98 Neb. 380 | Neb. | 1915
From a decree of tbe district court for Platte county, awarding plaintiff specific performance of an alleged parol
The above statement contains, substantially, the allegations in the petition as to the contract upon which plaintiff relies. She then alleges compliance on her part with the terms of the contract. Mr. Zeigler died without keeping his part of the agreement. Defendant Webster is the administrator of his estate, and the other defendants are brothers and sisters and children of a deceased sister of the decedent Zeigler. The substance of the answer of the defendant Webster, administrator, is that he admits the plaintiff performed services for the decedent and his wife within the period of three years preceding his death; that deceased left an estate of the value of about $60,000; that be is informed that bis codefendants deny the rights asserted by plaintiff in her petition; that he is without knowledge as to the allegations of the petition, and therefore denies the same. The answering heirs allege, substantially, that the services rendered by plaintiff for the decedent, which formed the basis for the claim, if any, which plaintiff had, and which she alleges she abandoned at the time she made the parol agreement under which she seeks to recover, were rendered for plaintiff and one Edward A. Gerrard, a copartnership. They admit that plaintiff rendered service, under the direction of the decedent, as a nurse for his wife in her last illness and in nursing and caring for the decedent himself in his last illness; admit that they claim the entire estate of the decedent by virtue of the laws of descent of this state; admit that plaintiff is in possession of the home place above referred to, but
The brief assigns eight specific errors for reversal, the second being that the judgment is unsupported by the evidence, and the seventh that the district court exceeded its power in allowing plaintiff’s claim of $5,000 and interest, and assuming to distribute funds in the hands of the administrator and within the exclusive jurisdiction of the county court. A consideration of these two assignments involves sufficient of the record to dispose of the other six.
The witness Selzer testified that he had known decedent for 30 years and plaintiff since 1891; had worked on the ranch referred to during the last 21 years that it was operated; that, after the ranch was discontinued, decedent said he was going to move down to Columbus and have plaintiff keep house for him; “That he was going to give her this home property and $5,000. * * * Q. What was she to do for that? A. Maintain this house and take care of him.” That plaintiff remained with and kept house for decedent until the time of his death, October 14, 1911; that decedent said he had never given plaintiff any money or paid her anything; that she-had been responsible for his accumulating property; that he never had as good success as he had now. He further testified that the agreement to give plaintiff the home place and $5,000 in money was talked over by decedent in plaintiff’s presence while they and the witness were “eating at the table, all three of us, after we moved down here;” that decedent told him he had traded off a house, which belonged to plaintiff, for lumber to put into his new house, and that he received $850 for it.
Mrs. Elizabeth Schmid testified that she was acquainted with the parties; that decedent sold off the stock on the ranch and moved to Columbus in 1909, after the death of his wife; that plaintiff went to Columbus and lived at the Zeigler residence thereafter; that she did the housework and cooking; took care of decedent and nursed him all through his sickness; that she (witness) frequently visited at the Zeigler home after plaintiff and Zeigler
Dan J. Echols testified that he knew decedent in his lifetime; knew the place where he lived in town; that in 1910 decedent told him that plaintiff had worked for him a number of years; had done her work well and was one of the best women to work he had ever known; that when he died he intended to name her in his will and give her $5,000 and the home place; that she was going to stay with him until he died.
Jacob Schmid testified that decedent talked to him about plaintiff, and said “he intended Miss Lacey to have $5,000 and the home place;” that at the time decedent told him that “we was washing him off, tending to his arms, and Miss Lacey went into the kitchen, and he told me that, and when he told me that he said she is an awful good woman;” that plaintiff remained at Zeigler’s home until his death.
Fred Elias testified that decedent had told him he had received $800 for plaintiff’s house, which he traded to lumbermen for lumber to go into his own new house.
