108 N.Y.S. 1024 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The plaintiff brings this action, and allege's that “ heretofore, and on or about the 10th day of September, 1894, Ellen Eice requested the plaintiff to come and reside with her, the said Ellen Eice, * * * for the purpose of acting as a companion, and to take care of her, the said Ellen Eice, in her declining years, and plaintiff thereupon, at the express instance and request of the said Ellen Eice, thereupon took up her residence * * * and thereafter and from the 10th day of September, 1894, until the death of said Ellen Eice on May 9th, 1905, acted as the companion and housekeeper of the said Ellen Eice, and during all that time performed services as housekeeper, cook, secretary and companion, which services were reasonably worth the sum of twenty dollars per month ; .that to induce the plaintiff to render such services without immediate compensation, the said Ellen Eice frequently stated to
At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that the “ plaintiff has not proven the causé of action set forth in the complaint, and there is no proof here at all of any request on the part of the plaintiff, in September, 1894, or at any other time; and as to the nursirig and the alleged second cause of action, there is no proof at. all that there was any request, of any kind or any promise or -agreement or understanding for extra compensation.” The court granted the motion as to the second cause of action. Defendant’s counsel then continued: “ The complaint sets forth a request, or contract,, or agreement entered into at the time this plaintiff went there. The only testimony- in her own case to support that is testimony, which fails to 'support it and contradicts it;„so -that- Ido not think the question should be-submitted to the jury.” ■ The court pointed out the- general rule of law, suggested that there was evidence in support of the plaintiff’s-'first cause of action arid declared an ititeritiqn of sending the case to the jury. To this defendants counsel took an "exception. The motion to dismiss was not renewed at the close of the case, after defendant had called Witnesses, and the- Case was submitted to the . -jury upon a charge to which the defendant took „no exception, all of the deferidant’s requests to charge being granted-.. Upon- the jury rendering a verdict for the plaintiff, defendant inoved for a new trial upon the minutes,'this motion-being denied, hut the ¡order was
The plaintiff in this action was not a relative of the testatrix; she was shown by disinterested witnesses to have gone into the home of the testatrix, an old woman, living rather meanly, and to have performed the services of a maid, companion, nurse, etc., during a long series of years, during which time she received only fifteen dollars in money. The plaintiff produced witnesses to testify that the testatrix had at various times declared in the presence of the plaintiff and the witnesses that the plaintiff was to be compensated for her work by a provision in the will of the testatrix, and the court charged the jury, without exception on the part of the defendant, that under such circumstances there was a presumption of law that the services were' to be compensated for. This is undoubtedly the law; it became the law of this case by acquiescence on the part of the defendant, and unless there are valid exceptions upon the trial the judgment must be affirmed.
The appellant urges that the proofs are at variance with the facts alleged in the complaint, and the exceptions, taken relate to this proposition. The defendant insists that the complaint set forth an express contract, and that the proof only goes to establish, if anything, an implied contract. As we read the complaint it does not allege an express contract. A contract is express when the agreement is formal, and stated either verbally or in writing, and is implied when the agreement is matter of inference and deduction.
An examination of the exceptions shows no reversible' error, and the judgment appealed from should stand.
Jeniis, Hooíiee, Gaynob and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.- . .'