196 Ky. 618 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Josie McWhorter sued J. H. Copien, administrator with the will annexed of H. R. Pitman, deceased, to recover the sum of $1,500.00, alleged to be due for services rendered the decedent and his wife. Her petition was dismissed and she appeals.
Appellant, who was the niece of H. R. Pitman and an orphan, lived with, the Pitmans upon their farm in Graves county until she was about twenty-two years of
Appellant’s claim for services covers not only the two periods when she and the Pitmans lived together on the farm and in Mayfield, but the period when the Pitmans lived by themselves in Mayfield, as well as the period between Mrs. Pitman’s death and the death of the decedent It may be conceded that during the time appellant lived with the Pitmans, she not only performed the household work but was very attentive to Mrs. Pitman. But as the ease is one where the parties were not only near relatives, but lived in the same household, and the services were not of an extraordinary or menial character, such as nursing a person afflicted with a loathsome disease, the law regards such services as gratuitous, and no recovery therefor can be had unless an express contract be shown by stricter proof than is required in the case of an ordinary contract. Humble v. Humble, 152 Ky. 160, 153 S. W. 249; Bolling v. Bolling’s Admr., 146 Ky. 313, 142 S. W. 387, Am. Ann. Cas. 1913C 306; Allen v. Allen, 158 Ky. 760, 166 S. W. 211. While appellant proved that the decedent said to various witnesses that he did not
Coming to the last two periods when appellant did not live with the Pitmans, we are inclined to view the proof as insufficient to show that any services were rendered for which both parties intended and expected that compensation should be paid. While there was some evidence that she was frequently at the home of the Pitmans and performed services for them, it must not he overlooked that during that period she not only gave birth to five children, hut was regularly engaged in the performance of her own work, and that during four years of the time the Pitmans employed a woman who did the household work and looked after Mrs. Pitman. Not only so, bn't many of the neighbors who were in a position to know say that appellant’s services were few and . far between, and that she did no more than the other neighbors, who frequently went to the home of the Pit-mans and waited on them while there. On the whole, we see no reason to disturb the finding of the chancellor.
Judgment affirmed.