Taylor v. Staples, Trustees

8 R.I. 170
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 6, 1865
StatusPublished

This text of 8 R.I. 170 (Taylor v. Staples, Trustees) 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
Taylor v. Staples, Trustees, 8 R.I. 170 (R.I. 1865).

Opinion

Dureee, J.

This bill is brought by the representatives and devisees of the late William Bradford D’Wolf, against the trustees of the residuary estate of the late James DWolf, the father of said William Bradford, and against the administrator, with the will annexed, on the estate of said James D’Wolf. It prays that the defendant trustees may be decreed to release and quitclaim to the complainant devisees a certain lot of land, with the house and improvements thereon, situate in Bristol and described in the bill; and also to pay to the other complainants the sum *174 of one thousand dollars, with interest from October, in 1837, or, in the alternative that this decree is refused, to pay over to the complainants, last named, the sum of five thousand dollars, with interest from October, in 1837. One of the grounds,- — and the chief ground on which the complainants claim the relief prayed for, — is two entries made in the ledger of said James D’Wolf, in his account with said William Bradford, and in his own handwriting. One of these two entries, which is on the debit side of the account, under date of October 19th, 1837, is as follows, to wit: — “To house and lot per deed, with cost of stable, &c., $4,000.00; ” the other, which is on the credit side, under date of May 30th, 1837, is as follows, to wit: — “ By farther allowance, - to pay for house, &c., $5,000.00.” The account consists of many other items, some preceding and some following these two entries, all of which are in-the hand-writing of Byron Diman, who was the confidential clerk of James D’Wolf, and who testifies that the two entries not in his hand-writing were made by James' D’Wolf, both at the same time, and some time in the latter part of October, 1837, though he cannot state the precise day. He also testifies that the house and lot designated in the entry on the debit side of the account, was the house and lot described in the bill, and that it was then occupied by William Bradford D’Wolf. The complainants have also put in testimony going to show that William Bradford continued in the occupation thereof till the death of his father, in December, 1837, when he removed to the homestead, so called; and that, afterwards, during some years at least, he let the house and lot and collected the rents, and was at the expense of keeping the same in repair. And from these facts, taken in connection with the entries, they infer an agreement, on the part of James D’Wolf with William Bradford D’Wolf, to convey to the latter the house and lot in question, and contend that this agreement, having been partly performed by the possession allowed to William Bradford of said house and lot, and by his reparation thereof, is of such a character that, though not wholly in writing, it can be and ought to be specifically enforced.

The complainants, to further strengthen their case, show that *175 William Bradford was the youngest of four sons who survived their father; and they allege, and appeal to the ledger of James D’Wolf to prove, that his gifts and allowances to Ms other sons were much larger in amount than the sums allowed to William Bradford; and, also, they allege that it was the intent of James DWolf, in consideration of his gifts and allowances to the other sons, to have conveyed to William Bradford the house and lot in question, — the gifts- and allowances to each son being made with reference to, and in consideration of, the gifts and allowances made to the other sons, — and that the deed was never executed, through mistake or forgetfulness. This allegation is not admitted by the answer, and is supported by little except its intrinsic probability.

Can we, on the case thus made, grant the complainants the relief they seek ? Can we compel the defendants to convey to them the house and lot debited to William Bradford? The defendants say, there is no consideration for such a conveyance, and that, therefore, we cannot compel it. The complainants answer, that the possession and reparation of the house and lot by William Bradford is a sufficient consideration. Is the answer correct? Since the death of James DWolf, William Bradford has been in possession of the house and lot only as landlord, enjoying the rents and profits, and does not appear to have laid out in repairs on them more than enough to keep them in a condition to yield rents and profits. His relation to the house and lot has, apparently, been no detriment to him and no benefit to the estate of James DWolf, and it does not, therefore, present the usual characteristics of a valuable consideration. Furthermore, there is no evidence that William Bradford ever came under any obligation to his father to continue to retain and repair the house and lot, if his father would convey them to him, or that his doing so was not purely a matter of choice. But of course a consideration — if such it may be called — which is to follow an agreement, and which it is optional with the party to be benefitted by tbe agreement to furnish or not, is not a consideration in any legal sense of the term. And, indeed, the idea that there was to be any consideration for the house and lot does *176 not appear to have entered the minds of either father or son. On the contrary, so far as William Bradford is concerned, his own son, — whose deposition the complainants have put into the case, — testifies that he has “ often heard him (William Bradford) say that his father (James D’Wolf) gave him the house and lot.” We think this statement was correct, except that William Bradford denominated that a gift which, though promised or intended, was never effectuated as such. We are of the opinion that James D’Wolf, when he made the entries in his ledger, meant to give, by deed, to William Bradford the house and lot debited to him, and that he subsequently omitted, — probably through forgetfulness, — to carry his intention into effect.

Can we supply the omission ? There can be no doubt that, as a general rule, a court of equity will not enforce a voluntary agreement, or perfect a merely promised or imperfect gift. “There is no case,” says Sir William Grant, M. E., in Antrobus v. Smith, 12 Vesey, Jr. 39, “ in which a party has been compelled to perfect a gift which, in the mode of making it, he has left imperfect. There is locus poenitentice as long as it is incomplete.” This doctrine is recognized and applied in numerous cases, some of which present full as. strong claims for relief as this does, and that too without the delay in prosecuting them which is so marked a feature of this. Tate v. Hibbert, 2 Vesey, Jr. 112; Ward v. Turner, 2 Vesey, Sen. 431; Pennington v. Gittings, 2 Gill & Johns. R. 208; Thompson v. Dorsey, 4 Md. Ch. Dec. 149; Hitch v. Davis, 3 Ib. 266; Edwards v. Jones, 1 My. & Cr. 226; Dillon v. Coppin, 4 Ib. 647 ; Meek v. Kettlewell, 1 Hare, 464. The rule has, indeed, been qualified in some cases in order to give effect to a voluntary assignment of a chose in action or an equitable estate, where the assignor had done all he could to divest himself of the property; but even in these cases the rule is admitted to hold good where there is no obstacle to the direct transfer of the legal title. Kekewick

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Bluebook (online)
8 R.I. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-staples-trustees-ri-1865.