165 A. 443 | R.I. | 1933
This is an action in assumpsit brought to recover compensation for services rendered to Abbie E. Tucker, defendant's intestate. The case was tried in the Superior Court before a justice thereof and a jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,700. The case is here on defendant's exceptions to the denial of its motion for a directed verdict, to the admission of testimony and to the denial of a motion for a new trial. All the exceptions other than that to the denial of defendant's motion for a directed verdict have been waived. *222
The plaintiff lived all her life with her mother, the said Abbie E. Tucker, on a farm in South Kingston where plaintiff was born. Her father, the record owner of the farm, died intestate, and no administration was taken out on his estate and no partition of the farm was made among his heirs who — beside the plaintiff — are a son and two daughters. Plaintiff appears to have been self-supporting: she worked for neighbours, braided rugs, did sewing and kept poultry. About 1925, Abbie E. Tucker's health began to fail and she required more and more care, some of which was of a particularly disagreeable character; and this care was given her by her daughter, the plaintiff in this case.
There is testimony that it was the mother's desire to have the farm divided so that the plaintiff would have the southeast quarter on which were located the buildings; that on several occasions she said not only to the plaintiff but to others that the plaintiff was to be paid for her services and that the money with which to pay her was in the bank.
The defendant relies in part on the principle of law that, where the relationship of mother and daughter exists, services are presumed to have been rendered out of love or good will or from a sense of filial duty and not in expectation of financial reward. Newell v. Lawton,
The defendant's main reliance, in support of its contention that the verdict should have been directed in its favor, was *223 several letters which the plaintiff wrote to her brother and a sister after her mother's death. There are expressions in these letters, which taken by themselves, imply that the plaintiff's services to her mother were rendered without expectation of financial reward. But, taken as a whole, the letters are open to the interpretation that plaintiff would not present a claim if her brother and sisters would consent to such a division of the estate of her parents as would secure to her the house where she was born and lived all her life. The letters do not warrant the conclusion as a matter of law that the plaintiff's services were rendered gratuitously. This being the case, it was a question for the jury to determine from all the evidence whether there existed between the mother in her lifetime and the plaintiff an understanding that she was to be compensated in some form for her services.
The defendant's exceptions are overruled and the case is remitted to the Superior Court for the entry of judgment on the verdict.