63 Mo. App. 421 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
Plaintiff filed her claim, aggregating $1,500, in the probate court against the estate of her deceased father for personal services during the five years before his death. Upon a trial she-had judgment for the full amount, from which the administrator appealed to the circuit court, where, upon a trial de novo, plaintiff recovered judgment for $750, from which this appeal was taken by defendant.
The first error assigned is that the court should have sustained the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence offered by defendant at the close of plaintiff’s case. The court refused this instruction, whereupon defendant introduced evidence in support of his denial of plaintiff’s right to recover. By this, action defendant waived the correctness of the court’s ruling on the evidence given for plaintiff, and submitted the propriety of the instruction upon the whole case as it stood after the testimony for both parties had been introduced. Jennings v. Railway, 112 Mo. 274.
It appears from the brief filed by defendant that he claims this instruction should have been given for an
The implied contract to pay arising from the rendition of service, which the law raises in transactions between strangers or persons not living in a family relation, is not inferable .when the relationship between the parties is that' of parent and child. Erhart v. Dietrich, 118 Mo. 418. In order to recover against the estate of her father in the present action, it was essential that plaintiff should give evidence tending to show an express or implied agreement on the part of the deceased to pay for the services rendered. Hart v. Hart, 41 Mo. 441; Ramsey v. Hicks, 53 Mo. App. loc. cit. 195. The jury were fully justified in inferring such an agreement from all the evidence in this record; hence
The instructions given by the court in this case are nob attacked by the appellant. The only point urged in that respect is the refusal of two instructions requested by appellant. Appellant does not in his brief indicate in any way how the court erred in declining these two instructions. He merely sets out one of them and refers to a page of the record for the other, and asserts that both should have been given. An examination of these two refused instructions shows, however, that the propositions of law contained in them are distinctly embraced in instruction “c” given by the court, to wit:
“Unless you believe from the evidence that there was an express agreement' on the part of Frederick Boverschmidt with the plaintiff, Mary Ronsiek, to pay her the services rendered, or unless you believe from all the facts and circumstances in the case shown by the evidence, taking into consideration the relationship of the parties, the nature of the services and the condition in life of the parties, that said services were rendered by plaintiff with the intention ’ on her part to charge and on the part of the deceased to pay therefor, then your verdict must be for the defendant.”
As appellant’s refused instructions were embraced in those given, their refusal was not error.
The only other point made on this appeal is a complaint that the trial court permitted the plaintiff to swear to her claim in the presence of the jury, and allowed her attorney to refer to the fact that the claim had an affidavit to it in the course of his remarks. We fail to see any reversible error in this ruling and action of the court. The judgment herein will, therefore, be affirmed.