16 N.Y.S. 77 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The plaintiff made a claim against the estate of the testator for services performed by his wife between the 20th of December, 1877, and the 5th of November, 1888, in caring for and attending to him as a consumptive invalid, and for expenses paid on his account, and also for cream furnished to him between the 4th of July, 1886, to the same time in 1888. By the consent of the parties and the approval of the surrogate the case was referred to a referee for trial and determination, and he reported in favor of the claimant for the sum of $7,599.52, with interest. By his report be allowed for the services rendered to the executor in this manner the sum of $8,404.28, which was reduced by $500 paid by the executor, and a legacy of $500 more given by the will of the testator. The wife of the claimant was the principal witness upon the trial, and she testified that her husband was the lessee of the premises known as “959 Third Avenue,” and that the testator lived at that house. Her testimony was that in 1877 he rented a room •of them, and that he continued to occupy this room until his decease in 1888, taking his meals at, or provided from, the restaurant kept in the same building by her husband. When it was proposed to prove the contract or arrangement made for the performance of these services by the wife of the claimant, it was objected that she was incompetent, under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure; but it appeared from her testimony that in what she did for him she was acting in subordination to and with the authority and approval of her husband. The testator was living in the building, and from his bodily illness required the service and attentions of a nurse, and at his request they were given to him by the wife of the claimant, and with his assent; and the testator continued to live in the building in this manner during the entire interval through which the services were rendered, and these attentions were given to him. It was not the understanding of the wife that she was acting for herself in any respect, but that she was aiding and assisting her husband in his business, and when expenditures were required to be made for the testator she obtained the money expended from her husband; and she made no personal claim against the testator or against the estate, on her own account, but that was made by her husband, the claimant. From this evidence it is quite clear that she was acting, not for herself, but in the service of and subordinate to her husband; and within what was held in Reynolds v. Robinson, 64 N. Y. 589, the claim for compensation accrued to him, and not to her. That case was very much, "in its leading circumstances, similar to the present