104 N.Y.S. 887 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
This action was brought to recover the sum of $3,000 for services as nurse, alleged to have been rendered to defendant’s intestate, and the sum of $210, alleged to have been loaned to him. The alleged services covered a period from August 11, 1901, to September 10, 1904, at $2.50 a day for 1,013 days, and from September 10, 1904, to January 1, 1905, during his last illness (117 days), at $4 a day. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount claimed, and from the judgment entered thereon and an order'denying á motion for a new trial the defendant appeals.
I am of the opinion the judgment must be reversed, not only upon the ground that it is against the weight of evidence, but also because errors were committed at the trial.
The intestate was a silk dyer, owning certain premises in the city of JSTew York upon which his business was conducted, and where he had one room in which he lived. Some twenty years before his death lie boarded with the plaintiff and her husband for three or four years and from that time to the timé of his death they were very intimate friends. Some time in December, 1904, by reason of a serious illness he was taken' to the plaintiff’s house, where he died about ten days later. To establish the claim for services, the plaintiff relied substantially upon the testimony of her husband,, who testified, in substance, that in August, 1901, the decedent complained to him of being sick and asked if the plaintiff might come and take care of him; that he consented on condition that the decedent should pay her for her services, which he agreed to do-; that the services, were rendered by the plaintiff, and that he frequently asked the decedent for the money which was due his wife therefor, and that the decedent gave various reasons for not paying, but invariably promised to pay later on, which he neglected to do; that the plaintiff would, start for the decedent’s room about ten o’clock in the morning each, day and return about five o’clock in
As was said in Rosseau v. Rouss (supra) : “ As ‘ such contracts are easily fabricated and hard to disprove, because the sole contracting party on one side is always dead when the question arises,’ we have declared that they ‘ should be in writing, and the writing should be
The plaintiff’s husband can hardly be said to have been a disinterested witness and if he were his evidence falls far short of establishing a contract .which entitled the plaintiff to recover for services rendered as a nurse. . And in this connection it is worthy of notice that the plaintiff claims, and has been allowed four dollars a day for 117 days for nursing the decedent in his last illness. The record shows ' that he was not tafeen to the plaintiff’s house until ten days before his death and there is not a scintilla of evidence ■ that any greater services were rendered before that time than had been at any time previous.-
The evidence as to the alleged loan is equally unsatisfactory. This depends also upon the husband’s testimony, the- slightest consideration of which shows it to be unreliable. He testified that' the decedent told him of the loans in August, 1904. The plaintiff’s bill of'particulars states that the loan was made in sums of eighty dollars, fifty dollars and eighty dollars on April 22, August 6 and October 8, 1904. Obviously the decedent could not have told him in August, 1904, of the loan which was made the following October, and yet the jury, .upon his testimony alone, found that such loan was made.
But if it.be held that there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question of the employment and rendition of the seiwices, the evidence was entirely insufficient to sustain a verdict on the value of the services rendered. The witness So.phie Jehner, a professional nurse, testified that she charged three dollars a day of twelve hours,-and that"'the services rendered by the plaintiff were worth from two" dollars, to two dollars and fifty cents a day. The plaintiff was not a professional nurse, nor did she render any services as a' nurse, nor was she employed for twelve hours a day. As to the services' which the plaintiff actually rendered the witness admitted that she Knew nothing of their value. Her evidence, therefore, to. establish the value of the services, was incompetent and irrelevant, and should not have been admitted. ( Weidman v. Thompson, 53 App. Div. 22.)
The plaintiff was also allowed, against the objection of the defend
Finally, inasmuch as there must be a new trial, it may not be out of ■ place to call attention to the fact that the plaintiff was not ■ ■ entitled to costs. ■ Such costs were awarded without any certificate or finding of the trial judge showing the facts upon which the award was founded. The Code of Civil Procedure (§ 1835) forbids the allowance of costs in an action brought against an executor or administrator in his representative capacity, except as prescribed in section 1836, which permits such an award where it appears that the claim was duly presented; that its payment was unreasonably resisted or rejected; or that there was a refusal to refer. Since these facts depend in whole or in part, at least, upon circumstances
The judgment and order appealed from, therefore, .must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
Patterson, . P. J., Ingraham, Clarke and Lambert, JJ., concurred. '
Judgment and order reversed, new trial' ordered, costs to appellant to abide'event.