15 Mo. App. 471 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
This plaintiff, Thomas Vojta (or Yoita) preferred a claim in theprobate court against the estate of his mother, Johanna Pelikan, deceased, for services alleged to have been rendered at her instance and request, as a bar-tender or manager of a saloon kept by her, from the year 1867 until the date of her death, which occurred in 1881. His claim was allowed in the probate court for $1,460, one-half of the amount claimed. At the time of preferring the claim the plaintiff was administrator of the estate, and the probate court appointed George W. Lubke, Esq., to represent the •estate as administrator pendente lite. From this decree of the probate court appeals were taken to the circuit court by the administrator pendente lite, and by two of the distributees of the estate. The cause was tried anew in the circuit court before a jury, and judgment was rendered for ■the defendant, aud the plaintiff has appealed.
I. We are asked to reverse the judgment on the merits, as being contrary to the evidence. The evidence submitted in support of the claim was that of William Vojta, brother of the claimant, who testified that about fifteen years before, their mother had stated to the claimant, who had attained his majority, in the presence of the witness, that she wished him, the claimant, to take charge of and run her saloon for her, and that she would give him everything she had at her death, if he would take charge of it and run it, and remain with her until that time ; that the claimant agreed to do so, and went to work for her soon after; that he remained with her and worked for her until she died, which was about
Mrs. Mary Eosipal, testifying for the plaintiff, said that she knew his mother intimately for a great number of years prior to her death; that she had often seen the plaintiff working in the saloon for his mother — had seen him working there for a number of years ; that she had often heard her say that he was to have everything at her death. “ Thomas worked, and so did the other children, together in one household. Thomas ran the saloon business.” '
Thomas Eoth testified to a long acquaintance with Mrs. Pelikan, and to the fact of the services having been rendered by the claimant, as stated by the preceding witnesses. He also stated that he had been in the saloon business in St. Louis for about thirty-two years; that he knew the value of such services, and that they were worth about $15.00 per month with board and washing.
The only testimony offered to disprove the fact of this agreement between mother and son was that of four witnesses, one of them a sister, one a half sister, one a half brother to the claimant, and one a person who had long boarded with the claimant’s mother prior to her death. The testimony of these witnesses tended to confirm that of the plaintiff’s witnesses as to the fact of the rendition of the services by the claimant. It also tended to show that, during the period of the rendition of these services, the claimant received from his mother his board, clothing and spending money. Three of these witnesses testified to having heard the mother say that her property was to go to her children at her death. ' One of them testified that he
No exceptions were saved to any rulings upon the admission of testimony, and the instructions upon which the cause was submitted to the jury are not complained of. We see no ground on which we are authorized to disturb the verdict of the jury. The jury were authorized to infer from the testimony that the claimant had worked for his mother, and lived with her and her family, as some of the other children did, and that he had been treated by her as the other children had been treated—getting his living, his board, clothes, and spending money, from his mother, or out of her business. A contract of this importance, involving the entire disposition of the estate of the head of a large family, extending over a period of fifteen years, ought, it should seem, to be made out by very clear evidence. Common prudence would have required that such a contract be put in writing. To allow such an engagement to be established by parol evidence after the death of one of the principal parties to it, would strongly contravene the policy of the statute of frauds; though, of course, we do not mean to suggest that the case is embraced within the letter of the statute, for it does not appear that the title to real property is involved. It should certainly seem that a contract of this importance, if it were made, would be a matter of family history; and, while it is not very clear that declarations made by the mother to persons other than the claimant is competent evidence to disprove the fact of her having made such a contract, yet this evidence was no.t objected to. It was allowed to go to the jury ; and it must be confessed that such declarations of a mother made to other children, and to an inmate in the house, furnish very
II. When the case was called for trial in the circuit court, according to the recitals of the bill of exceptions, the following proceedings took place : “ Eighteen men of the regular panel of jurors were called to the jury-box by the sheriff, from which the parties to this suit proceeded to select a jury to try this cause. Said eighteen men were sworn by the clerk on their voir dire, and examined by plaintiff’s' attorney as to their qualifications as jurors. Having concluded which, plaintiff’s attorney made certain marks on the list of jurors furnished counsel by sheriff, opposite the names of three of said jurors, by way of indicating (in the manner customary in said court) that said names were to be stricken from the list by plaintiff’s attorney, by virtue of his right of peremptory challenge. Plaintiff’s attorney then handed said list of jurors to defendant’s attorney, who thereupon proceeded to examine said eighteen men, touching their qualifications as jurors, and this examination disclosed the fact that one of the jurors, opposite whose name no ■ mark had been made by plaintiff’s attorney, as aforesaid, knew the defendant’s attorney, and so stated at the time. Defendant’s counsel,
We see no error in these rulings of the court. We understand from the above recitals that, instead of allowing the parties to make their challenges orally (a practice which is calculated to wound the feelings of the veniremen challenged), it was the practice of the court to require the parties to make their challenges by checking upon the list the names which they desired not tobe called. We understand that when a party thus checked a name, he made his peremptory challenge of that juror. If there is any doubt about this, we feel sure that, in accordance with well settled principles, we are entitled, in support of the action of the circuit court, to presume that this was the meaning of the practice of checking the names on the list. This being
Nor do we see that the court abused its discretion in refusing to allow the plaintiff’s attorney to re-examine the juror in question, with a view of challenging him for cause. The mere circumstance that the juror was acquainted with the defendant’s attorney suggests no ground of disqualification. The statement of the juror of this fact indicates no affection on his part towards the plaintiff’s attorney such as would control his judgment, but it rather indicates a spirit of honest frankness which should always characterize those who take part in the administration of justice. It is a well settled rule, applied by appellate courts when called upon to revise the rulings of trial courts in matters of discretion, that these rulings will not be disturbed unless prejudice appears. The mere fact that a juror may be acquainted with the attorney of the opposite party raises no suspicion of prejudice. Some of the older practitioners, at
III. The bill of exceptions also contains the following recitals : “ Defendant’s attorney then proceeded to address the jury and sum up the evidence ; and, in so doing stated and argued that there was a conspiraey between the witness William Vojta and the plaintiff Thomas Vojta, for the purpose and with a view of getting plaintiff’s claim allowed against the estate of Johanna Pelikan, in order to beat the balance of the heirs to said estate out of their distributive shares in their mother’s said estate. To all of which statements and argument plaintiff’s attorney then and there objected, for the reason that there was no evidence before the jury warranting the same. But said argument and statements were allowed to go to the jury, to which plaintiff excepted at the time.”
Whether a new trial will be granted upon the ground of the misconduct of an attorney, of a juror, or the like, is regarded in some jurisdictions as entirely a question of discretion with the trial court, which discretion is not subject to revision upon appeal. Our practice, perhaps, regards it also as a matter of discretion, but subject to revision and reversal in cases of manifest abuse. We see no manifest abuse of discretion in the action of the court above recited. It is not stated that the counsel for the defendant, in addressing the jury, claimed that there was evidence of a conspiracy directly furnished by the testimony of the witnesses. He may have urged them to accept the theory that there was a conspiracy, as a matter of inference from the testimony, and from the conduct and situation of the witnesses. No intelligent jury, we take it, would regard this as a statement of evidential facts, or as any thing beyond a lawyer’s argument. The privilege of counsel in arguing to the jury what deductions they shall draw from the testimony must