175 Mo. App. 696 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Mrs. Eliza Noland died tbe 30th of January, 1910', on a farm at Bainbridge, Cape Girardeau county, on wbicb farm sbe bad lived and reared ber , family. Sbe was about eighty-four or eighty-five years of age at tbe time of ber death and bad been a widow for a number of years. Tbe farm on which sbe lived and died was- ber own property. By ber last will sbe devised tbe farm to an only daughter, Mrs. Ellen Bowman, who survived ber. Her only other heir at law was a son, Henry Bowman, bus-band of tbe plaintiff here, to whom sbe left five dollars. Henry Bowman bad married tbe plaintiff some twenty-five years prior to tbe death of bis mother. Prior to tbe marriage be bad lived on tbe farm mentioned with bis mother and after bis marriage be and bis wife continued to make their home there, tbe only other member of tbe family being the daughter of Mrs. Bowman by a former marriage. Along in 1900 or 1903, tbe St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company was constructed either through or near tbe farm, on which farm, in addition to a small dwelling, were a storehouse and wharf on the Mississippi river. Bainbridge appears to have been a station on tbe railroad and Henry Bowman, tbe husband of plaintiff, kept a small grocery there and managed tbe wharf. He was also post master at tbe village of Bainbridge. Along in 1902 or 1903, Mrs. Bowman commenced keeping board
The question presented in this case arises over the right of appellant here to charge for board and these services.
The action was commenced October 24, 1910. The petition in the cause, in one count, avers that Oliver Bowman, who at the time of the institution of this action had charge of the estate of Mrs. Nellie Bowman, as executor under her will, was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $1425 on account of board and washing furnished Mrs. Noland from March 8,1902, to January 30, 1910, at fifteen dollars per month, and for services of plaintiff as a nurse in taking care of Mrs. Noland during her illness from December 23, 1907, to the 23rd of February, 1908, at the rate of $2.50' a day, amounting to $155, and for services as a nurse in her last illness from November 15, 1909, to January 30, 1910, in the sum of $380', being at the rate of five dollars a day, and for services rendered Mrs. Noland by plaintiff, “in watching after and taking care of her” from November 15, 1906, to November 15, 1909, at the rate of five dollars a month, a total of $180, the total amount claimed being $2140'.
The defendant appearing moved the court to require plaintiff to elect upon which cause of action stated in her petition plaintiff would proceed. This motion was overruled, defendant excepting and filing
The cause was tried before the court and a jury and at the conclusion of the testimony for plaintiff, defendant demurred to the evidence. This-was overruled, defendant excepting. Whereupon defendant offered his evidence. - At the conclusion of all the testimony in the cause defendant again renewing his demurrer to the evidence, the demurrer was overruled, defendant excepting.
At the instance of plaintiff the court gave four instructions, all of which were excepted to by defendant. At the instance of the defendant the court gave six instructions and refused two. One of the instructions asked by defendant and refused was that if the jury found the issues for plaintiff, in arriving at the amount of their finding they should not take into consideration any services rendered or meals furnished prior to the 29th of November, 1905'; in the other refused instruction the court was asked to tell the jury that they should not take into consideration the charge for any services rendered or meals furnished deceased prior to September, 1907.
The jury returned a general verdict in favor of plaintiff, assessing hér damages at the sum of $700. Piling a motion for new trial, as also one in arrest, and excepting to the action of the court in overruling these motions, the executor duly perfected his appeal
This presents a case of which we have recently had quite a number of like character, of a dispute arising On the death of a member of a family over the question as to whether the services rendered her while the parties were all of one family were gratuitously furnished in consideration of and as growing out of the family relation, or whether they were furnished under a contract, express or implied, or under such circumstances as created an obligation on the part of the estate of the deceased to pay for them. The determination of this class of cases is so entirely a matter for the jury and for the trial court that if no substantial error has been committed in the reception or rejection of testimony, or in the matter of the giving or refusal of instructions, and there is substantial evidence to support the verdict, the appellate courts cannot and wrill not interfere, the verdict having been approved by the trial court. That court alone is authorized in an. action at law, as invariably held, to pass on the weight of the testimony.
It is very earnestly insisted by counsel for appellant that two or more causes of action are improperly joined in one count in the petition and as noted, a motion was filed to compel plaintiff to elect as to which cause of action she would .rely upon. That motion was overruled, whereupon defendant answered and pleaded, after a general denial, the five-year Statute of Limitations. An examination of this petition does not sustain this charge that there are several causes of actions counted upon. As the facts are pleaded in the petition, the account is a .running account, made up of various items, accruing at different dates but constituting one
Aside from this, defendant lost the benefit of his motion to elect by pleading over. This has been so often decided by our Supreme Court and by the appellate courts of the State that it may be said to be a closed question, one no longer open to debate. We refer, in passing, however, to the decisions of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in Finnell v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co., 159 Mo. App. 522, l. c. 525, 141 S. W. 451, and Kastor & Sons Advertising Co. v. Elders, 170 Mo. App. 490, 156 S. W. 737, as containing very full collections of the decisions on this point. This disposes of the first assignment of error made by the learned counsel for appellant.
