Opinion
Docket No. 41.
Submitted October 7, 1926.
Decided December 8, 1926.
Appeal from Wexford; Lamb (Fred S.), J. Submitted October 7, 1926. (Docket No. 41.) Decided December 8, 1926.
Bill by Rosella Kraus and L.C. Elya against Homer, John, and Rowena Vandevanter for an accounting. Defendants filed a cross-bill for specific performance of a land contract. From the decree rendered, plaintiff Kraus and defendants appeal. Affirmed.
Henry Miltner, for plaintiff Kraus.
Fred C. Wetmore, for plaintiff Elya.
Penny Worcester, for defendants.
This case presents only issues of fact. William L. Vandevanter settled in Antioch township, Wexford county, in 1881. He then purchased 160 acres of land. Later he added another 40 acres. He had five children, three girls and two boys. Of the girls, plaintiffs Mrs. Kraus and Mrs. Elya married and moved away. The remaining children, defendants Homer, John, and Rowena remained with their parents and never married. At the time of the hearing Homer was 54 years old, John 52, and Rowena 48. The mother died in 1919 and the father died July 18, 1922, at the age of 82 years. Plaintiffs filed this bill asking for an accounting by defendants for money, bonds, and other personal property claimed by them to be the property of the estate and held by defendants. Defendants filed an answer and crossbill asserting the personal property belonged to them and asking specific performance of a claimed oral agreement to convey by will or otherwise the farm. The trial judge decreed the personal property to belong to defendants, but did not find the contract established, and decreed the farm to belong to the five children. Mrs. Kraus and defendants appeal.
The Vandevanter family was a thrifty one. The original 160 acres was cleared, substantial farm buildings erected, an additional 40 acres purchased and the land successfully operated; $5,000 worth of timber was sold from it. There was $3,000 of liberty bonds laid away, about $10,000 in the bank, and the usual stock and tools on the farm. The failure of the bank in which the money was deposited caused a substantial loss. The accumulation of this substantial amount of personal property was largely due to the efforts of the children who remained at home. The boys aided their father, and in his declining years worked the farm and managed the business. Rowena aided her mother and after her death did the housework. That the father fully appreciated this is disclosed by this record, and that he turned over the personal property, and all of it, no matter from what source obtained, to the defendants before his death, we entertain no doubt. For several years before he died the personal property was assessed to defendants with his approval, and he frequently stated that he had no personal property, that he had turned it over to the defendants. The plaintiffs' bill was properly dismissed.
While the father's statements as to the personal property were frequent and unequivocal, his statements as to the real estate were infrequent and lacking in definiteness. There is some testimony of statements by deceased which tends to establish defendants' claim, but in the main the testimony tends to establish nothing more than an unexecuted intention to make a will. This is not sufficient. To authorize a decree for specific performance, there must be a contract to enforce, and the burden is on those who ask such relief to establish such contract. It would profit no one to detail this testimony and mention will only be made of what occurred after the father's death. Defendant John, after the death of his father, filed a petition for the appointment of Homer as administrator, reciting that his father died seized of the real estate; there was some objection to the appointment of Homer and another petition with the same recital was filed praying for the appointment of one Muche as administrator. Shortly after his father's death Homer, who seems to have been the active one of the defendants, wrote Mrs. Kraus a letter in which no mention was made of the personal property, but in which he said:
"Father left no will that we know of, and you and L. C. will get an equal share of the farm. John has filed a petition in the probate court for the appointment of an administrator. * * * You no doubt will think we are starting rather soon, but we are confronted with a lot of expense in keeping the farm and buildings and fences up and paying high taxes, insurance, and so forth, and the farm has not paid out in the last three or four years, and we do not think it would be best to let it run down, and, too, you can use your money to good advantage any time."
These incidents are hardly consistent with the claims now asserted that defendants own the farm as well as the personal property, and own it by virtue of an agreement made with the deceased in his lifetime. We agree with the trial judge that defendants have not established by a preponderance of the proofs that deceased agreed to convey the real estate. He did give them the personal property in his lifetime and doubtless did so to compensate them for their years of toil, but did not give them the farm and it is not established that he agreed to do so.
The decree will be affirmed. As plaintiff Mrs. Kraus and defendants have appealed, the expense of transcript and printing the record will be divided between them. As Mrs. Elya did not appeal and the decree is affirmed as to her, she will recover costs of this court from defendants.
BIRD, C.J., and SHARPE, SNOW, STEERE, WIEST, CLARK, and McDONALD, JJ., concurred.