
    Harold E. Spencer, as Administrator, with the Will Annexed, of the Goods, Chattels, and Credits of Marietta P. Hay, Deceased, Plaintiff, v. The De Witt C. Hay Library Association of the Town of Caldwell et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    April, 1902.)
    Specific performance — Requisite proof of the terms of the contract and of an adequate consideration.
    Assuming that, in an action for the construction of a will, a legatee under it, unable to take because the will was made within two months of the death of the testatrix, may, in order to avoid the effect of the statute, demand specific performance of a contract alleged to have been made by the legatee with the testatrix and o£ which the legacy was the alleged outcome, the court cannot grant, specific performance in the absence of definite proof of the terms of the contract and of an adequate consideration for it.
    Action for the construction of a will.
    Weil & Weil (Robert Weil, of counsel), for plaintiff.
    Robert Imrie, for DeWitt 0. Hay Library Association.
    Redding, Kiddle & Greeley, for H. S. Cremation Co., Limited.
    DeForest Brothers, for N. Y. Infirmary for Women & Children.
    Rogers, Atwell & Rogers (Watson M. Rogers, of counsel), for Walter B. Camp, as trustee, and the Presbyterian Society of Sachet Harbor.
    William DeGraff, for Amy Beach Ewers, next of bin.
    William J. Townsend and Clarence S. Davison, for Tarrytown Historical Society.
    Robert Imrie, guardian ad litem, for Daniel Ferguson, an infant.
    
      John C. Davies, Attorney-General, by Hasbrouck & Johnson (G. B. S. Hasbrouck, of counsel).
    O. F. & R. R. Davis (Oscar Englander, of counsel), for Mary O. Ames.
   Blau chard, J.

This action for the construction of the will of Marietta P. Hay, was tried before Mr. Justice McAdam and by him decided. Before the decision and judgment were signed Justice McAdam died, and the case has now been retried before me. Since the trial before Justice McAdam the answers of the Attorney-General and of the DeWitt C. Hay Library Association have been amended by setting up that the bequests contained in the will for the benefit of that institution were made in pursuance of a contract ‘to that effect, and evidence was taken on the new issue thus presented. In other respects the issues on the trial before me were the same as on the previous trial before Justice McAdam. The evidence taken and the exhibits introduced on the first trial have been, under stipulation, introduced in'the present trial. I am disposed to adopt the decision of Justice McAdam on the questions which remain as they were presented to him. As to the bequests to the DeWitt C. Hay Library Association, Justice McAdam very properly held them, under the case as it was then presented, to be void, as it was provided in the act under which that corporation was incorporated that all bequests under a will executed within two months of the death of the testator should be void. That institution sought to avoid the effect of this statute by attempting to show the bequests to have been made as a result of a contract made in 1887. Assuming that this is the proper time and place to establish such a contract, if one existed, and there is considerable doubt as to it, I am of the opinion that no sufficient evidence has been produced to establish the claim that the provisions in the will of the testatrix were the result of a contract, of which a court of equity should decree a specific performance. The terms of such a contract must be definite and certain; there must be an adequate consideration and the contract must be clearly established. Shakespeare v. Markham, 10 Hun, 311, 322; affd., 72 N. Y. 400. The alleged contract was not in writing, and, so far as the evidence discloses, there was nothing more than a voluntary revocable intention of doing something for an institution not then in existence. With whom did Mrs. Hay contract, if at all? The DeWitt C. Hay Library Association was not then in existence. The negotiations and correspondence were with Mr. West, the supervisor of the town of Caldwell. He is not the beneficiary under the will. Subsequent to this alleged contract of 1887 a written contract was entered into in 1899, when the books and1' other articles were transferred by Mrs. Hay. The contract was entered into be- » tween Mrs. Hay and the DeWitt C. Hay Library Association, and provided for the care, use and freedom from incumbrance of the property transferred. The reading of this contract does not indicate any previous contractual obligation on the part of Mrs. Hay. Without lengthening this memorandum needlessly, it will suffice to say that there is nothing in the case which leads me to believe that a contract existed between Mrs. Hay and the association. The association from 1887, when it was incorporated at the suggestion of Mrs. Hay, until subsequent to the first trial of this case, gave no-intimation th.at it considered Mrs. Hay under any contractual obligation to it. I must conclude, therefore, that these bequests-are void, as found by Justice McAdam. The other questions are disposed of as they were upon the former trial. See decision reported in 36 Misc. Rep. 393. The decision and decree should be noticed for settlement, and at that time the application for allowances may be submitted.

Ordered accordingly.  