The second and third assignments are thát the court erred in overruling the demurrers to the evidence at the close of plaintiff’s case and at the close of the whole case. We cannot agree to these assignments as being well made. There is substantial evidence in the case that the services were rendered at the request of the decedent by the complainant; that she was conducting the boarding house herself, independent of her husband; that her mother-in-law boarded with her,' with the expectation on both sides that the board was
It may be, as some of the evidence tends to show, that the manner in which Mrs. Noland expected to pay for the services was “by .remembering Mrs. Bowman in her will.” Referring to'.like evidence in a case before it, the Kansas City Court of Appeals in Christianson v. McDermott’s Estate, 123 Mo. App. 448, 100 S. W. 63, has said that while there is some evidence tending to show that the claimant in that case expected to be compensated by being remembered in the will, the evidence shows further that she did expect remuneration in some form and that the deceased agreed that she should be remunerated. Says the court (1. c. 451): “We are at loss to know why, if a remuneration was expected and .promised for the services, plaintiff would not be entitled to it although
The fourth error assigned is to the giving of the third and fourth instructions at the request of plaintiff. The third instruction, in substance, told the jury that it was not necessary to a recovery by plaintiff that she establish a formal verbal or written contract, but if the jury found “from a consideration of all the evidence that services were rendered or board furnished Avith the expectation at the time on the part of plaintiff that she wTas to receive pay therefor and the expectation on the part of Eliza Noland that she was to make compensation therefor, such mutual expectation constituted a sufficient contract within the legal meaning of the term.”
The fourth instruction told the jury that where services are rendered or received “a contract or obligation to pay will be presumed, except services rendered by members of one family to each' other, in which case the presumption is that they were intended to be gratuitous, ’ ’ and although the jury might believe that the plaintiff and the deceased were members of
We are unable to discover any error whatever to the prejudice of the defendant in these instructions. They state the law applicable to this case as has been determined in many decisions of our courts. They were in line with those given at the instance of the defendant, which told the jury in most unequivocal and even emphatic terms that the burden was on plaintiff to overcome the presumption that they were gratuitous, that presumption arising from the family relationship, and that plaintiff, before she can recover
The fifth assignment of error is to the refusal of defendant’s instructions numbered 7 and 8, invoking the Statute of Limitations as against items prior to 1905 and 1907. The learned counsel for appellant rely in support of their contention for the bar of the statute upon the decisions of our court in Loeffel v. Hoss, 11 Mo. App. 133, l. c. 135 ; Chapman v. Hogg, 135 Mo. App. 654, l. c. 660-661, 116 S. W. 492, and Sidway v. Missouri Land & Live Stock Co., 187 Mo. 649, l. c. 668, 86 S. W. 150. We do not think that the facts on which 'the bar' of the statute was interposed in the Loeffel and Chapman cases, are present in the case before us. In each of those cases there was an entire cessation of the relation between the parties and after the lapse- of a considerable time and. in an entirely disconnected transaction charges were again made. We held in both those cases that the statute did interpose as a bar and that the accounts were not connected accounts. That is not the case here.
As we understand the decision of our Supreme Court in Sidway v. Land & Live Stock Co., supra, it is not only not in favor of defendant but is against his position. Quotation is there made from Chadwick v. Chadwick, 115 Mo. 581, l. c. 586, 22 S. W. 479, of whar Judge Black, speaking for the court has there said, namely: “It seems to be quite generally held that if the items are all on the one side, then the. account is not mutual in the sense that the last item will draw-after it the items previously charged so as to save the bar of the Statute of Limitations as to the whole
Applying the rule above announced to the facts here, we hold that this, as pleaded, is a running account, and that the Statute of Limitations does not apply to any items in it unless to all, and that would include the last item, which last item is undoubtedly within the statutory period and is not subject to the bar of the statute.
The remaining- assignments of .error are to the overruling of the motion for new trial and in arrest. Holding as we do on the above propositions, these motions were properly overruled.
The learned counsel for appellant, in a very fervid argument, both printed and oral, inveigh against the danger of allowance of accounts of this kind, brought up after the death of the party whose estate is to be charged. That may be. It may be that it is dangerous, in a way, to allow accounts of this nature and under like circumstances to be recoverable, especially when, as here, and in all like cases which have come before us, no memorandum of the items, no account in fact, was made or kept of them during the life of the alleged debtor; no formal account ever made out, and where the proof of the fact of its acknowledg- ■ ment and even of its existence rests in parol; that parol
We find no such errors here. The judgment of the circuit court must he and is affirmed.