161 Iowa 656 | Iowa | 1913
Defendant’s wife died in the year 1894. Soon after her death plaintiffs took the infant son of the defendant, and since that time have kept and cared for him. They allege that they have performed this service upon the express agreement and promise of the defendant, made about January, 1894, to pay therefor at such rate as should be reasonable and just. They further aver that, except a single installment of $25, and a few smaller items, no part of the debt so contracted has ever been paid. It is not denied that plaintiffs have kept and eared for. the child, but defendant alleges that they assumed such custody voluntarily and without request on his part, but with the declared desire and purpose to make the child a member of their family to be received and cared for by them as their own. He further avers that he has frequently and on different occasions proposed and sought to resume the care and custody of his son, but plaintiffs have always objected thereto and earnestly urged that they were attached to the boy and loved him as their own son and wished to keep him as Such.
The ease as made did not justify the court in submitting the defense of the statute of limitations. The pleaded contract was either entire and no right of action arose thereon until it was fully performed or otherwise terminated, or plaintiff’s claim is in the nature of a continuous open account for the accruing items of service and the statute had not run against any part of it. There was no question upon this issue for the consideration of the jury.
2. same:evidence: The rulings upon evidence are clearly right, except perhaps in permitting one witness to say that Mrs. Barger was expecting compensation for keeping the child, a matter of which the witness was probably not competent to speak, and immaterial upon thq question whether there was an express promise to pay,
It must be presumed that the jury did its duty and followed the instructions in reaching its verdict. It is inconceivable that the remark of the witness to which exception is taken could have influenced this finding, and we cannot make its admission in testimony the ground for setting aside the judgment and putting the parties and the public to the expense of another trial. The instructions as a whole are very favorable to the appellant, and the whole record presents a case in which there is no reasonable prospect of a different result even if a new trial were ordered.
The judgment of the district court is therefore Affirmed.