189 Iowa 379 | Iowa | 1920
I. The account sued on began more than 40 years ago, and had fully accrued more than 14 years ago. The more prominent questions involved in the case are:
(1) The title of the plaintiffs to the alleged cause of action.
(2) The avoidance of the statute of limitations.
(3) The incompetency of the chief witness for the plaintiffs to testify, under the inhibition of Code Section 4604.
We have first to consider and to construe the petition of the plaintiffs. It avers as follows:
“That, at the time of the death of the said Neis Jacobson, he was indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of $3,900, and interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent per annum since November 28, 1904, by virtue of the following facts, to wit:
*382 “That, on and between June 1, 1878, and November 25, 1904, both dates inclusive, one Melinda Jacobson, the grandmother of the plaintiffs, performed labor and services as housekeeper for the decedent, at his request, of the reasonable and agreed value of $3,900.
“That, on November 25, 1904, the said Melinda Jacobson died intestate, in Hamilton County, Iowa, leaving her daughter, Bertha Mortenson, her sole heir at law.
“That, on said November 25, 1904, the decedent, in consideration of the debt then due from him to the estate of Melinda Jacobson, did promise to pay the said sum of $3,900, with legal interest, to the said Bertha Mortenson or her heirs and assigns, payable upon the death of decedent.
“That, on June 6, 1913, the said Bertha Mortenson died intestate, in Hamilton County, Iowa, leaving her heirs at law Ole M. Mortenson, her husband, and these plaintiffs.
“That, at various times subsequent to the death of Bertha Mortenson, the deceased, Neis Jacobson, recognized and affirmed the debt due from him to Melinda and Bertha, as aforesaid; and particularly, on or about October 24, 1917, the said Neis Jacobson, at Hamilton County, Iowa, in consideration of the debt due to Melinda and Bertha, as aforesaid, did promise and agree to pay to these plaintiffs the amount due Melinda at the time of her death, to wit, the sum of $3,900, with legal interest since November 25, 1904, the same to be payable upon the death of the said Neis Jacobson.”
,Later, an amendment to the petition was filed, as follows:
“That, on or about November 25, 1904, the decedent, in consideration of the services performed for him by Melinda Jacobson in her lifetime, did promise to pay to the children of Bertha Mortenson who should survive the decedent, the plaintiffs herein, in the event that the said Bertha Mortenson should predecease the said Neis Jacobson, the sum of $3,900, with legal interest, the same to be payable upon the death of the decedent,”
Construing the petition in the light of the evidence offered in support of its allegations, it appears from such evidence that the alleged promise of November 25, 1904, was made two days after the death of Melinda, and was made to Bertha and Ole Mortenson; and that the alleged promise of October 24, 1917, was made to Ole Mortenson, the father of these plaintiffs.
Analyzing the petition, it pleads the following successive contracts:
(1) A contract with Melinda for her services at $3.00 per week.
(2) A contract with Bertha, after the death of Melinda, whereby the decedent agreed to pay to Bertha and to her heirs and assigns, at the death of decedent, the amount due Melinda.
(3) A contract with Bertha that the decedent would pay such debt to such of the children of Bertha as should survive the decedent.
(4) The contract of October, 1917, with Ole Mortenson, that the decedent would pay such debt to the surviving children of Bertha.
The plaintiffs have rested their claim upon the third and fourth contracts above stated, and not upon the first or second.
The defendant pleaded a genei’al denial and the statute of limitations and a defect of parties, in that Ole Mortenson was a necessary party, as the only heir of Melinius Mortenson, and as the surviving husband of Bertha.
The difficulties confronting the plaintiffs are that, if
The theory put forward by the plaintiffs is that the original contract between Neis and Melinda furnished a consideration for the subsequent promises, and that these subsequent promises had the effect to toll the running of the statute of limitations.
Taking the testimony on behalf of plaintiffs, Melinda had been in the service of the decedent up to the time of her last illness. This last illness continued for many months, during which she was in charge of a nurse. It is manifest, therefore, that her cause of action, if any, had accrued either at the time of her death or some months prior thereto. Suppose it be true, therefore, that, after the death of Melinda, Neis promised Bertha that he would pay her the indebtedness at the time of his death. Would such promise toll the statute of limitations which was already running? If yea, then a promise that he would pay it within 10 years would be equally effective. We suspect that counsel would hardly contend for this latter hypothesis, as sufficient to toll the statute. But if not, why. not? What reason can be given for saying that an oral promise to pay an accrued debt at the time of promisor’s death would toll the statute, and that a like promise to pay at the expiration of 10 years would not toll the same? The statute expressly provides the methods and conditions under which the running of the statute is tolled. Among others, a written promise or a written acknowledgment is provided. No authority is .cited to us wherein it has ever been held that an oral promise to pay at a later date will
If such subsequent promise could not have been pleaded as a good defense against her, neither is it available as . a cause of action in her favor or in favor of her boys.
