19 Mo. 433 | Mo. | 1854
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit commenced by the plaintiff against the defendant for the value of her services performed for him. She
The court instructed the jury that, if the plaintiff lived with the defendant, as a member of his family, being a mother-in-law, and not in the capacity of a servant, she cannot recover, unless there was an agreement for wages ; that, if she was a member of the family, without any contract for wages, she cannot recover, unless she was turned off without good cause, after she had become, by age, incapable of supporting herself ; but if she was turned off without cause, after living with the defendant as a member of his family for a series of years, after she had become old and infirm, she was entitled to full pay for her services.
The general rule is, that, whenever service is rendered and received, a contract of hiring or an obligation to pay will be presumed. This is an undoubted rule between strangers. But