84 Vt. 255 | Vt. | 1911
This is a probate appeal. The plaintiff Tor ought a claim against the defendant estate for services rendered to her mother, the intestate,- from June 1896, to May 1904, a period of about eight years. In county court trial by jury was had, and verdict was returned for the plaintiff to recover seven hundred and fifty dollars. The principal question reserved by the exceptions is whether or not a motion made
A. C. Powers and Juliana D. Powers were father and mother of the plaintiff. During the most of the time in question these parents lived on • a small place, worth about fifteen hundred dollars, situated in the town of Proctor. The title of the place was in Mrs. Powers. After becoming of age the plaintiff, until her marriage, remained for the most part at the home of her parents, rendering services in the way of house work, and of sewing and mending, and at times in the way of care for her father and mother in sickness. At various times, however, she was elsewhere, sometimes on visits, sometimes doing sewing, and at one time teaching school. In. May 1904, Gertrude married, moved away, and has since lived in Granville, New York. The uncontradicted evidence was that at the time of her marriage she was twenty-eight years old. At that time her father was eighty-two years old and her mother was seventy-six. This elderly couple continued to live on the home place until about four years after the plaintiff had married and moved away, when they died almost simultaneously, the father March 5, 1908, and the mother five days thereafter.
The evidence of a neighbor, Mr. Shangraw, was to the effect that not long before Mrs. Powers died and frequently at previous times, both before and after the marriage of Gertrude, Mrs. Powers said to him that Gertrude always lived with her parents, and that she should have what was left after they got through with it, that it belonged to her, that she had earned it, that she had done enough for them so that after they got through with the property she was going to have it. In her last sickness Mrs. Powers was attended by a professional nurse and to this attendant Mrs. Powers, some three or four days before her death talked of her daughter, Gertrude, and the mother then further said that she always meant that Gertrude should have the home place when the parents were through with it. Mr. Shangraw, before referred to, testified that he had advised Mrs. Powers to deed the property to Gertrude if she was to have it and that Mrs. Powers said she was going to, but that shortly after saying this she died.
Where services are rendered by a child to a parent or by a parent to a child an implied promise to pay for the services is not inferred from the mere fact that they have been performed. The fact that a child lives and boards and works with the parent after becoming of age does not of itself give the parent any claim against the child for board nor does it give the child any claim against the parent for services. Reasons of public and domestic policy forbid. And so our cases following one upon another in a long line of decisions have established the rule that to warrant recovery by a child from a parent for services rendered, they must have been rendered either under an express contract or with a mutual understanding and expectation of payment, though such contract or such understanding and expectation may be inferred from circumstances.
The relation of master and servant or of debtor and creditor must in some way be substituted for, or added to, the mere relation of parent and child. Fitch v. Peckham, 16 Vt. 151; Andrus v. Foster, 17 Vt. 556; Davis v. Goodnew, 27 Vt. 715; Putnam v. Town, 34 Vt. 429; Sprague v. Waldo, 38 Vt. 139; Lunay v. Vantyne, 40 Vt. 501; Harris v. Currier, 44 Vt. 468; Doane v. Doane, 46 Vt. 485; Sawyer v. Hebard, 58 Vt. 375, 3 Atl. 529; Wescott v. Wescott, 69 Vt. 234, 39 Atl. 199.
Stress is laid in argument upon the fact that in speaking
If the mother’s intentions were what the testimony referred to tended to show, she failed to carry them into effect. For the law cannot distribute a parent’s estate among children by weighing the relative degree of care and assistance which they respectively have afforded to the parent.
Judgment reversed and judgment that the plaintiff’s claim be disallowed with costs. Let the result be certified to the probate court.