The above testimony stands uncontradicted and unimpeached. It is strengthened by the admission in the answer of defendants that plaintiff rendered service under the direction of the decedent as a nurse for his wife in her last illness, and in nursing and taking care of the decedent himself in his last illness; and that they are willing and anxious that plaintiff should be amply compensated for all services rendered by her on account of the decedent or his wife. Mr. and Mrs. Zeigler died childless. The defendants are brothers and sisters and children of a deceased sister, all nonresidents of Nebraska during the time of the illness of Mr. and Mrs. Zeigler. Plaintiff in the hour of decedent’s need was the one to whom he turned for services of a character which would have been hard to secure from strangers. The testimony of these witnesses clearly shows that she was faithful at every point; that she rendered services, the value of which it would be impossible to estimate in dollars and cents. Decedent knew plaintiff. She had been in his employ for 18 years at the ranch before he brought her to Columbus. He knew the kind of housekeeper and cook she was, and understood more than anyone else the character of the services which she would be able to render. He fixed the value of those services at $5,000 and the home place in Columbus. He was worth, as alleged in the petition, $80,000, and, as admitted by the administrator in his answer, about $60,000. Under such circumstances we certainly cannot say that the court erred in sustaining the value which decedent himself placed upon those services. We think the evidence
The question raised by the seventh assignment of error is not so difficult of solution as it might at first appear. Section 16, art. VI of the Constitution, provides: “County courts shall be courts of record, and shall have original jurisdiction in all matters of probate, settlements of estates of deceased persons, appointments of guardians, and settlement of their accounts; in all matters relating to apprentices; and such other jurisdiction as may be given by the general law. But they shall not have jurisdiction * * * in actions in which title to real estate is sought to be recovered, or may be drawn in question.” It is urged by defendants that the district court was without jurisdiction to render judgment against the administrator on account of services rendered for deceased for the amount of the money consideration to be paid therefor, and directing such judgment to operate “as an established claim against the estate of said deceased,” and that the judgment to that extent is therefore void. It is argued that the county court is alone invested with the jurisdiction to determine such a matter; that the county court in this instance had actually acquired jurisdiction of the res by the appointment of the administrator. ' A number of decisions of this court are referred to in support of this contention. An examination of the cases cited will show that none of them is applicable to a case like the one under consideration. We have repeatedly held that the county court is the court of original jurisdiction in which claims against decedents’ estates must be filed and adjudicated, but it will be found in every such case that there was involved a separate and distinct matter which the county-court could in the exercise of its jurisdiction dispose of in its entirety. We have never held that where the matter involved is a single contract on the part of a claimant for
Doubtless, other authorities could be found, but tbe proposition appears to us so plain that we have not made further search therefor. We therefore bold that tbe district court bad jurisdiction to bear and determine tbe controversy between tbe parties, in its entirety.
It was within its jurisdiction to order specific performance of the contract as -to tbe money part of tbe consideration, to advise tbe county court, by tbe certificate wbicb it ordered its clerk to send to that court, of tbe finding of tbe district court as to tbe amount wbicb it bad found due
We deem it unnecessary to consider the assignment that the decedent was mentally incompetent, as there is an entire failure of evidence to show that his mental incompetency existed at the time he made his contract with plaintiff. At that time, and for many months thereafter, he was transacting his business as usual, and was clearly not in such mental condition as to render him incompetent to make a contract of the kind set out. Nor. do we think there is any merit in the assignment that the service proved was not referable to any contract alleged. The fifth assignment, under which the defendants seek to cast a stain upon their brother, from whom they are inheriting this large estate which they did not help to earn, is not worthy of consideration. The proof utterly fails to establish it, and, even if it were established, that fact would not militate against the right of the decedent to make the contract alleged. The evidence fails to establish the sixth assignment, that the contract was the product of plaintiff’s undue influence over decedent. The eighth assignment, that there was a defect of parties defendant, must fail, for the reason that it is immaterial that decedent may have been jointly interested with Mr: Gerrard in the ranch upon which plaintiff worked for 18 years before she rendered the services for which she now seeks to recover. We have limited our consideration to the services performed by plaintiff for decedent and his wife in the last illness of each. The amount which decedent agreed to pay plaintiff in money and property for those services was not, under the circumstances shown, “unconscionable.” The compensation agreed to be paid for such services was not considered excessive by Mr. Zeigler, nor do we so consider it.
Fnding no error in the record, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.