37 Mo. App. 258 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in equity to subject the separate estate of a married woman to the payment of an indebtedness alleged to be due to the plaintiff from the married woman, for services rendered at her special instance and request and for the benefit of said estate. The petition alleges “that plaintiff, at the special instance and request of said defendant Sarah Kane, and for the benefit of her separate estate, rendered her • his labor and service for five months in the year 1876, and also continuously from April 1, 1877 to July T5, 1881, amounting to fifty-six and one-half months, and that said services were of the value of twenty dollars per
The answer of J. P. Kane admitted that he was the husband of Sarah Kane, and denied each and every other allegation of the petition. The answer of Sarah Kane admitted that she was the wife of J. P. Kane,' denied each and ever other allegation of the petition, and set up as a counter-claim thafc the plaintiff was indebted to her in the sum of $1,794.77, for the use and occupation of the farm in Lawrence county, Missouri, for three years at two hundred dollars per year; for money had and received by the plaintiff for the use of the defendant; for money lent by the defendant to the plaintiff; for goods and property sold by the plaintiff belonging to the defendant and appropriated to his own use; and for boarding himself (sic) by defendant following with an itemized statement qf the counter-claim. There was a reply putting in issue the new matter and pleading the statute of limitations as to such of the items as had not accrued within five years.
Pending the proceedings the plaintiff has died, and the cause has been revived in the name of his administratrix, Bridget Clarke. The defendant J. P. Kane has also died, leaving the defendant Sarah Kane, against whom alone substantial relief is sought, as the sole defendant. For convenience, the parties are designated in this opinion as they stood at the commencement of the action, — the word plaintiff referring to the original plaintiff Anthony B. Clarke, and the word defendants referring to the defendant Sarah Kane and J. P. Kane.
I. Before proceeding to an examination of the merits, it is necessary to dispose of a technical objection raised by the plaintiff, which is that the defendant’s exceptions to the report of the referee were not filed
II. This brings us to the merits of this controversy, as exhibited by the evidence filed by the referee with
The parties are all natives of Ireland. The plaintiff is the brother of the defendant, Sarah Kane, and the defendants, Sarah Kane and J. P. Kane, are husband and wife. They were married in Ireland in 1859, and soon after removed to this country. After some changes, they finally settléd in Scranton, Pennsylvania, where Mr. Kane, first alone, and afterwards with his daughter, pursued the occupation of school teacher, and Mrs., Kane kept boarders. By industry and frugality they gradually accumulated about eighteen hundred dollars in money, besides a house and lot, vested in Mrs. Kane, which for several years yielded a, rental of ten dollars a month, and afterwards of five dollars a month. They had a large family of children to support.
The plaintiff remained in Ireland and married there. He came to this country in 1875, and from that time on he and his family became, more or less, a charge upon the benevolence of his sister and brother-in-law, these defendants. They boarded him for several months when he was out of employment, for which they received no remuneration. At his earnest solicitation, they sent a draft of five pounds to his family in Ireland, which then cost thirty-three dollars in our inflated currency. Finally, in the year 1876, the plaintiff, having a longing, desire to see the great West, started toward the setting sun, in the character of an .itinerant peddler, with a traveling companion named Thomas Clarke. They peddled as far as Chillicothe, in Missouri, where the plaintiff found himself stranded,, and was obliged to appeal to the defendants for assistance, to which appeal, they responded to the extent ■ of a remittance of ten dollars.- With this aid he went forward to- Colorado, where he found himself again obliged to appeal to them for aid, and they again responded to the extent of
To facilitate this enterprise, they placed in his hands three hundred dollars, and sent him to Pierce City. They also advanced to him seventy-three dollars to bring his family to this country, and this money was expended in bringing .them over. He went to Pierce City, and, after examining many farms and spending considerable time in negotiations and inquiries, during which time he was ¡in active correspondence with his brother-in-law at Scranton, he, or rather they, for the final decision was made by them, decided upon the purchase of the Legrand farm for fifteen hundred dollars in cash, and one thousand dollars payable in five equal installments, in one, two, three, four and five years, the deferred payments drawing interest at seven per cent, per annum. They forwarded fifteen hundred dollars in currency to him by express, and with this he paid the cash portion of the purchase price, and took a deed for the land, by which the title was vested to him in fee, but in trust for the s.ole and separate use of the defendant Sarah Kane. With what remained of the three hundred dollars, with which they had furnished him when he left Scranton, he purchased a team and utensils
