74 A. 875 | N.H. | 1909
It is argued that the court erred in allowing, by way of set-off, the defendants' account for the board of the plaintiff and her children while she was a minor, because during that time she was under guardianship. This contention is based upon strict and literal construction of section 25, chapter 177, Public Statutes, which provides that "no contract of any nature whatever, made by a person under guardianship, after the appointment and during the continuance of the guardianship, shall be valid in law." But as the court remark in McCrillis v. Bartlett,
As the statute was evidently enacted for the protection of wards against their improvidence, the legislative purpose, as explained more than seventy years ago in McCrillis v. Bartlett, cannot now be overcome by technical reasoning based on verbal refinement. Having received food and lodging from the defendants with the understanding that the necessaries thus furnished should be paid for, and not deemed a gift, the plaintiff became bound by an implied promise to pay the defendants what the accommodation was reasonably worth. The fact that she was under guardianship did not deprive her of any legal ability she otherwise had to provide for her reasonable sustenance. Although she was a minor, it is not claimed that the common law relating to minors prevents them from incurring obligations by implication of law which inure to their benefit. Hall v. Butterfield,
The facts reported necessarily imply a finding, and are based upon the fact, that under the circumstances attending her situation the food and lodging furnished her by the defendants were *387
necessary. This fact is involved in the general finding; and as the competency of the evidence to support such a finding is not questioned, its existence as a fact must be assumed, upon the general principle that a verdict is presumed to be supported by the evidence unless the contrary appears; or, as otherwise stated, that the excepting party must show that it is unsupported as a legal deduction from the evidence. Concord Coal Co. v. Ferrin,
The plaintiff makes the additional contention that no promise on her part can be implied because of the family relationship existing between her and the defendants; or in other words, that the board was furnished gratuitously. Although she was a daughter-in-law of the defendants, it does not appear that she was a member of their family, sharing in "the mutuality of the benefits rendered and received by the members of a single family." Page v. Page,
Whether there is a distinction in law between her liability for the board of her children and that of herself, which is material in *388 this case, is a question that does not appear to have been considered at the trial; and as it has not been argued by her in this court that such a distinction exists, it is presumed that she did not desire to litigate that question.
Exception overruled.
All concurred.