109 N.Y.S. 484 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The action is to recover for services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendants’ testator during the seven years prior to his death on the 30th of January, 1904, “as financial adviser arid private secretary of the testator, attending to all his correspondence of a social nature, advising him in .connection with all social matters, managing his home, wherever it happened to be, accompanying him and attending to his wants while traveling, nursing him when ill,
. The complaint is somewhat indefinite as to whether the amount of $35,060 that the plaintiff seeks to recover is claimed to be the value of her services to-thé-decedent during that period or whether the plaintiff’s cause of action was based upon a specific.agreement with the decedent as to the amount she should be paid for these services. The complaint incidentally alleges that the plaintiff was a music teacher in the-town of Dover in the State of Hew Jersey from which the plaintiff derived an income sufficient to care for her-. self and her mother, and that the value of the services rendered to the decedent and the just and fair coiripensation for the surrender of the profession of music teaching and the giving of such services aforesaid was $35,000, for which she seeks .to recover.' So it may be assumed that the action is based upon the. value of the services, rendered and the just and fair compensation fqr the surrender of the profession of music teaching, although in another part of the complaint allusion is made to an “ arrangement made between said plaintiff and the.said Hudson Hoagland,” but just what that, agreement was is not stated and there was no proof of it upon the trial. The answer, after denying all knowledge dr information sufficient to form a . belief as to the material allegations of the' complaint, alleges that for all services of whatever nature rendered by the plaintiff to the decedent the said decedent fully paid and compensated. the plaintiff for during his lifetime; that during the year commencing January 2, 1897, and terminating January 2, 1898, he paid to her as a salary in full .for all services the sum of $1,000 in money in equal quarterly payments, and that during each of the years from January 2, 1898, until his decease lie paid to her as a salary in full for all services the sum of $1,500 in money in equal quarterly payments ; that besides making such payments to the plaintiff he maintained the plaintiff as a member of the family during the whole period of her. connection therewith without expense to her, ■ and at her request paid, laid out and expended large sums of money for the benefit of her mother, Cornelia . C. Rose, a .niece of the decedent, and that the decedent also made bequests in liis will to the said Cornelia C. Rose, and upon her death to the plaintiff-..
The fact of the alleged.payments by the. decedent to the plaintiff ..
The. counsel for the plaintiff announced at the' opening of the trial that he would endeavor to prove a special contract under which the decedent promised- that if the plaintiff would give up her home he would provide her with sufficient funds to support her mother
This rule is stated in the American and English Encyclopaedia of Law (Yol. 20 [2d ed.], 19), as follows : “All services rendered by an employee during the period for which he is employed of a nature similar to his regular duties are presumed to be paid for by his salary and to recover extra pay the servant must overcome this presumption by showing an express agreement therefor.” And a direct authority for this principle is Ross v. Hardin (79 N. Y. 84). While I do not find any express authority as to the presumption that arises merely from an employment and the subsequent receipt of a salary at regular and stated periods by the employee, reasoning from analogy it must be that from such facts there is a presumjition that the salary or payments were received as full compensation for the services rendered. ‘ The burden is, therefore, upon the party seeking to recover additional compensation of proving that there was an agreement that for the services rendered additional compensation should be paid, or that the obligation- to the employee was not fully discharged by the payments made and accepted. In relation to the evidence necessary to establish claims of this character against the estate of a decedent certain rules have now been established which are stated in Rosseau v. Rouss (180 N. Y. 116), where it is said : “ Thus, the evidence relied upon to establish the contract is, first, the testimony of the mother, who tried to swear $100,000 into the pocket of her own child, and, second, the testimony of witnesses who swear to the admissions of a dead man. The former is dangerous ; the latter is weak, and neither should be acted upon without great caution. We have repeatedly held that such a contract must not only be certain and. definite, and founded upon an adequate consideration, but also that it must be established by the clearest and most convincing evidence. We have been emphatic in condemning these agreements, because they ‘ have become so frequent in recent years as to cause alarm.’ We have been rigid and
A short analysis of the testimony given by the plaintiff, and upon which the referee has based his findings of fact, will be sufficient, I think, to establish that the evidence in this case is insufficient to justify a finding that there was ever any understanding or agreement, express or implied, between the plaintiff and the decedent that she should be entitled to receive any compensation for her services except that regularly paid to her. The plaintiff went to live with Mr. Hoagland on the 2.d of January, 1897. 'A witness testified to a conversation with Mr.Hoagland on January 7, 1897, the day of the burial of the decedent’s wife, at which he said he did not know what to do; that Ire could not live alone. The witness tiren asked him why he did not keep Mary (the plaintiff) with him, if things could be planned at her heme so that she could leave her mother. And Mr. Hoagland replied: “I can arrange that,” or “I would arrange that.” Another witness testified that he called upon Mr. Hoagland at or about the time of the death of Iris wife, and that the plaintiff was there at the time; that two or three weeks afterwards he again called on the decedent,-who, in speaking of the plaintiff, said that she was going to keep house with him, arid that he was going to take care of her as long as she lived; that she had given up a position in Dover, and was going to remain with him, and that this statement as to his intentions was subsequently repeated. Another witness testified that she had known the decedent and his wife, having "apartments next to them at the hotel atwhich they resided ; that the witness saw the plaintiff perform the duties of taking care of the very old man, and also saw the plaintiff writing letters for him ; that the decedent said that he was keeping the plaintiff at work there, as she had a lot to do," and also detailed other work that the plaintiff did for the deceased; that at one time-, about two months after the death of his .wife, when the plaintiff was
These are all the declarations of the decedent, and the only evidence from which the court is asked to infer that the payments made to the plaintiff were not intended by the decedent or
■ It follows, therefore, that this judgment- must be reversed as against the weight of evidence, and a new trial ordered before another referee, with costs to the appellants to abide -the event.
Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred; Patterson, P. J., and Houghton, J., dissented,.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered -before another referee, costs to appellants to abide event. . Settle order on notice.