Todd v. Hyzer

18 So. 2d 888, 154 Fla. 702, 1944 Fla. LEXIS 799
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 14, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 888 (Todd v. Hyzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd v. Hyzer, 18 So. 2d 888, 154 Fla. 702, 1944 Fla. LEXIS 799 (Fla. 1944).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

Since 1938 appellants have occupied the lower of two apartments in a building owned until her death by Clara Zearing. The owner lived in the upper apartment. She had reached the age of 66 years and had been in ill health for a long time immediately preceding her death. She was fond of appellants’ children, often assisting them with their studies and showing them other considerations.

In December, 1940, about ten months before Mrs. Zear-ing’s decease, appellants’ status changed from lessees to owners by reason of a verbal agreement between her and them. For some time appellants had held the property under a lease, but they were contemplating the purchase of a lot and construction of their home. When deceased learned of their plans she importuned them to remain in her building and agreed that if they should comply with her reqúest, take care of her during her remaining years, keep up the house and grounds, and pay her $45 each month, the property should be theirs at her death. This, said four or five of her *704 acquaintances, who testified in appellants’ behalf, had been stated to them by the deceased.

In execution of this agreement appellants had the floors cleaned, the woodwork varnished, and Venetian blinds installed. They bought considerable furniture and also placed in the apartment other furniture which had been stored by them in a distant state. The cost of painting and cleaning was $102. Appellants also, between the time of the agreement and the death of Mrs. Zearing, showed her many courtesies, helped her with her automobile, took her to market, sent her occasional meals, kept her yard in repair, paid taxes for 1941, and fed her cat. The reference to the cat is not meant to be facetious because, as will be seen when we later refer to her will, she was inordinately fond of the animal. Upon the testimony just recounted appellants relied to substantiate the prayer of their bill that the executor of Clara Zearing’s estate be directed to convey to them the property in question. There is much, however, in the record to refute it.

It was testified by other of her acquaintances that the deceased disliked intensely one of the appellants and one of their children. It was said by some of them that other tenants were living in her own apartment with her and caring for her when she died and because of these services were charged no rent. It was stated that the deceased was quite able to drive her car, and actually did so the very day she died. One witness, who apparently had no interest whatever in the controversy, related a conversation held between her and one of the appellants at the funeral home immediately following Mrs. Zearing’s death. During the discussion a reference was made to an arrangement similar to the one claimed by appellants to have existed in their behalf, between Mrs. Zearing and some persons named Ward involving other property. (Incidentally, this matter is now being considered by this court in a companion case.) The witness and the appellant joined, so she said, in the hope that “everything was all fixed for them [the Wards],” and the appellant, Warren Todd, was quoted as remarking: “Mrs. Zearing made a proposition like this to me” but “We did not go through with the *705 contract.” The same witness testified that Mrs. Zearing had employed her own yard man, and further quoted Todd as saying that for the paint, or painting, which he did he was allowed credit on his rent. It was developed by the defendant in the trial that at one time shortly before her death Mrs. Zearing had shared her apartment with a lady in return for companionship, and that Mrs. Zearing had worried during the summer preceding her death- about the failure of the appellants to indicate an intention to renew their lease. In conversations with still other acquaintances she indicated her desires about disposing of her property, and these declarations corresponded with the provisions of the will which was eventually probated.

It was stipulated by counsel that taxes on the property for 1940 were paid by Mrs. Zearing. Evidently the taxes for the following year were paid by one of the appellants.

We turn to three instruments about which there is no dispute, namely, a memorandum Mrs. Zearing made 1 July 1940 to be consulted “in case of accident or death, or unconsciousness,” her will, and the lease to appellants. In the first she requested that in such an emergency some neighbor be asked to care for her cat and that eight stated persons be notified by telephone. She designated the place where she wished to be buried and named the undertakers in Miami and in Lexington, Kentucky, the burial place, whom she wished to have charge of her remains. She nominated an attorney in Miami and one in Kentucky to handle her affairs and a person in Kentucky to make arrangements for her funeral. It is noteworthy that the names of appellants did not appear, and in this connection it is important to state that in a conversation held with an attorney a few days before her death, relative to a proposed cocidil, she mentioned the Wards, to whom we have just referred, but not the appellants.

We will now recite the provisions of the will so far as they are pertinent to this controversy. Mrs. Zearing directed that her cat be placed in the care of a certain friend who should occupy free from rent one of her apartments situated in another part of Miami so long as the cat should live; also that one dollar a week should be paid out of her estate for the *706 upkeep of the feline. She made three bequests of $1,000 each, and directed that the residue of the estate be divided equally between the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Miami, Florida, and the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. Again there was no mention of the appellants.

Now for the lease. It was executed the first day of September, 1940, and was to continue one year, the lessees paying the sum of $540, $40 a month for the first six months and $50 for the second. This instrument had no unusual features except the provisions that exterior improvements were to be made by the owner, who should' also pay for the water unless the tenants became careless in leaving faucets open, and that plumbing and electrical equipment on the inside of the house were to be kept in repair by the tenants.

It is immediately apparent from a perusal of the transcript that there was sharp dispute about the facts essential to appellants’ recovery. They assumed the burden of proving their claim by evidence far more convincing than that revealed in this record, for as it was written in Myers v. Myers, 197 Iowa 1137, 198 N.W. 484, “It is well settled that to establish either a parol gift or contract of conveyance of land the one so claiming must establish the gift or contract by clear, unequivocal, and definite testimony, and that the acts claimed to be done thereunder should be equally clear and definite, and referable exclusively to the contract or gift.” Language very like this is found in the decision of this court in Wood v. Hammel, 132 Fla. 164, 181 So. 145, where Mr. Justice BROWN quoted Holsz v. Stephen, 362 Ill. 527, 200 N. E. 601, 106 A.L.R. 737: “ ‘Whether the specific performance of a contract will be granted depends in a large measure on the facts in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 888, 154 Fla. 702, 1944 Fla. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-hyzer-fla-1944.