93 Me. 220 | Me. | 1899
This is an action of assumpsit, upon an account annexed to the writ, wherein the plaintiff sues to recover for board and nursing furnished by her to the defendant. The verdict was for the plaintiff, and the case comes here on motion for new trial and on exceptions to the rulings and instructions of the judge of the superior court for the county of Kennebec, before whom the case was tried. The plaintiff and the defendant were formerly husband and wife but had been divorced sometime before the time included in the account sued. The testimony discloses that on or about the middle of January, 1897, the defendant, being sick and out of work, came to the plaintiff’s house and boarded with her, with her consent, until the 20th of the following March, and was nursed by her during a portion of that time. Before the defendant so commenced to board with the plaintiff, the plaintiff and the defendant had mutually promised each other to re-marry, and such marriage contract existed during all the time that the defendant boarded with the plaintiff. Subsequently, and before the commencement of this suit the defendant married another woman. The plaintiff does not rely upon an express promise on the part of
On re-direct, the plaintiff testified: “When he came there there was an understanding that I should marry him. I never at any time agreed with him that he should not pay board. Nothing was said between Mr. Clary and me in regard to his board.”
The case of LaFontain v. Hayhurst, 89 Maine, 388, is almost identical in point of fact and precisely identical in point of law with the case at bar, and is decisive against the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action. There, as here, the plaintiff sued the defendant for board; before such board was furnished the defendant had promised to marry the plaintiff but subsequently married another woman; the plaintiff testified that at the time such board was furnished she did not intend to charge the defendant therefor. In that case, as in this, board was not furnished in consideration of a promise of marriage, but, rather, on account of the relations existing between the parties by reason of such a prior promise.
In LaFontain v. Hayhurst, supra, the court, after stating the well-settled doctrine that no binding promise to make compensation
We perceive no error in the rulings and instructions of the presiding judge to which exceptions are taken and the exceptions should be overruled.
Exceptions overruled.
Motion sustained. New trial granted.