41 Ind. App. 408 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1908
Appellee filed a claim against the estate of appellant’s intestate for the sum of $3,000, for work, labor, assistance, care and attention alleged to have b.een rendered the deceased by appellee from January, 1902, to June 14, 1906. The cause was tried by a jury, and verdict returned in favor of appellee for the full amount of the claim. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and judgment ren
There is no contention regarding the law as applied to this ease. It is too well settled to admit of controversy. Where one is taken into the household of another and treated as a member of the family, there is ordinarily no implied obligation to pay for services on the one hand, or for board and shelter on the other. Such obligation .is never implied unless the circumstances show that at the time the services were rendered there was an expectation on one side to charge for the services, board, shelter and care, and on' the other hand to pay for the same. All the facts and circumstances developed by the evidence in this case absolutely repel the inference that the services for which appellee here 'sues, this estate were rendered for hire, or that there was any expectation on his part, at the time they were rendered, to charge therefor, or any intention on the part of the decedent to pay the appellee for them, unless it might
Cause reversed, with instructions to the court below to grant a new trial.