59 A.2d 520 | Conn. | 1948
In this action the plaintiff sought recovery upon a claim of $18,000 against his deceased *538 mother's estate for the reasonable value of services rendered to his father and mother from the spring of 1915 to September 24, 1940. The jury returned a verdict for $13,858 for the plaintiff, the court denied a motion to set it aside, and the defendants appealed from the ruling and from the judgment entered upon the verdict.
The written statement of claim required by General Statutes, 4915, was duly presented to the executors, was disallowed in its entirety, and this action was brought. This statement of claim is annexed to the complaint as an exhibit. While the complaint contains but a single count, it states both an oral promise to leave a farm by will and a rendition of services under an expectation of payment. The agreement is alleged in the complaint itself in the following language: "Many times between the spring of 1915 and September of 1940, said John Costello and Annie G. Costello requested the plaintiff, who is their son, to remain on the said farm and continue to assist them in its operation and in the businesses incidental thereto, and promised the Plaintiff that if he would continue to do so during their lives they would devise and bequeath said farm to him so he should have it at the death of the survivor of them." The next allegation is that "In compliance with said requests, and in consideration of the promises herein alleged, and relying on said promises, the Plaintiff remained on said farm and rendered such services from the spring of 1915 until the 24th of September, 1940, with the expectation that he would be compensated therefor on the death of the survivor of said John Costello and Annie G. Costello, and that expectation was known to both said John Costello and Annie G. Costello when the services were rendered." It is further alleged that *539 John died in 1940, that Annie died in 1945, that neither devised the farm or any part of it to the plaintiff, that he has not been compensated for the services which he performed, and that his services were reasonably worth $18,000 over and above the board and living expenses received by him while living on the farm. The defendants denied the essential allegations and also pleaded in bar the three- and six-year statutes of limitation, General Statutes 6010, 6005.
It thus appears that both the complaint and the statement of claim alleged promises made by the parents and that in consideration of them the plaintiff remained on the farm and "rendered such services from the spring of 1915 until the 24th of September 1940." The complaint further alleges that the plaintiff did this with the expectation that he would be compensated therefor on the death of the surviving parent and that this expectation was known to both of the parents when the services were rendered. The written claim presented to the executors further directly alleged that the plaintiff "fully carried out said agreement on his part." It must be read with the allegations of the complaint, as contended by the defendants. Duvall v. Birden,
The claimed contract was an oral agreement to devise land in return for services and was unenforceable *540
because of the Statute of Frauds. General Statutes 5982; Grant v. Grant,
It follows that if the plaintiff did not prove the express agreement and his own performance of his part of it, but did prove circumstances entitling him to recover on an implied contract arising from the furnishing of services with an expectation of payment and the knowledge of that fact by the parents, his recovery would be limited to a period of six years prior to the death of the mother. This consideration is of importance, because the verdict included compensation for services rendered prior to the six-year period. *541
The defendants contend that there was no evidence upon which the jury reasonably could have found that the mother entered into the alleged agreement. The only direct testimony came from the plaintiff himself. It was sufficient, if believed, to warrant the jury in finding that the father made such an agreement. He died September 24, 1940. He left the farm to his wife, and it is her estate which is now being sued. The evidence in support of the claim that she joined with her husband in making the agreement is less substantial but is sufficient to support a finding by the jury that she adopted the father's promise and made it her own. The defendants argue in their brief that "there was not a word of testimony to those conversations, save Claude's." His testimony was sufficient, if believed.
The plaintiff testified that he worked on the farm seven days a week and had three days' vacation in twenty-five years; that from 1915 to 1930 his day's work averaged fifteen hours; and that from 1930 to 1940 it averaged thirteen hours. The defendants' primary contention is that there is no evidence to show performance of the agreement on the plaintiff's part from January 1, 1941, until his mother sold the farm on April 15, 1942; that he breached and abandoned the agreement and left his mother to get along as best she could without assistance in running the farm; and that his conduct justified the sale of the farm by her. The claim of law made in the brief is that "one who seeks to recover on such an agreement for life services from one now deceased must first show either `full performance' as the plaintiff has claimed, or a readiness and willingness to perform, or a sufficient excuse for nonperformance, as a condition precedent to recovery" (Godburn v. Meserve,
The defendants further claim that a check for wages given the plaintiff by his mother on February 27, 1942, purporting to be in full payment to its date, would bar the plaintiff from any further recovery. The mother was alive and had not then sold the farm, consequently the plaintiff could not claim that he was entitled to it. He contended that only cash dealings were involved. The question was whether the check was given in full satisfaction of all unliquidated amounts due the plaintiff for services. There *543
was evidence from which the jury might have found that the check was tendered and received only in full satisfaction of a claim of the plaintiff for wages and that it did not concern the matter of the agreement to devise the farm by will. Blakeslee v. Water Commissioners,
The defendants have assigned error in denying the motion to set aside the verdict as excessive. They have not pursued the claim in their brief, and we do not consider it. For the reasons stated above, we find no error in the denial of the defendant's motion to set aside the verdict.
The defendants claim that the court in its charge to the jury failed to give any standard or guide whereby they could determine that the plaintiff had or had not fulfilled the condition of performance by him. No one of the assignments which comprise the claim refers to any particular paragraph of the charge, to any request to charge, or to any objection made at the termination of the charge. Without such reference these assignments of error are not properly before us. Practice Book 156. However, the court did give instructions which were sufficiently favorable to the defendants. It stated the plaintiff's claim that he had fully performed the agreement and the details of the defendants' claim that he had not done so, and it instructed the jury that, if they should conclude that he had failed to perform his part and that no act of the mother had brought that about or made it impossible for the plaintiff to perform, "then you could not find the plaintiff to be entitled to recover for services rendered in reliance upon the express agreement to leave the farm." The court further charged: "Of course if he proves the express agreement to leave the farm and fails to prove that he has performed *544 on his part, then he cannot recover." The defendants had requested a charge on the effect of the plaintiff's alleged failure fully to perform his part of the agreement. The request to charge was defective, but the court's charge was a sufficient compliance with it.
The plaintiff was a minor during the first five years of the period covered by his claim. In its instructions on the question of damages, the court charged upon the question of emancipation and told the jury, in effect, that if they found the plaintiff had not been emancipated he could not recover for any services rendered during that period. The defendants make the double claim that the court should not have charged on the subject at all, because there was no evidence of emancipation, and that the charge as given was erroneous. The contract, if made, was a sufficient indication that the parents assented that the plaintiff should have his earnings, and the charge fairly presented the law upon which the jury was to decide the question of emancipation.
The defendants have assigned error as to three rulings on evidence. None of them relates to evidence which reasonably could have affected the verdict, and even if erroneous are not ground for reversal. State v. Goldberger,
"The finding in a jury case is designed to present the claims of the parties as to the facts proved, for the purpose of testing the correctness of the charge and the rulings of the court." Fitzgerald v. Savin,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.