Even if the new promise made by Neis had been in writing, duly signed, it would not constitute a new cause of action. It would be effective, under the statute, only to revive the original cause of action, or to extend its life by tolling the statute of limitations and starting it anew. This is the settled law in this state. Frisbee v. Seaman, 49 Iowa 95; Bayliss v. Street, 51 Iowa 627.
In Price v. Price, 34 Iowa 404, a subsequent oral promise by the debtor was relied on, which deferred the maturity of the debt to a future time, when the creditor “should get married.” That is to say, the debtor made a subsequent promise to pay the debt when the creditor “should get married,” and the creditor assented thereto. It was held that such alleged new contract was ineffective, and not binding upon either party, in that it lacked consideration, either of benefit to the one or prejudice to the other. To put it in another way, such an agreement does not
Applying the holding in the Price case to the alleged agreement first made with Bertha on November 25 (or 27), 1904, whereby Neis agreed to pay the amount due the estate of Melinda at the time of his own death, nothing was gained or lost by either party. Without such promise, the estate of Neis would be liable for the debt, if such, unless it were sooner extinguished, either by payment or by the statute of limitations. With such promise, such liability was neither greater nor less.
The alleged promise of October 24, 1917, was made 4 years after the death of Bertha. But the statute had fully run before the death of Bertha. Such oral promise was not sufficient to revive the original cause of action, as held in the Price case, supra; nor was it sufficient to constitute a new cause of action, as held in the Frislee and Bayliss cases, supra.
In proof of the original contract between Neis and Melinda, Ole Mortenson testified to a conversation held in 1890 or 189Í, on the “east side of Nel’s house,” as follows:
“A. Melinda and I were talking of the way she came to work for Uncle Neis. Uncle Neis came from the house and stopped, and she repeated the conversation. She said, when Uncle Neis bought the .farm, he sent for her to come*388 as a housekeeper, and that he would pay her the same as she had worked at. Uncle Neis said, ‘That is right.’ She said she had $3.00 a week, and when she came there, Uncle Neis offered her the same, and that is the way she came to work for Uncle Neis; and Neis said, ‘That is right.’ ”
He testified also to a conversation with Neis, “two days after she [Melinda] died,” as follows:
- “A. Neis says: ‘I will take care of Melinda as a sister. I will give her a funeral. She has been working for me 26 years, and I have paid her nothing. What I owe Melinda shall go to Bertha and her boys.’ ”
He also testified to a conversation overheard by him between Bertha and Neis, as follows:
“A. Bertha asked Uncle Neis how much he owed her mother. Neis said, ‘I owe her $3.00 a week, with interest.’ He said in Norwegian, ‘Interest and interest interest.’ Bertha said she would not be hard on him, and said, ‘You can give me a paper.’ Neis says, ‘No, you — if you live— or your boys shall have it after I die. It can be paid when I die.’ ”
He testified also to a conversation between him and Neis, had on the evening of the day before Bertha died, as follows:
“He said, ‘I would have settled with Bertha, but I didn’t, and I am going to settle with the boys.’ He says, ‘If you will take care of what you have got, you have got enough. I don’t want you to have anything, but what little there is, is going to go to her boys.’ He said that more than once, that I shouldn’t have a cent of his estate.”
At this time, the six sons of Bertha were living. The next alleged conversation testified to by him was had in October, 1917, as follows:
“A. He said: ‘If anything should happen me between now and then, I will either write you or wire you. I have found out that the court will allow these boys all earnings of my sister that worked for me.’ He said, ‘Figure her wages $3.00 a week, with interest and interest interest, and be sure that you get it figured or figure it.’ He said, ‘You*389 can get somebody that knows how to figure it.’ He told me to take the first year with my given amount, and there will be no interest on it, but you put that out at interest the next year, and you add a little interest to it, 6 per cent, or whatever it may be, and from then on until the time it expires.”
