1. In the instant suit. in which the plaintiff, as against an administrator, sought specific performance of an alleged oral agreement by the defendant's intestate to "execute a will giving to petitioner all of her property," in consideration of services to be rendered by the plaintiff, the evidence was not sufficient to establish the alleged contract so clearly and satisfactorily as to leave no reasonable doubt on the minds of the jury, as required by law to authorize a recovery in such case.
2. Where a party seeks specific performance of an executory contract for the purpose of establishing title to property and recovering the same, evidence of a completed gift would not prove the case as laid, and hence would not authorize a recovery under the pleadings as framed.
3. Under the preceding rulings, the court did not err in granting a non-suit.
After that decision and return of the case to the trial court, the claimant amended paragraph 4 of the equitable amendment, by inserting at places designated the word "help" and the phrase "and to look after her business affairs," so as to make the paragraph read as follows: "4. At the same time the said Mrs. Grace contracted and agreed with petitioner that if petitioner would help look after and care for and nurse and see that petitioner was properly cared for as long as she lived and to look after her business affairs that she, Mrs. Grace, would execute a will to give to petitioner all of her property, both real and personal and money at the death of said Mrs. Grace." The case then proceeded to trial, and after the claimant had introduced evidence and rested, the judge, on motion of the administrator, granted a nonsuit. The claimant excepted.
Fred C. Salmon, husband of the claimant, testified: "Other than paying the premiums on the insurance policy it was also agreed that my wife and myself were to look after Mr. and Mrs. Grace, nurse and help nurse as long as they lived, and after their death the remaining part of the estate of Mr. and Mrs. Grace, the personal goods and things like that, were to go to my wife, and Mrs. Grace was to leave a will. . . As to whether or not I said Mr. Coker was present when this agreement was made, well, yes sir. . . As to what Mrs. Grace said while we were at Mr. Coker's office at the time the agreement was made relative to what she wanted Mrs. Salmon to do, well, she said she wanted the insurance payments made, and she also said there was no reason for carrying it except for somebody else, and that she wanted Mrs. Salmon to have it, and also wanted her to look after her business at the house and her business in general for her. . . Mrs. Salmon did the things she agreed to do." The witness further testified that the *Page 416 conversation relied on occurred at Third Avenue Hotel in the office or place of business of W. H. Coker.
J. H. Lovelace testified that on a certain occasion he was present at the Third Avenue Hotel, having gone there to see Mr. Coker, and that Mr. and Mrs. Grace and Mr. and Mrs. Salmon were already there and in consultation with him, and were having some kind of papers made out, and while waiting for Mr. Coker the witness overheard some of the conversation. "They were having some kind of insurance transferred from Mr. and Mrs. Grace to Mrs. Salmon, and I heard Mr. and Mrs. Grace say that they were not able to take care of the payments on the insurance and not able to take care of themselves, and that what they had left when they died they wanted to go to Mr. and Mrs. Salmon; and there were some papers made out, but I don't know what the papers were."
The record contains other evidence besides that which has been quoted, but none was more direct or stronger for the plaintiff than the foregoing, as to the making of the alleged contract.
Under the settled rule as to the degree of mental conviction required in such cases, which rule was merely restated in the former decision in this case, the evidence was insufficient to authorize recovery, and for this reason the court did not err in awarding a nonsuit.
It will be seen that the contract as alleged contemplated services only for Mrs. Grace, the intestate, while, according to the evidence of Fred C. Salmon, the plaintiff was to help look after both Mr. and Mrs. Grace. Again, according to the allegations, only the estate of Mrs. Grace was involved in the agreement, while the evidence was to the effect that the remaining parts of the estates of both Mr. and Mrs. Grace were to go to Mrs. Salmon. Furthermore, the testimony of the witness Salmon was ambiguous as to whether all of the "remaining part of the estate" would go to Mrs. Salmon, or merely "the personal goods and things like that," whereas under the allegations the contract embraced all of Mrs. Grace's property, both real and personal.
Manifestly this evidence did not establish the alleged contract so clearly and satisfactorily as to leave no reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury as to its existence. Nor was the defect cured by the testimony of Lovelace or other evidence.
It is further insisted that in any event the evidence was sufficient *Page 417 to show a gift of certain jewelry by Mrs. Grace to Mrs. Salmon, completed by delivery during Mrs. Grace's lifetime. Under the former decision, the equitable amendment was construed as converting the two claim cases into a suit for specific performance of an oral contract. Such being the nature of the case as it was finally laid, the plaintiff can not recover upon the theory of a completed gift.
From what has been said, the court did not err in granting a nonsuit as to all of the property in controversy.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.