17 Pa. Super. 314 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
This action was brought against the administrator of Rebecca Hearst to recover on an implied contract for services rendered to the decedent and for feed etc., furnished to her stock. On
In Van Horne v. Clark, 126 Pa. 411, in an action of ejectment, the defendant, a married woman, was permitted to testify that she remained at home under a contract with her father, that if she would stay with him and her mother and take care of them he would pay her for her services, and that from said service she paid for the land in dispute, on the ground that she was not called to testify “ against the decedent’s title, but in support of it; or to speak with greater accuracy, to prove the consideration she paid for the land, neither party to the record was acting in a representative capacity.” This was followed in Young v. Senft, 153 Pa. 352, and in Poundstone v. Jones, 187 Pa. 289.
In these cases the question was not only as to the competency of the wife as a witness but as to the effect to be given to her testimony. This court held in Guernsey v. Froude, 13 Pa. Superior Ct. 405, that under the act of May 23,1887, when the wife was competent, her testimony was entitled to the same credit as that of any other witness, but that her credibility, like that of a father, child or friend, was for the jury alone.
The evidence shows that while the parties were not related to each other, they resided together and had many domestic interests in common; that certain necessary services were rendered up to the time of Mrs. Hearst’s death, and that during the last illness of the deceased they were peculiar and exceptional. The presumption of payment, at least, as to those which might ordinarily arise in the case of a domestic servant, would not necessarily be applicable in such a case: Ranninger’s Appeal, 118 Pa. 21; Rhodes’s Appeal, 156 Pa. 337.
The performance and receipt of services generally raises an implied promise by him who receives to compensate him who performs, but the implication may be rebutted : Curry v. Curry, 114 Pa. 367; Griffith’s Estate, 147 Pa. 274.
There was sufficient competent evidence from which the jury would be justified in inferring an implied promise to pay a reasonable amount for the services rendered and necessary expenses incurred during the last illness of Mrs. Hearst. The learned court was correct in the application of the law to the evidence adduced by the plaintiff in support of the greater part of his claim. In order to establish such a contract, either express or implied, the evidence must be clear and distinct and convincing. Such claims are always subjects of just suspicion, and our books are full of expressions of the necessity of strict requirement of proof and the firm control of juries in such cases : Carpenter v. Hays, 153 Pa. 432; Mueller’s Estate, 159 Pa. 590; Hughes’s Estate, 176 Pa. 387; Weaver’s Estate, 182 Pa. 349; Miller’s Estate, 188 Pa. 214; Savage’s Appeal (Hayes’s Estate).
A jury should be allowed to pass upon the part of the plaintiff’s claim which related to the proper services rendered and the reasonable expenses incurred during the last illness of the decedent.
The fourth assignment of error is sustained, the judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.