This preliminary statement brings us to the conflicting evidence as to the terms of the contract under which the plaintiff purchased the farm, took possession of it, lived upon it, and cultivated it. The plaintiff ’ s version of the contract is thus stated in his own language, testifying as a witness: “I was to have half of the farm and half of everything belonging to it. There was no written contract whatever between us, and no agreement to keep any account or record of anything, or keep the letters, or account for moneys. I was to have the money and do what I pleased with it.” The defendants’ version of the contract is thus given in the testimony of Mrs. Kane: “My husband told him he would assist him all he could; that, if he came and bought the Legrand farm for us, he could have the use of it for such time as we did not need it, by paying two hundred dollars a year for the use of the farm, or the money so invested, while he used it for his benefit.” The defendants’ version of the contract is also given in the testimony of Mr. Kane: “I will here state there was no proposition or contract, either verbal or in writing, in the year 1876, that Clarke was to have any portion or part of any farm that might be purchased for Mrs. Sarah Kane. There was no talk about such a
The first finding of fact made by the referee was “that about the first of April, 1877, the plaintiff, Anthony B. Clarke, commenced to labor for the defendant, Sarah Kane, at her instance and request, without any agreement as to compensations This is the basis of the succeeding findings of the referee. This finding is not only not supported by any evidence in the case, but, as above seen, it is contradicted by the evidence of both parties. The plaintiff’s evidence, briefly, is that he was to buy the land with the money advanced by the defendants, was to move on it, cultivate it and live upon it and have half of it. The defendants’ evidence is that he was to buy the land and move on it, yielding them a rental of two hundred dollars' a year, or thereabouts, while they allowed him to live on it. The theory on which this action is brought seems to be that, as the contract which was really made was broken by the. defendants, the plaintiff can' abandon that contract and recover upon an implied assumpsit the reasonable value of his services. Such is not the law. There can be no recovery on an implied contract in opposition to an express contract in force fixing the rights of the parties. Christy v. Price, 7 Mo. 430, 433; Suits v. Taylor, 20 Mo. App. 166, 173; Kansas City Planing Mill Co. v. Brundage, 25 Mo. App. 268; Davidson v. Bierman, 27 Mo. App. 655.
In Ashbrook v. Dale, 27 Mo. App. 649, 654, the principle was conceded, arguendo; “ that, where an express contract fails for informality, a party may still
This consideration renders it unnecessary for us to express an opinion upon the weight of the evidence adduced by the contending parties in support of their respective versions of the- contract. The plaintiff’s statement is supported by the testimony of four witnesses as to statements made to them by the defendants after they had arrived at Pierce City, which statements they deny. The letters of the defendant J. P. Kane, who, as agent for his wife, had charge of the transaction, more than fifty in number, written from his home in Pennsylvania to the plaintiff at Pierce City, add some color to the plaintiff’s version of the transaction; but there is not a line in these letters, nor is there a scrap of writing, which exhibits the contract according to the version of either party; and after the year 1880, when the period of controversy commenced between the parties, we find nothing in their correspondence hinting at the plaintiff ’ s version of the contract. On the contrary, in his letter of February 21,1881, he gives a statement of the receipts from crops and expenditures of the ■preceding year, showing a balance in his hands of $104.10, which he offers to turn over to the defendants, together with a considerable list of personal property. When the defendants arrived at Pierce City, Mr. Kane demanded this money of the plaintiff, and he refused to turn it over, on the ground that his wife had it, and would not give it up. This led to a disturbance, and from this time on the parties were enemies, and a succession of law suits followed. It should seem that, if the plaintiff ’ s version of the contract were true, it would crop out in some of the correspondence which took place after the stress between the parties began. It is true that many of the earlier letters of Mr; Kane to the plaintiff read as though there had been an understanding that
On the other hand, we have the positive testimony of both the defendants that no such agreement was ever made or talked of, and the defendant J. P. Kane testifies that he never heard of it until this action was brought. This testimony is supported by the inherent improbability of any such arrangement ever being made. These two defendants had saved this small sum of money by a long course of laborious frugality. If we may credit the letters of Mr. Kane to the plaintiff, which we understand to have been put in evidence by the plaintiff and to be now relied on by him, we must conclude that during most of the period while plaintiff was in the occupancy of the farm, Mr. Kane was working and pinching and saving to the utmost to get a little money to forward to him to meet his wants, to assist him in working the farm, and to prevent the farm being taken from them for the unpaid purchase money. It appears that the defendants had invested their all in this venture; it seems highly improbable that they would invest their all in a venture on the basis of giving half of it to their dependent relative at the very outset. If he was to have half of the land and personalty, it would have been perfectly simple to have had the deed made in such a form as to express that intent, or to have had it expressed in some other writing. In dealing with a matter so important that would be the most obvious suggestion of prudence.
To establish the existence of an arrangement so improbable the evidence ought to be as clear and cogent as that required by courts of equity to establish a resulting trust — especially where it is sought to charge an indebtedness upon the estate of a married woman. On the whole, the equity seems to be in favor of the defendants rather than in favor of the plaintiff. He has had the use of their farm for the support of himself and family, rent free for three or four years. He has had considerable money for his personal use which they have
The judgment will be affirmed.