Moore v. Renick

SMITH, P. J.

This is an action which originated in the probate court. The wife of the plaintiff was the sister of the deceased. The evidence adduced by the plaintiff tends to prove that the deceased was an unmarried man of considerable means, and that he had been making his home with his father and mother until after the mother’s death, which took place in 1885, after which occurrence he and his father concluded to break up. housekeeping. He then went to plaintiff and made that fact known and, at the same time inquiring of him (plaintiff) whether or not they could stay there, and to which inquiry plaintiff answered that they could, and thereupon the deceased replied that if they could do so he (the deceased) would make it all right with him. It is, in effect, conceded that the deceased made his home with plaintiff from February, 1885, until his death, which happened in January, 1889. It further seems from the evidence that the deceased kept, at the plaintiff’s residence, from two to four horses, during the time he made his home with plaintiff. The plaintiff’s evidence further tended to prove that the plaintiff’s wife, during the time the deceased lived with plaintiff, did his mending, washing, etc.

The plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that during that time the deceased did no work for plaintiff except some chores which he performed occasionally, when agreeable to him, but that of the defendant tends to show that he did considerable work at times, such *206as gathering corn, patting ap ice, feeding stock, etc. The latter evidence farther tended to show that the deceased made several loans of money to plaintiff, for which no interest was charged. The reasonableness of the charge of twelve dollars per month for the services rendered deceased by plaintiff, was not dispated. The action is on an accoant against the decedent’s estate to recover $2,001 for board, room, washing, etc. The answer was a general denial, coapled with a plea of the statate of limitations, and that of payment.

There was a trial in the circuit coart where the plaintiff had jndgment, and the defendant appealed.

I. The defendant objects that the trial coart erred in permitting the plaintiff to testify at the trial of the case. It appears from the record that James Benick a witness who had been called by the defendant, testified, in sabstance, that plaintiff had come to his (witness’s) hoase after the appointment of the defendant as administrator, and had stated to him that he did not intend to charge the deceased any board. The plaintiff in response to a qnestion asked him by his coansel as to whether or not he had made sach statement, testified that he had not. As the plaintiff’s testimony was in rebattal and related to á conversation which took place between him and the witness Benick after the appointment of the administrator, ander the stat-ate it was properly admitted. R. S. 1899, sec. 4652; Callahan v. Riggins, 43 Mo. App. 130; Stanton v. Ryan, 41 Mo. 510; McGlothlin v. Hemry, 59 Mo. 213; Martin v. Jones, 59 Mo. 187; Wade v. Hardy, 75 Mo. 394; Eyermann v. Piron, 151 Mo. loc. cit. 115.

II. The defendant farther objects that the coart erred in giving plaintiff’s first instruction, which told "“the jnry that when' one person renders valaable services for another person, the law makes the other person liable for whatever snm sach services are reasonably worth, and if yoa believe from the evidence in this case, that said Benick made his home with said *207Moore, during the time charged for in the account, and that he received the care and attention and the services charged for in said account, then the law makes his estate liable for whatever such care and attention and such services are reasonably worth; and you will find for the plaintiff for whatever sum you believe from the evidence the same were worth, not to exceed the sum of $1,757.75; unless you shall believe from the evidence that said Moore did not intend to charge for said services when they were rendered. ’ ’ This instruction is unhappily and awkwardly worded, but barring this we think it is not an incorrect expression of the law, either in the abstract or concrete.

An implied contract is co-ordinate and commensurate with duty, and whenever it is certain that one ought to do a particular thing, as for example, to pay the worth of services requested by another, the law presumes the former to have promised that thing, or, in-other words, it creates a contract. And so it has been held that a promise by the employer is generally implied to make reasonable compensation for services rendered, unless there are circumstances which negative that implication. Thomas v. Coal Co., 43 Mo. App. 653; Lowe v. Sinklear, 27 Mo. 308; Hay v. Walker, 65 Mo. 17. In the last-cited case it was in substance said that, in. order to raise an implied contract to pay for services, it is not necessary that there shall have been an intention on the part of the one rendering the services during such services to charge therefor; it is sufficient that the one for whom the services is rendered expected to pay for it, and so, unless the, services were performed under circumstances justifying the belief that no charge was intended, a liability arose even though no charge was, in fact, intended by the one rendering the service during rendition thereof. Hay v. Walker, as far as we are able to discover, has never been criticised or overruled. The general rule to be extracted from the cases in this State *208is, that where one performs valuable services for another, the benefit of which has been received and enjoined by him, the law presumes an intention on the part of the former to charge and the lattei to pay the reasonable value thereof^ and raises a promise on the part of such latter to pay such reasonable value. Kostuba v. Miller, 137 Mo. 161. The ordinary presumption of an agreement to pay for valuable services rendered, does not obtain where the parties occupy the family relation. Woods v. Land, 30 Mo. App. 176; Penter v. Roberts, 51 Mo. App. 222; Louder v. Hart, 52 Mo. App. 377. In such cases the law raises the presumption that the services were voluntary and gratuitous, and this presumption will prevail unless a contract to pay for them be shown. Kostuba v. Miller, ante. The existence of the relation of brother and sister is not per se sufficient to authorize the presumption that service performed by the one for the other was gratuitous, unless they lived together and thereby created the family relation. Callahan v. Riggins, 43 Mo. App. 130.

