144 N.Y.S. 209 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The plaintiff, brought action against the executors of the last will and testament of her mother, Mary A. Jamison, to recover the sum of $2,416.64 “for work, labor and services done and performed for said Mary A. Jamison, and her husband, Thomas Jamison, in their lifetime, at the special instance and request of said Mary A. Jamison * * *■ and Thomas Jamison during the closing years of their lives, and in and about the renting, cleaning, management and care of the premises No. 351 46th Street, Borough of Brooklyn, City of New York, as a house with furnished rooms for lodgers.” There was an allegation that the services were reasonably worth $2,640, and that there had been a payment of $223.36, leaving the balance
For over forty years Thomas Jamison and Mary A. Jamison, husband and wife, lived together in the house No. 351 Forty-sixth street, in the borough of Brooklyn, where they eked out a livelihood by renting furnished rooms. There they raised a family of six children. With the passing of the years the children left the home. The last to leave was Matilda, who became Mrs. Burke. She lived with them “all her life” and until a short time of her marriage, in her forty-third year. The proof was sufficient to establish the fact that after Matilda left them, the parents, then old and feeble, became sick and were unable to take care of themselves or to attend to the wants of their lodgers; that in this condition of their affairs, in August, 1901, the plaintiff, another daughter, who had long been away from home and had been supporting herself by her own earnings, returned to take care of them, and that from that time until their death she lived with them and performed the duties mentioned and described in the complaint. Of the nature and extent of the services and the faithfulness with which they were performed there is no doubt. Several witnesses testified to them, and no evidence was offered in contradiction.
The only testimony given in an attempt to support an express promise to pay for the services was given by a Mrs. Kate Olsen, who lived in the house with the Jamisons. She testified as follows: “ Q. Now, did you, about the time that Mrs. Seaman came there, see Mr. and Mrs. Jamison in their house ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And did you about that time hear any conversation between Mr. and Mrs. Jamison ? A. Yes, sir, I did. Q. Did you hear them speak about Mrs. Seaman coming there ? A. Yes, sir; I was there when she came in. Q. Now, will you tell the jury what you heard on that occasion % What did you hear ? A. Mrs. Jamison got a little book and gave it to Mr. Jamison to put down the day she came in there, and he put it down in the book. Q. Well, now, do you remember
This is how the memorandum read:
“Aug 23 1901
Zella commenced
taking care of
Papa and Mama.”
The plaintiff was sometimes called Zella by the members of the family.
Mr. Jamison died on March 3, 1904. Mrs. Jamison lived until December 20, 1908. When he died he was eighty-three; when she died she was eighty.
Mrs. Jamison left a will, by the terms of which she bequeathed $300 to each of four designated beneficiaries and the balance of her estate equally among four children, one of
The general rule is that, where the relationship between the parties is that of parent and child, the law presumes that where there is no proof of a contract under which the services were performed there was no promise or agreement to pay for them; that is, that they were rena'ered gratuitously. (Ulrich v. Ulrich, 136 N. Y. 120, 123.) It is obvious from an examination of the testimony of the witness Olsen that it furnished no evidence which would authorize the jury to find any promise or agreement on the part of the testatrix to pay her daughter for the services rendered by the daughter to her husband and herself in his lifetime or to her during the years she lived after her husband’s departure. The only evidence relating to Mrs. Jamison was, “She said the same thing.” What was the same thing ? That Mr. Jamison said he would give her (plaintiff) wages, “but he couldn’t give her any now, until he would sell the house.”
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, P. J., Burr, Carr and Putnam, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.