193 P. 58 | Mont. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court.
The complaint alleges that between the nineteenth day of February, 1910, and the 19th of June, 1916, at the special instance and request of defendants, the plaintiff rendered services to them, as cook, housekeeper and servant girl, of the reasonable value of $25 per month, for which they agreed to pay a reasonable wage, and that only $334 of the $1,566 alleged to be due plaintiff has ever been paid.
The answer consists of a general denial, supplemented by affirmative allegations to the effect that, in consideration for
Eefusal of the trial court to grant defendants a new.trial is the principal ground urged upon this appeal, the contention of appellants being that the proof offered by the plaintiff failed to establish the date upon which the agreement was made, and that, for that reason, the verdict is based upon guesswork, conjecture and speculation, and ought not to be permitted to stand.
So far as the overruling of the motion for a new trial, is
On behalf of defendants evidence was adduced in support of the affirmative allegations of their answer. They themselves testified that they never promised or agreed to pay plaintiff any wages, but that it was agreed between them that plaintiff should make her home with defendants and live with them as long as it was mutually agreeable, without any compensation other than the benefits afforded by the home so provided her, including her clothing, entertainment and education, the value of which was far in excess of the amount demanded by her as wages, and that, as a consequence thereof, defendants owed her nothing.
The district court, in passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, refused to grant defendants a new trial, and thereby signified .its conclusion that the plaintiff had made out a case entitling her to the verdict she received at the hands of the jury, and that the defendants had failed to. overcome the preponderance of the evidence found by the jury to exist in favor of the plaintiff.
From a careful review of the testimony given to support [2] the respective theories urged by the parties, it is apparent to us that there was a substantial conflict in it, and enough competent prOof to uphold the judgment awarded the plaintiff. As has been many times announced by this court in cases presenting the condition now confronting us, the verdict of the jjiry and the judgment of the district court, attacked upon the ground that the evidence was insufficient to justify them, cannot be disturbed. (Baxter v. Hamilton, 20 Mont. 327, 51 Pac. 265.)
Affirmed.