166 Wis. 323 | Wis. | 1917
The appellant seeks to reverse the judgment rendered upon several alleged errors assigned, which will be considered.
It appears from the record that Mrs. Thoni had also filed a claim against the estate and that the respondent here was a witness for her, and it is claimed by appellant that the testimony referred to was not competent and should have been excluded under sec. 4069, Stats. There was no error in admitting the evidence. The fact that Mrs. Thoni had filed a claim against the estate did not render her evidence incompetent. Moreover, during this conversation the respondent was not present, but the mother and two sisters were discussing plans, and it was talked between the mother and Mary' Ann that the respondent should have $1,000 for performing the services referred to in the claim filed by the respondent. The testimony of Mrs. Thoni was also corroborated by several other witnesses.
It is claimed by appellant that George Haines, witness for respondent, was permitted to testify, under objection, to a conversation between respondent and her mother, and that the witness exercised an influence in respect to this conversation; therefore his testimony should have been excluded under the rule of Holway v. Sanborn, 145 Wis. 151, 130 N. W. 95. The Holway Case is not controlling under the facts of the instant case. The Haines conversation, as appears from the record, was not a conversation between respondent and deceased, but was a conversation solely between Haines and the deceased, and, while it appears the respondent was present, she in no way participated in such conversation. An examination of the Solway Case shows that it has no bearing upon the instant case.
“I instruct you that if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff and her mother, from the 26th day of June, 1911, to the 8th day of April, 1912, lived together in the same house as one family, the relationship raises a presumption that any services performed by the plaintiff for her mother while they were living together in the same house as one family were intended to be rendered gratuitously, that is, without compensation; and in order to overcome that presumption it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to convince you that an express contract to compensate for such services was in fact made, and the law requires the plaintiff to establish such contract by evidence which is positive and direct, or by circumstantial evidence substantially equivalent to positive and direct testimony.”
There was no error in refusing this instruction for several reasons. In the first place it did not apply to any question in the special verdict, and for that reason, if for no other, it
Complaint is made because the court failed to instruct the jury particularly on the rule of value of services. Counsel for appellant asked no instruction upon this point, and in the absence of such request the court was not obliged- to give more specific instructions. However, the instruction was immaterial and not prejudicial because the claim was for an agreed amount.
It is also said that the court should have instructed on the preponderance of the evidence under this head. No such
By the Gourt. — Judgment affirmed.