305 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1940
In this account annexed the plaintiff seeks to recover for board and room and for services rendered to the defendant’s testatrix and for disbursements made for her care and benefit. The answer is a general denial and payment. The judge found for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed from the order of the Appellate Division dismissing the report.
The decedent was the mother-in-law of the plaintiff. She came to live at the plaintiff’s home in June, 1933, and continued to live there, except upon occasional visits to friends, until December 4, 1936, when she went to a hospital where she died within a few days. It was mutually agreed between the plaintiff and the decedent that she should continue to live at his home. She said that ‘ ‘ she had a mortgage on the plaintiff’s property of $3,000 to $3,500 to protect her, as the plaintiff might die first and she wanted the income, but she would discharge the mortgage so the plaintiff wouldn't have to pay it, and the plaintiff replied that was all right.” This was a second mortgage upon the plaintiff’s real estate in Waltham. On February 20, 1936, it became necessary to refinance the first mortgage on these premises which was then held by a trust company in the process of liquidation. A Boston bank took a new first mortgage of $30,000; the former first mortgagee took a second mortgage of $1,800 and the second mortgage, held by the decedent, was discharged; and a new third mortgage for $5,500 was given by the plaintiff to the decedent. There was evidence that the testatrix had furnished additional money for the plaintiff at the time he gave her this new third mortgage. The testatrix did not discharge this third mortgage during her lifetime or by any provision in her will. The plaintiff did not base his claim entirely upon an express contract; he was entitled to show all the circumstances attending the rendition of the services, the nature, extent and value of them, that at the time they were rendered he expected to be paid, and that the decedent understood that he was to receive compensation.
The oral agreement by which the decedent promised to discharge the second mortgage in consideration of the plain
It was competent for the plaintiff to show the original agreement and the subsequent conduct of the parties as tending to prove that when he rendered the services and made the disbursements he expected to be paid and the decedent understood that she was to compensate him; and that the discharge of the second mortgage made no change in the contractual relation existing between the parties, excepting only in the manner by which the plaintiff was to be paid. Morrissey v. Morrissey, 180 Mass. 480. Spencer v. Spencer, 181 Mass. 471. Butler v. Butler, 225 Mass. 22. Sherry v. Littlefield, 232 Mass. 220. Donovan v. Walsh, 238 Mass. 356.
The defendant contends that, if there was any agreement to compensate the plaintiff, there was a full performance by the decedent when she discharged the second mortgage. The consideration for this discharge was a question of fact, and a finding would be warranted that it was not given in payment of the present claim of the plaintiff but was a part of the consideration for which the new third mortgage was
The plaintiff is not seeking to recover the value of the second mortgage at the time of its discharge, but is merely seeking to recover the fair value of the services rendered the decedent by him and the disbursements made for her benefit. The finding was warranted that there was a failure of consideration and that the plaintiff was entitled to be compensated in the amount found by the judge. Cromwell v. Norton, 193 Mass. 291. Dixon v. Lamson, 242 Mass. 129. Raine v. Shea, 259 Mass. 412.
The defendant did not contend that the amounts charged by the plaintiff were unreasonable if the estate was liable, and, as the trial judge by his treatment of the defendant’s requests shows that recovery was based upon a contractual relation between the plaintiff and the decedent, we perceive no error in his refusal to grant such of the requests as were denied.
Order dismissing report affirmed.