Shahan, 1 Ohio C.C. 216 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Albaugh, J.

The most important question presented for our consideration is raised by the demurrer to the second defense, and if we are right in the conclusion we have reached as to that, the other questions are not of difficult solution. The able arguments of counsel on both sides, have not been strictly confined to the questions presented by the several demurrers; but it has also been claimed and elaborately argued, that the contract upon which this action is based, is void for the want of mutuality, and for inadequacy of consideration. The validity of the contract in these respects must necessarily be determined in the discussion of the question made by the demurrer to the second defense, because if it is void for the want of either of these elements, there would be nothing upon which the relief invoked could be predicated. In considering the sufficiency of this defense, we must assume that' all tire allegations of the petition are true.

For the purpose, then, of understanding the nature and extent of the contract claimed,and of determining the rights of the parties under it, we must look to all its terms, the position and surroundings of the parties at the time it was made, and [221]*221the subject matter therein contained, as well as the legal requirements that are essential to its validity. The motive that actuated the mother of the plaintiff to enter into this agreement, is easily understood; she was charged with the duty of the care, custody and control of the plaintiff, then an infant, as its mother, and had, we assume, the natural parental love and affection for her child; and while she was transferring that care and responsibility to Woodbridge and wife, and thereby freeing herself from that duty, she was, at the same time, transferring to them the affections of her child, and rehouneing and relinquishing that tender love and care that mothers have for their offspring, as well as securing the advantages to it that persons in affluent circumstances would guarantee. On the other hand, it'appears from the petition, that the Wood-bridges were childless, and that they never expected children to be born to them ; their conduct toward the plaintiff immediately after receiving her and during the life time of Wood-bridge, is sufficient to warrant the conclusion that their object .and desire was to procure for themselves that happiness in their declining years, that the affections of a child taken in its infancy, in ignorance of its true parentage, could be trained to bestow upon them as its supposed parents, and upon whom they could bestow their favors and affections.

We are unable to believe as is claimed by counsel for the ■defendant, that it was an act of charity, or intended to be such on the part of Woodbridge and wife; all their conduct repels such an idea. It was stipulated that the plaintiff should not be permitted to know her true ancestry; that she should be taught to believe that she was their child, and with that view 4 it was agreed that the mother, upon her visits to the plaintiff, should refrain from the natural exhibition of the feeling of a mother for her child, and from making herself known to it. Its name was changed to “Woodbridge,” and an entry made in the family record of the name and date of birth, and in this .she was called the daughter, and so recorded, of Woodbridge and wife, so that upon examination of this agreement, we must conclude that the.advantages derived from the transaction to the parties were reciprocal. The plaintiff’s mother made a beneficial arrangement for her child, and the affec[222]*222tions of Woodbridge and wife were satisfied by the adoption of a daughter.

In the case of Van Dyne v. Vreeland, 11 N. J. Eq., 381, the contract upon which relief was sought was almost identical with the contract claimed in this case. The court say in that case: “ There is no consideration of-public policy which should forbid the court countenancing such an agreement; considering the situation of the parties and their circumstances in life, it was beneficial to all parties, and cannot be considered as injudicious or unreasonable.”

In Smith v. Hogden, 62 Mo., 114, the court say: “ There are things which money cannot buy; a thousand nameless and delicate services and attentioris incapable of being the subject of explicit contract, which money, with all its peculiar potency, is powerless to purchase. The law provides no standard whereby the value of such services can be estimated, and equity can only make an approximation-in that direction by decreeing specific execution of the contract. The reasoning and authorities would seem a sufficient answer as to any lack of mutuality in the contract under consideration; but after a contract has been fully performed and acquiesced in, as in the present instance; after a contracting party has received all the anticipated benefits arising from a faithful performance, it must be apparent that it would be altogether inequitable to permit such party at this late period, when the law can afford no adequate redress, to raise objections on the score of mutuality.”

But it is claimed that the contract is for the transfer of real estate, and not in writing, and, therefore, within the statute of frauds. This would be a complete defense to the action, unless’there has been such part-performance on the part of the plaintiff and her mother, as would take the case out of the statute. The facts as disclosed by the petition, show that the mother left nothing undone that she agreed to do, and that the agreement upon her part was fully and completely performed according to its terms. The plaintiff was placed in the care, custody and control of Woodbridge and wife, and remained there during all the time until her marriage; and it is not claimed that she in any way failed on her part to so con[223]*223duct herself as to be wholly consistent with the duties and obligations of a daughter, and that her marriage was even such as to invoke the sanction and approbation of her adopted parents. She was brought up from her childhood in ignorance of her true mother, and with the full understanding and belief that she was their daughter, and there is no act of misconduct complained of, either in the failure to render services, or in disobedience; but on the contrary, it appears to us that in all things there has been complete realization of all the anticipated benefits, derived from the contract to Woodbridge and wife.

Upon what principle, then, can they be excused from the performance of the contract upon their part ? The theory upon which equity proceeds in administering its specific remedy in such cases is, that one party having promised another to treat the agreement as binding, and to dq, positive acts based upon such presumption, it would be a fraud on him to repudiate his undertaking and set up the statute as an obstacle in the way of its completion. The doctrine is most frequently applied to contracts for the sale of land which have been partly performed by the purchaser, but is not confined to these; it is extended to those contracts concerning things personal or things in action, which the statute of frauds requires to be in writing,..but which, when verbal, are in their nature, capable of part-performance. “ Payment of the purchase money alone in contracts for the sale of real estate, made in whatever manner, will not ordinarily take the agreement out of the'operation of the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio C.C. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swan-v-shahan-ohiocirct-1885.