McLean v. Breen

SONFIELD, P. J.

Suit by J. J. Breen, defendant in error, against W. P. McLean, Sr., trustee of the estate of Rose A. Dodd, deceased, and another, plaintiffs in error, for services rendered to, expenditures made by plaintiff and wife for and in behalf of Mrs. Anna Morey. Defendant McLean was the duly appointed and qualified- trustee under the will of Mrs. Rose A. Dodd. The will vested the estate in the trustee in trust for her sister, Anna Morey, directing that the net income be turned over to the sister during her natural life. Upon the death of the sister, “and the payment of whatever expenses may be incurred in her last sickness and for her funeral expenses,” all the estate then on hand was to go to the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, to whom the trustee was directed to turn it over “after the payment of the said expenses of last sickness and funeral expenses of my said sister.”

The sisters, Mrs. Morey and Mrs. Dodd, were quite old, and for some time prior to the death of Mrs. Dodd they became boarders at the St. Joseph’s Infirmary in Ft. Worth. At the date of the will, and at the time of Mrs. Morey’s death, she had on deposit in a bank the sum of $630, which constituted the whole of her property, and received from, the United States (government a pension of $12 per month. During the period of about one year after the death of Mrs. Dodd, defendant trustee paid the St. Joseph’s Infirmary the sum of $30 per month for the board and room rent of Mrs. Morey. The net income from Mrs. Dodd’s estate did not exceed, on an average, that amount.

About the month of January, 1910, Mrs. Morey went to live with the family of plaintiff. It was agreed between plaintiff’s wife and defendant trustee that the charge for Mrs. Morey’s board and room rent should be the same that had been paid to St. Joseph’s Infirmary, and the sum of $30 per month was paid to plaintiff’s wife each month during the time Mrs. Morey lived in the home of plaintiff, which was about two years and eight months.

After the death of Mrs. Morey, which occurred on the 12th day of September, 1912, plaintiff presented to defendant trustee an account for expenditures made and services rendered covering the whole period of Mrs. Morey’s residence with his family, aggregating the sum of $2,467.83. The account included charges for nurse hire, liquors, fuel, and washing, for mattresses, pillows, linens, and carpet spoiled and replaced, or used and worn out, and for extra care in addition to the amount contracted and paid for during this period. The account was rejected and payment refused by the trustee. At the time of the presentation of this account, defendant trustee had paid all the funeral expenses and bills for medical attendance on Mrs. Morey up to the date of her death. Herein plaintiff sought judgment in the sum of $2,360.

The Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, residuary legatee and devisee under the will of Mrs. Dodd, was made a party defendant, and was co-plaintiff in error in the application for writ of error.

Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant in error in the sum of $1,000, which on appeal was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 183 S. W. 394.

The Court of Civil Appeals held that, from the evidence of Mrs. Breen and her two daughters, and various neighbors who visited the Breen home during Mrs. Morey’s stay there, the theory was sustainable that, although Mrs. Morey was able, at intervals, to be up, and even to go to town as late as May, 1912, yet she was, during the period intervening between June, 1911, and her death in September, 1912, suffering from the same and continuous ailment of which she died. ' The amount awarded by the verdict was held by the Court of Civil Appeals to be justified.

The Supreme Court, in granting the writ of error, regarded the judgment as wrong in decreeing recovery for expenditures for *1090services which could not be considered as having been incurred on account of “the last sickness” of Mrs. Morey, under the legal meaning of that term as applied to one in her physical condition.

Mrs. Morey was over 80 years old at the time she went to live in the home of plaintiff. She suffered the usual infirmities of old age. She was feeble, and doubtless required much more attention and care than would a younger person. Mrs. Breen, the wife of plaintiff, testified that Mrs. Morey was first confined to her bed in 1911 for a period of three weeks in the spring; that in the fall of 1911 she was in bed seven weeks during the months of September and August; that in 1912 she was confined to her bed from April until her death in September; that Mrs. Morey took to her bed in April, 1912, and did not get up again; that in May of that year she got up once or twice and went as far as the dining room; that she had to be assisted to the table and could not remain there, and had to be taken back to bed; that that was the last time she was ever out of her room, and from that time she was so sick she could not be out of bed, or get out without assistance. She also testified that Mrs. Morey went to town in the month of February, 1912.

The Supreme Court, on investigation of the record, advises that it adheres to the opinion expressed in the granting of the writ of error; that the time of “the last sickness,” as applied to one in the invalid condition of Mrs. Morey, and under the facts as disclosed by the evidence, should he reckoned, as a matter of law, as from the date when she was last permanantly confined to her bed. In view of this holding, conceding a full recovery for each item for the full period, and- including the value of the linens, mattresses, and carpet claimed to have been ruined, as of this period, and deducting therefrom the $30 per month paid to plaintiff, as under the instruction of the court, there i's no evidence to sustain a verdict in the sum of $1,000.

We are of opinion that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, affirming that of the district court, should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.

PHILLIPS, C. J.

The judgment recommended by the Commission of Appeals is adopted and will be entered as the judgment of the Supreme Court;

The undisputed proof in this record is that in February, 1912, Mrs. Morey was able to leave the home of the Breens and go into the city of Et. Worth and there attend to cerain business affairs. A verdict whidh reckons the period of her “last sickness” as embracing a time when such was the state of her health, cannot be sustained.

“Last sickness” means the illness which immediately precedes and results in death. It does not mean the general or protracted illness from which a chronic invalid may at no time be free. Applied to one in Mrs. Morey’s condition, — an old lady, past 80 years of age, so infirm as to be habitually ill, — • it could not in fairness and right be held to mean other than that illness by which she was last taken to her bed. The time of such illness did not antedate April, 1912.

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