278 N.W. 680 | Mich. | 1938
On an appeal from probate to circuit court plaintiff had verdict and judgment of $1,732 for money loaned to, and services performed for, his deceased father. The executor of the estate of decedent appeals and asks for a reversal of the judgment on the ground that plaintiff's claim was barred by the statute of limitations (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13976); and that there was no evidence of a contract between plaintiff and decedent.
When plaintiff was 21 years old, in 1912, deceased suffered an accident causing injury to his spine. Plaintiff, his son, thereupon managed decedent's farm for approximately seven years until the time *547 when the other children of decedent had grown up. Plaintiff afterward went to Bay City where he secured a job.
In 1923, four years after plaintiff had left the farm, the deceased came to see him and induced him to leave his job and come back and manage the farm. He acceded to his father's request and worked on the farm during the following four years.
Plaintiff's father died November 12, 1935. Three days prior to that time he informed his daughter that he owed plaintiff money and that he wanted to pay him. Deceased expressed the fear that he himself might be obliged to go to the poor house, and he did not know how long he was going to live, but that "he was going to pay him in the end." Decedent also told two of his other sons in the presence of plaintiff during the month before he died, that he owed plaintiff money but that he couldn't pay him at that time because he might live for a long time. Three years before, in 1932, deceased told his son Edward that he was indebted to the plaintiff and stated:
"I want to pay Chester for the work and the money he let me take. Of course, I couldn't pay him now, because I might live 20 years or more, and I don't know when I will die."
On other occasions deceased told members of his family that as long as he lived he would "hang on to the money, but he said he wanted Chester to be paid."
In re Pierson's Estate,
In Decker v. Kanous' Estate,
While it is not necessary to prove an express contract in terms, in claims for services against the estates of decedents, there must be proof at least of an implied contract, and in case of services performed by a member of the family, there must be enough in the record to overcome the presumption arising from the family relation. Decker v. Kanous' Estate,supra.
In Pupaza v. Laity,
Testimony and evidence presented a question of fact for the determination of the jury in the present *549 case. Under instructions from the trial court, the jury found that there was a contract between decedent and plaintiff. Because of the fact that there was evidence that payment was not to have been made until the death of deceased, the claim was not barred by the statute of limitations.
"There was some evidence from which the jury might find that the services were not to be paid for until the death of the decedent, and in such case the statute would not begin to run until such decease." Pupaza v. Laity, supra.
With regard to the presumption that services performed by a child for his parent are gratuitous, it was said in the case ofIn re Abel's Estate,
"It is not essential to a recovery by a child for services rendered to a parent, that a formal contract be established in relation thereto; but if the facts and circumstances attending the performance of the work and its acceptance are sufficient to rebut the presumption that the services were gratuitous and to authorize the inference that both parties acted under the understanding that they were to be paid for, the parent is liable."
In the case of In re Hoffman's Estate,
"The presumption that services rendered to a mother by a daughter are gratuitous is not of itself destroyed by the fact that they were not members of the same household, yet this fact weakens the presumption, and it may be regarded as giving support to other facts tending to establish an implied contract." *550
At the time of performance of the services in this case, plaintiff was a married man and did not belong to his father's household. He returned from Bay City to the farm, in response to his father's request, at a time when the other children were leaving the farm. Statements of decedent acknowledging his obligation to his son and expressing an intention that he would pay claimant "in the end" for his services, were made to decedent's other children in the presence of the plaintiff.
There are no suspicious circumstances respecting the testimony of witnesses for the claimant. They were members of the same family and the establishment of plaintiff's claim would be to their disadvantage. Under the evidence, the question of whether the services which plaintiff performed for his father were gratuitous was a question of fact for the jury.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
WIEST, C.J., and BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, POTTER, CHANDLER, and NORTH, JJ., concurred. *551