Court Opinion

ID: 3629990
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:09:46.292833+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:07:40.016588
License: Public Domain

This case adds another to the long list in which appeals to the Court of Appeals were ineffectual because the Appellate Division reversed the judgment of the Trial Term both on the facts and the law. We have frequently held, but it does not seem to be well understood, that there may be a question of fact when all the witnesses are worthy of belief and no witness contradicts another. Diverse inferences may be drawn from the narrative of a truthful witness and when the narration is of oral admissions made some time before and although the precise words are important there is no circumstance to impress them particularly on the memory, it is seldom that a question of fact is not presented as to whether the essential fact is fully proved. Aside from the danger of fabrication, verbal admissions are regarded as unreliable evidence, *Page 81 
because experience shows that they are frequently misunderstood, imperfectly remembered and inadvertently made.
The alleged contract in this action was of a class, posthumous in effect and regarded with anxiety by the courts, that can be established only by clear, credible and satisfactory evidence. (Hamlin v. Stevens, 177 N.Y. 39.) As found by the trial court, it was a verbal contract made by the defendant's testatrix to "make such provision that upon her death" property said to be worth nearly half a million of dollars "owned by her should belong to and become the property of the plaintiff." There was no writing of any kind to support the contract. No witness was called who was present when it is alleged to have been made and the only evidence to establish it was given by two witnesses, doubtless disinterested, who testified to admissions made by the decedent in casual conversations with them more than two years before. She made two wills afterward and in each ignored the plaintiff's claim, yet it is conceded that she was a woman of high character. At her funeral, and before he knew the contents of her will, the plaintiff began to negotiate with her executor for the purchase of the very property that he now claims by virtue of said contract. He did not disclose his claim to the executor until this action was commenced. The most vital evidence of the most important witness for the plaintiff was given by him under circumstances which made it look like an afterthought. The conversations in which the admissions are alleged to have been made were desultory in character and consistent with an agreement, or with the declaration of an intent to do something without promising to do it. There was nothing to particularly impress them upon the memory of the witnesses and there were inconsistencies which, although not grave, bore on the accuracy of their recollection. They did not profess to give the words used by the decedent, and as was well said by the Appellate Division, "How much is inference and how much recollection, neither we nor the witnesses can tell." The opportunity for misunderstanding *Page 82 
and misrecollecting what the decedent said is quite apparent from the evidence, and as the highest Federal court once declared: "Courts of justice lend a very unwilling ear to statements of what dead men had said." (Lea v. Polk Co. Copper Co., 21 How. [U.S.] 493, 504.)
These circumstances and others which are set forth much more fully by the Appellate Division, make it obvious, as we think, that there was a question of fact whether the contract was made as alleged or not. "When facts proved without dispute require the exercise of reason and judgment, so that one reasonable mind may infer that a controlling fact exists and another that it does not exist, there is a question of fact." (Hirsch v. Jones,191 N.Y. 195, 198; Matter of Totten, 179 N.Y. 112, 116.)
Upon the argument before us the learned counsel for the plaintiff was informed by the chief judge that if there was a question of fact in the case, absolute judgment would doubtless be rendered against the appellant upon his stipulation, still he preferred to run that risk rather than encounter the danger of an adverse finding of fact against him upon a new trial. No doubt the situation which confronts counsel upon a reversal of the Special Term on the facts is embarrassing, because the court upon a new trial is too apt to follow the view of the Appellate Division instead of deciding the questions of fact wholly on its own judgment, as is its duty, still an appeal to this court is hazardous if not fatal, as we cannot deal with the facts, which must be settled in the Supreme Court. While we could dismiss the appeal and allow the plaintiff to have another trial, in view of the circumstances and the recent announcement of our intention to restrain such appeals "by the most repressive form of judgment within our power," we feel compelled to affirm the order appealed from and to render judgment absolute against the appellant, with costs in all courts. (Van Slyck v. Woodruff, 192 N.Y. 547.)
CULLEN, Ch. J., EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, etc. *Page 83