Westropp v. Westropp

7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 14
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 14 (Westropp v. Westropp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westropp v. Westropp, 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 14 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Marvin, J,

The -tase of Thomas P. Westropp against Patrick S. Westropp, as r&lmirústiator of the estate of Catherine Westropp, deceased, is brought dre upon a petition in error seeking to reverse the judgment of the omt of common pleas. The case was brought by Thomas P. Westropp in that court, by filing a petition which sets forth that something like eleven years before the death of Catherine Westropp, who was his mother, he put into her hands the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars ' d'zb. 'the agreement with her that she should make use of it, as she might need, during the period of her life, and that upon her death, it, or rich part of it as should remain unexpended, should be paid back to ?v ui; and the petition further alleges that the ent:...u amount wa. 1 it unex-pended at the death of his mother; that he filed hi: claim with th ..d.mir-istrator of her estate, and that the same was rejected, and so lie broug ‘t this-suit in the court of common pleas for judgment for the amount of said ilaim.

To his petition a demurrer was interposed, the ground of -which was II. t the promise winch was claimed to have been mad : by the .--other to return the property, was within the statute of frar.ds; that it was c, contract on ■ier part, no- to be performed within a year from the time It war made; and the court of common pleas sustained the demurrr., .neb .-.ith-out further pleading, judgment was entered for the defendara.

So the question her is whether or not the court, of common leas erred in sustaining the demurrer.

It is urged that the mother was likely to -live, in any event did ive, deven years after this money was put into her hands ; and it is urged to us that even if she died the next day, thr statute 1 ws the administrator eighteen months within which to pay ,-iiiy claii; owed by the deceased, and that, therefore, the contract could not be peiformed wkir.n a, -'ear: and to this we think it sufficient to say that, if by the ;erms of i,..e contract the performance was to be at such a time as to take the case out of the statute, the fact that the law allows eighteen, months to the administrator to pay the debts of the estate, this would not have the effect io bring it within the statute. It is further urged that without reference to [15]*15the provisions of law already mentioned, the case is still within the stab ute, and we are cited to a case in the 5th of Wallace, at page 580 — the case of Packett Co. v. Sickles, as sustaining the position of the defendant, that this contract was within the statute of frauds. That is a case where the owners of a steam packet undertook and agreed to pay a certain amount per year to the owner of a patent, for the use of a patented device for a period of twelve years, provided the boat upon which this device was to be used should so long last. And it is urged that there was a contract that might be fully performed within a year because the boat might not last a year, and if the boat should not last a year, the contract would be at an end; this contract was held to be within the statute. The proposition that this case is like the one at bar, and that reasons which apply to the one, also apply to the other, is not, we think, well taken.

An examination of the cases in whicn mis subject is treated, will show that there is a distinction made all the time between those cases where the contract is to run more than a year, or rather is not to be performed within a year but fixes the time within which the contract is to be performed, but liable to be terminated by a contingent event happening within a year, some of the cases of this kind are held to be within the statute of frauds, and that is the doctrine on which this case in the 5th of Wallace, to which I have referred, is held. Here is a contract for twelve years (that is the one I refer to in the 5th of Wallace); it was within the contemplation of the parties when they made the contract, that it was to continue for twelve years; it is liable it is true, upon a certain contingency to be terminated within a year. It was not a contract that could not be fully performed within a year though it might be terminated within that time. Hence this was held to be within the statute of frauds.

We are cited to Parsons on Contracts, vol. 8, chapter'5, star page 80, note g. That note is a very full one and has a large number of cases, and the distinction I have undertaken to intimate seems to run through all of them so far as I have examined them, and that is, where the contract is for a given period of time, more than ayear, anditsendingwithinthat time depends upon the happening of some contingent event. In most if not all of those cases, the contracts are held to be within the statute of frauds because the contract was to continue for more than a year; but in none of those cases, so far as I have found, is it held to be within the statute where the contract is to be terminated upon a contingency, where there is no time fixed for the contract to run, only that it is to end with the happening of some uncertain event which may happen within a year.

The opinion in the case of Blakency v. Doods, 30th O. S., page 350, cites a very large number of cases also cited in the note on Parsons on Contracts, to which attention has been called, and the fourth clause of the syllabus in that case reads :

“Although the parties may be longer than a year in the performance of the contract, still if that performance may be completed within a year and such performance is entirely within accordance with the intention and understanding of the parties, such contract is not within the statute and need not be in writing in order to maintain an action upon, it.”

A large number of authorities are cited in this case, and the whole •natter is gone over at great length in the case of Harris v. Porter, 2d Harrington, page 227, which is one of the cases cited in Parsons and which is cited here, and the court says : “There was a verbal contract [16]*16in this case to carry mails from '1832 to 1835 ; the plaintiff endeavored tc claim that the contrac* was not within the statute because it was within the power of the postmas"er to nut an end to it at any time.” The court say : “This was a contract which could not possibly be performed within one year. By its terms it was to continue four years, though it might be annulled by the oostmaster general within the year, still it falls within the class of cases as an agreement which, according to its terms, is not to be performed within a year.” Now we think that is like the case in the 5th of 'Wallace. It might be annulled within a year, but in order to be performed, it would take more than a year. The court in this same case, quoted from the opinion of a case in the 20th Maine, 'page 119. and quoting from the syllabus of that case says :

“To bring a case within the statute of frauds, it must have been expressly stipulated by the parties, or appear to have been clearly understood by them upon a reasonable construction of the contract, that the contract was not to be performed within a year.”

Then they cite this case in the 5th of Wallace, which I have already spoken of, following which this language is used bv Judge Wright in the opinion from which I am reading:

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