In the present case, there was evidence which tended to show that the services, the value of which the plaintiff seeks to recover, were rendered by the plaintiff at the request of the deceased. From these facts the law would imply a promise on the part of the deceased to pay the reasonable value of such services, unless there .were circumstances disclosed by the evidence negativing that implication.

The declarations and admissions made, if they were made, by the plaintiff, since the appointment of the defendant as administrator, that he did not intend to charge the deceased anything for the services, would have the effect to negative or rebut th,e implication. There was evidence of other facts and circumstances having a like effect. Besides this, if the jury found that the family relation existed between the parties as indicated by the instructions for the defendant, *209then that raised, the presumption of a fact which negatived the implication of a promise on the part of the deceased to pay for the service rendered'by the plaintiff. . Accordingly, we think this instruction, while subject to some slight verbal criticism, was not erroneous in expression nor was it, when read in connection with the others given, calculated to mislead the jury.

The defendant loudly complains, as well he might, of the action of the circuit court in giving the following instruction for the plaintiff: ‘ ‘ Although you may believe from the evidence that some of the services charged for in the account were rendered said Renick by the wife of said Moore; still, the said Moore is entitled to compensation for all the services that said Renick received that are charged for, in the account; whether rendered by said Moore in person or by his. wife.” It seems to us that by this instruction the court told the jury, about as plainly as it well could, that plaintiff was entitled to recover for all the services rendered to the deceased, whether or not such service was performed in part by the plaintiff’s wife Owing to its peremptory character, in a case like this where the evidence is not only conflicting but so evenly balanced, it is utterly intolerable. But if this be not so, it should at least be condemned for ambiguity, and on account of which it was calculated to mislead the jury. ...

..No objection is seen to plaintiff’s fourth, when read in connection with the defendant’s sixth and seventh, for the three when taken together contain a complete expression of the law covering the issue to which they relate. Swofford v. Spratt, 93 Mo. App. 631, and the cases there cited.

III. The court very properly refused the defendant’s instruction number two, which told the jury that all the items of the plaintiff’s account which accrued five years before the commencement of the suit was *210barred by the statute of limitations. We are cited to no authority, nor are we aware of any, which sanctions such an instruction in a case like this. The rule is that when the account is a running and continuous one, and it is fairly inferable from the conduct of the parties while the account is accruing, that the whole- may be regarded as one account, then none of the items are barred unless all are. Chadwick v. Chadwick, 115 Mo. 581. Whether such inference is authorized by the evidence, is for the jury and not for the court to determiné.

No sufficient reason is suggested why the defendant’s third was not properly refused. It was not within the limits of the issue. Wright v. Fonda, 44 Mo. App. 634.

Nor do we discover any ground for questioning the propriety of the action of the court in refusing the defendant’s fourth. Whether or not the deceased paid for the board of himself and horses, by work and labor performed for plaintiff, is not an issue made by the pleadings. The answer was a general denial coupled with a simple plea of paymént. A payment other than in money must necessarily rest on an independent agreement, and where the action is commenced in a court of record, as here, where formal pleadings are required, such an agreement can not be shown under a general denial or simple plea of payment, but the substantive facts of the agreement must be pleaded. Rider v. Culp, 68 Mo. App. loc. cit. 531.

The court properly refused the defendant’s fifth instruction, by which the court was requested to tell the jury that if during the time plaintiff’s account accrued, he was indebted to the deceased and he paid the said deceased such indebtedness, then upon such payment there was in law a presumption of fact from which the jury were authorized to infer (presume) that all of the items of indebtedness between plaintiff and deceased at that time were finally settled. A presump*211lion which the jury is to make is not a circumstance in proof, and is not, therefore, a legitimate foundation for a presumption. We have here presented an instance of one presumption resting upon another. Such a mode of arriving at a conclusion of fact can not be approved. Bigelow v. Railway, 48 Mo. App. 367; Chemical Co. v. Lackawanna, 78 Mo. App. 305; Glick v. Railway, 57 Mo. App. 104; United States v. Ross, 92 U. S. 281. The court, no doubt, meant by this instruction to authorize the application of the ruling as it is declared in Ham v. Barret, 28 Mo. 388, and the other cases that have followed it, but failed, as we think, to do so.

On account of the error in the giving of the plaintiff’s second instruction, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.