He testified also to the next conversation as having been had with Neis on the day of his death, as follows:
“A. He said that I should close the door; he wanted to talk to me alone. He told me that I should go get the key for a little chest he had that he had money in and some papers, a bank certificate, but how much he didn’t say, but he said he had $265 in money. He says, ‘You go and get the key and open that chest, and take that money for your expense coming down to see me.’ He said: ‘I have been worried all night that I have even dreamed about it; and I am sorry that I didn’t get this fixed up between me and the boys before now. I dreamed about it that the Jacob-sons will tear everything to pieces for the boys.’ ”
Morten Mortenson, one of the plaintiffs, testified to a conversation between Neis and Bertha in 1904, as follows:
“I remember the conversation between my mother and Neis. I did not take- part in the conversation. It was in. the kitchen. He was washing the cream cans. He said, ‘Melinda is dead, and I paid her nothing for this; but if you live over me, you shall have what is left, and if you don’t, and I live over you,’ he says, ‘I will make it to your boys, and have what is hers.’ ”
The witness was 8 years of age at the time of such conversation. This witness testified also to a conversation had in January, 1918, between Neis and one Carl, his hired man, as follows:
“A. Carl asked Neis what he would do -with the property. He said, T ain’t got nothing made up. And when you are dead,’ he said, ‘it will be all torn up.’ Neis said he knows where it is going. He says: ‘It will all be taken care of. You don’t need to worry about that. The agreement between Melinda and I was that, if she lived over I,*390 she should get it, and if she died and Bertha lived over us, she should get it. Now both of them are dead,’ he says, ‘and I am left, and the agreement was that Bertha’s children should have what is left for her work.’ And he paid her nothing for the. time she had been there, and she should have $3.00 a week, with interest, for 26 years. That was between 10 and 11 o’clock at night. * * * ‘Now,’ he [Carl] said, ‘you ain’t got no papers made, and it will be all torn up.’ ‘Don’t worry,’ he said, ‘about that.’ He said, ‘That is all fixed.’ He said: ‘The agreement between Melinda and I that, if Melinda lives over me, she .is to have it, and if Bertha lives over me, she is to have it; and now they are both gone, and the agreement was between Melinda and I to pay Bertha’s children.’ ”
It will be seen from the foregoing testimony that it disclosed no diminution or qualification of the title of Melinda as sole payee of the debt due her for her services;' nor. of the later title of Bertha as sole heir of Melinda; nor of the title of Bertha’s boys as her only heirs, and of her surviving husband as such. It is clear, therefore, that, if this claim had escaped the bar of limitations, the title thereto would have passed, subject to administration, to the surviving husband and heirs of Bertha. ’
Some references contained in the foregoing testimony find their explanation in other conceded facts. Neis was an unmarried man. He died intestate, leaving property consisting, in the main, of a farm of 80 acres. His only heirs were the children of his only brother, and these grandchildren of his only sister Melinda. In other words, “Bertha’s boys” would take, under the law, one half of the estate. In so far, therefore, as the petition purports to show a deflection of the title of this claim from the legal line of inheritance, it is not sustained by the evidence.
“(2) That Neis Jacobson agreed and promised that he-would cause compensation to be paid, for such work and labor, to Melinda Jacobson personally, in the event that he should die before she did; but, in the event that he should survive the said Melinda Jacobson, but should die before the death of Bertha Mortenson, then, in such event, on his death, he would cause said compensation to be-made personally to Bertha Mortenson; but, in the event that he should survive both Melinda Jacobson and Bertha Mortenson, then, in such event, compensation, on his death, for said services for said work and labor, should be paid to the children of the said Bertha Mortenson.”
No question pertaining to the operation of the statute of limitations was submitted to the jury.
It will be noted from an analysis of this instruction that it was predicated upon the hypothesis that the original agreement between Neis and Melinda not only deferred payment of the claim until the death of Neis, but that it qualified the title of Melinda, so that she could not have controlled the disposition of the claim by will or otherwise. The twofold objection to this hypothesis is:
(1) That it has no support in the petition.
(2) That it has none in the evidence.
The submission of the case on this hypothesis doubtless explains why the question of the statute of limitations was not submitted to the jury.
The foregoing is, perhaps, a sufficient discussion of the questions presented by pleading and evidence to indicate the reasons for the conclusions which we reach. By way of recapitulation, these conclusions may be specified as follows:
(1) The title of Melinda Jacobson to the original claim now sued on was unqualified and unconditional, and was fully accrued and payable at the time of her death.
(2) That Bertha succeeded to such title, subject to the rights of administration.
(4) That the statute of limitations had fully' run against such claim, long before the death of Bertha.
(5) That the alleged promises subsequent to the death of Melinda to make payment at a deferred time were wholly ineffective, either to toll the statute of limitations or to constitute new causes of action.
(7)The defendant’s objections and his motion to strike should have been sustained, as to much of the evidence of Ole Mortenson.
(8)The defendant’s motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained.