114 Neb. 728 | Neb. | 1926
This is a suit in equity to establish an oral contract to transfer by deed or will a house and lot in Omaha in consideration for personal services; to recover damages for breach of the contract; to’ impound proceeds of a wrongful sale of the property described, and to apply the 'impounded funds to the payment of the claim in controversy. The suit was defended on grounds, among others, that no such contract was ever made and that there was nothing due for compensable services performed. The district court upon a trial of the issues entered a- nonsuit. This is an appeal from the dismissal.
Is the evidence sufficient to prove the making of the oral contract? The parties to it were Lavinia P. Robinette, the person who performed the personal services, and Augusta Boyden, the owner of the lot. The former is plaintiff. Eric Olsen, executor of the will of Augusta Boyden, deceased, and others interested in her estate are defendants. The personal services performed by plaintiff included combing hair, cooking meals, washing dishes, sweep
Did plaintiff render services amounting to performance on her part? Witnesses who frequently saw her at work testified to facts showing that she complied with the terms of her agreement, and that her services were acknowledged and accepted by Augusta Boyden. The services extended over a period from 1912 to 1921. The proofs, however, indicate that plaintiff was not on duty during the final two weeks, after Augusta Boyden had been taken to a hospital, the explanation of this being that plaintiff was unable to continue her services there during that time. Defendants argue, however, that plaintiff did not make a case because she failed to prove any request for services, though the petition contained the allegation that she agreed to render such services “as might be requested” by Augusta B.oyden. The services were performed and accepted during a long period of time. Under the circumstances disclosed, the varying nature and frequency of plaintiff’s duties at different times, when performed and accepted, necessarily implied requests therefor. On the issue of performance on her part, the finding on appeal is in her favor.
Did Augusta Boyden violate her oral contract while receiving the consideration for it? It is conclusively shown that sometime before her death she sold the lot to an Innocent purchaser and thus destroyed her means of performance. The will devising the lot to plaintiff was destroyed and a former will ignoring her was probated. She never received payment for her services. A breach of the oral contract to transfer the lot to her by deed or will was therefore fully established.
Is plaintiff entitled to relief in equity? Defendants argue that she had an adequate remedy at law in the form of an action against the executor to recover compensation for services performed or damages for breach of contract, if she had any cause of action, and that therefore the suit in equity was not maintainable. Plaintiff, upon complete performance of her duties, was entitled to the lot. Assum
In the present instance plaintiff first filed in the county court a petition for her agreed compensation, the value of the lot, and prayed for an allowance therefor as a claim against the estate of Augusta Boyden, deceased. The petition stated that the lot had been sold to a purchaser in good faith. Issues relating to specific performance and title were therefore eliminated. It thus appeared that the claim was one within the jurisdiction of the county court in the settlement of the Boyden estate. The county court disallowed the claim and plaintiff appealed‘to the district court, where a demurrer to the petition was sustained and the proceeding at law dismissed. Afterward the equity suit now under consideration was instituted in the district court. The records in both cases, each disclosing a nonsuit, were presented to the supreme court at the same time for review. The technical objections to jursidiction in each case and the merits of the suit in equity are therefore before the supreme court at the same time.' Anomalies of this kind should be avoided. Where a plaintiff may resort to one of two forums having concurrent jurisdiction, a definite theory should be deliberately adopted in advance. The remedy should generally be pursued in a consistent course in one action to the end of the litigation. Where the method of obtaining redress is doubtful, pleading in the double aspect of seeking relief by one remedy if another should fail is sometimes sanctioned to settle litigable controversies in a single action. Defendants should not be harrassed and the courts burdened unnecessarily by two proceedings to recover the amount due on a claim consisting of a single item. Defendants insist that the claim of plaintiff in the proceeding at law was disallowed and that consequently it cannot be relit'igated in the court of equity. To so rule would defeat a just claim in both courts. There was no trial on the merits of the case in the county court nor on the appeal therefrom to the district court. The law case was dismissed on demurrer to the petition, but the dismissal
Reversed.
Note — See Measure of Damages, 31 A. L. R. 129; 41 L. R. A. n. s. 246-Courts, 15 C. J. 1131 n. 31-Specific Performance, 36 Cyc. 736 n. 52-Wills, 40 Cyc. 1070 n. 19, 1071 n. 21, 1073 n. 38, 39, 52.