25 S.E. 1014 | Va. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
• This is a suit instituted in the circuit court of Roanoke county by the appellee, Mary Woodson, against the appellant, the personal representative and heirs of William M. Utz,
The appeal may be disposed of upon the merits of the cause, without a review of the numerous authorities cited by counsel in support of the demurrer to the bill. Appellee’s proof upon the main question consists of her own deposition, to which no objection was made until the conclusion of her examination,
On the other hand, the proof is that the appellee lived with Utz in the capacity of a servant; that he paid her wages, charging her with what she received from him and what he paid out for her, and refused, on a number of occasions, to pay money for her until it became due to her for wages. She attempts, however, to show that he only paid her wages for cooking after the family of Mrs. Hannah came to live in the house with Utz, some five years before he died ; but the proof
It should be borne in mind that Utz never owned at any time but an undivided half interest in the Wavei’ly farm. While the proof is that Utz said to a number of persons, during his life, that he intended to give appellee a place, it is not shown by any witness that he ever mentioned any bargain or contract by which he was bound to her for any particular piece of property, or for the payment of any money at his death. Eldridge Carter (colored), who had been Utz’s foreman on the Waverly farm for 22 years prior to the latter’s death, and necessarily thrown with appellee frequently, testifies that, while he heard Utz say that he intended to give her the house and lot where her family was living, he never said at any time how much land he intended to give her with the house, nor did he or appellee ever mention to witness any contract or agreement between them; and witness never heard of the alleged contract by which appellee was to have 25 acres adjoining the house and lot, $10,000, and Utz’s household furniture, until after Utz’s death. This witness further testifies that appellee told him of the conversation she had with Mrs. Hannah and Mrs. Utz, immediately after it took place, on the morning after Utz’s
If it be a fact that appellee is the natural child of the decedent, Utz, under the policy of our law, it adds nothing to the strength of her claim asserted in this suit, however persuasive it may be in considering the probabilities that the alleged contract was in fact entered into. It would seem that, if Utz designed to make any such provision for appellee as the alleged contract embodied, he would have made it by a writing duly executed, or would have had it witnessed by reliable persons of intelligence, at least, and would not have contented himself with the loose declarations that have been testified to as having