68 Wis. 458 | Wis. | 1887
The cause of action, insisted upon is a note for $700 given by the appellant to the respondent, November 1, 1880, due at any time. The answer states, in substance, that the plaintiff is the mother of the defendant’s wife, and in 1871 came to live with them in their family, and was maintained and taken care of by them until the year 1880, when the said defendant procured for her a pension from the United States of eight dollars per month, and back pay of about $1,600, and paid the expenses of procuring the same, and the plaintiff thereupon paid the defendant $700 of said money in consideration of'her past support and maintenance, and in full settlement thereof, and for the balance of said money the defendant gave the plaintiff said note, and that it was then agreed between them that said plaintiff should in the future pay to the defendant a reasonable sum for her board, lodging, for being cared for in sickness, and for such necessaries as she "might require; and he continued to perform his agreement in these respects from that time until about two weeks before the commencement of this suit, and that her board so furnished was reasonably worth three dollars per week, which in the aggregate was, up to the time last mentioned, the sum of $696, and that the defendant in the mean time paid the plaintiff, and for her, about the sum of $140 mmnoney, and these sums are claimed as offsets to said note.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff was quite aged and indigent when she went to live with thé defendant, and she left his family about the time last stated. The plaintiff and defendant were the only witnesses, as appears from the printed case. The defendant testified that he was to have half of the pension money, if he got it for the plaintiff, for his getting it and for furnishing her a home as he had, or for what he had done for her, and that she wanted to continue at his house as she had been, and wanted him to build an addition to his house that she might have a room up
The circuit court instructed the jury as follows: “In the relation these parties stand to each other, and in the situation in which they have been living together, the plaintiff would not be entitled to pay the defendant for hex-board unless there was an agreement that she should pay it,” etc. “ The defendant claims that thei-e was an agreement on the part of the plaintiff that she should pay him what was reasonable for her boai-d, after the time she obtained her pension,— substantially after the date of this note, as I ixndei’stand it, — • and she denies that thex-e was any such agreement. Now, as I said before, unless there was an agreement 'that she should pay she would not be liable to pay it.” The learned counsel of the appellant
The above statement of the pleadings and of some of the evidence has been made in order to show fully the reasons for the decision that we feel compelled to make. The learned counsel who argued the case does not dispute the legal proposition that services rendered between members of the same family raise no presumption of fact that they are to be paid for, or the proposition that the plaintiff’s living and receiving her support and maintenance in the family of the defendant, from the time she came there until she received her pension, raised no presumption of fact that either she should be paid for the services she might render the defendant under such circumstances or that she would or should pay the defendant for such support and maintenance, or that he should be entitled to charge her for the same. To go further, I do not understand that the learned-counsel questions the legal principle that, considering the relationship between the plaintiff and defendant, as mother-in-law and sondn-law, during the whole time she was an inmate in his family he was not entitled to any compensation or remuneration for her board, support, and maintenance therein,
The argument of the learned counsel is strong, logical, and convincing that these facts and circumstances ought to have been considered by the jury in determining whether there was such a contract as the law makes necessary in such a case. Rut we can go no further with the learned
I have spent more time upon this case, because it more clearly than most cases squarely and directly presents this question of the relative duty of the court and the counsel as to an omission to instruct the jury upon some matter, very material perhaps, but not obviously within the pleadings or the evidence. Such omissions are frequently alleged as error in this court, and the true rule should not be overlooked. When the court has instructed the jury upon all the main questions involved, and correctly, then, if counsel desire additional or more specific instructions, they must request them to be given or the omission cannot be alleged as error. Brower v. Merrill, 3 Pin. 46; Lachner v. Salomon, 9 Wis. 129; Pilling v. Otis, 13 Wis. 495; Knox v. Webster, 18 Wis. 406; Karber v. Nellis, 22 Wis. 215; Weisenberg v. Appleton, 26 Wis. 56; Roebke v. Andrews, 26 Wis. 311; and many cases since decided. In this case, therefore, the omission complained of was not the error of the court.
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.