6 Lans. 512 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871
The law is well settled-, that a party cannot recover for services rendered where that party has lived with another as a member of his family, to be provided for, brought up and educated as such, and that relation continued during all the time that such services were rendered. This-decision was held in this case, when before, the Court of Appeals, and the judgment was reversed and a new-trial granted upon the ground that the judge upon the trial refused to give proper instructions to the jury in this particular. (See 38 How. Pr. Ry 406.) It appears from the report of the case cited that it was proved upon the trial by John C; Bennett, a son of the testator, that in the fall of the year, after the plaintiff came to live in the family of the testator, that her father came to the testator’s house, and that it was then understood between him and the testator that the plaintiff was to live there as a member of the testator’s family; that he was to send, her to school, and take care of her as his child. There was no direct contradiction of this testimony, and the father of the plaintiff was not a witness, and not present at the trial. On the second trial he was sworn and examined as a witness, and positively denied that there was any -such conversation or any such arrangement or agreement. The father and the plaintiff also testified that before she went to Bennett’s to live her father told- her that she could have her wages, and that he had never sought to control her wages. It
The court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover for services rendered more than six years prior to the testator’s death. The plaintiff lived with the deceased from April, 1852, to June, 1861. She was married on the fifth of December, 1860. Six weeks before she was married the deceased sold a cow to the plaintiff for twenty dollars. Shortly before her marriage ten dollars was paid to her, and at one time a pair of shoes was delivered; also a box of clothing, bed, bedding and several dresses. The testator died on the 24th of September, 1865, and letters testamentary were not issued until the 12th day of February, 1866. The action was brought in August, 1866. The pay ment of money and the articles delivered kept the claim alive and prevented the statute of limitations being a bar to it. The action was brought before six years had elapsed after this payment, and before the statute had attached.
An objection is made that the judge erred in allowing Edward hfaylor, the father of the plaintiff, to testify to transactions with the deceased, or conversations with him, on the ground that he was originally entitled to the demand for services. The witness had waived his right to the daughter’s services by emancipating her; and by means of such emancipation he had relinquished his claim, and authorized her to labor for herself and to receive her own earnings. (See Shute v. Dorr, 5 Wend., 206.) The services were performed after the emancipation had taken place, and the witness did not have at any time any such legal demand for the services ren
The plaintiff and her husband were also competent witnesses on the trial; and none of the testimony given by them to which objection was made was improperly received.
Ho other points are urged as error, and the judgment and order must be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed.