1. Where near relatives by blood or marriage reside together as one common family, and one of them renders services to another, and such other furnishes him board and lodging or other necessaries or comforts, a presumption arises that neither party intended to receive or to pay compensation for the services rendered on the one hand, or for the board and lodging or other necessaries or comforts on the other; that they were intended as mutual acts of kindness done or furnished gratuitously. And the relation of aunt and nephew seems to be within the rule. We think, however, it is going too far to say that in order to authorize a recovery in such case there must be direct proof of an express contract for compensation. The relation of master and servant, or an express contract to compensate a relative for services rendered, may be established as fairly and fully by circumstantial evidence as by that which is direct. “ Proof of expectation on the one hand to render compensation, and on the other to receive it, is competent evidence, in connection with the facts and circumstances of the case, to give color to them, tending to show that such expectations ripened into a mutual understanding,— an express contract.” Fisher v. Fisher, 5 Wis. 472; Pellage v. Pellage, 32 Wis. 136; Wells v. Perkins, 43 Wis. 164; Tyler v. Burrington, 39 Wis. 382; Ellis v. Cary, 74 Wis. 177.
We think the evidence sustains the finding of the circuit court that there was an understanding or contract between the parties that, if the respondent stayed with the deceased and carried on her farm, managed her property, and took care of her until she died, he should have her property, and that his services were of the value found by the court. The claimant in this case, although a nephew of the deceased, had never lived with or worked for her until he commenced to serve her under the contract found to have existed between them, and he was at that time over twenty-*665one years of age. The deceased had never occupied toward him any quasi parental relation, and it does not appear that he had ever been the recipient of anything from her by way of gift, donation, nurture, support, or otherwise, and he certainly owed her no legal duty of assistance or support. The death of the aunt has served to close the mouth of the claimant as to any transactions or communications between them, and the respondent has necessarily been, in a large degree, compelled to make out his claim for his services rendered to the deceased during'a period of eight or nine years, through the medium of her declarations or admissions, made at various times to witnesses who testified in his behalf, some of which were made.at times not long prior to her death. The fact is established that she sent for him to Germany, and he came at her request, and, though he had grown to man’s estate, for a period of nearly nine years he continued his services, and for which she declared in substance, at various times, that “what she had was to be his; ” that “ when she got done with all she had, then it was all to go to Joseph” and other similar statements. She told another witness that she was going to send for Joseph, and, after he had arrived, and during the first year, that she was going to deed him her property, and afterwards, when sick, she thought of making him a deed to avoid any trouble.
The record shows that respondent testified that the complaint, which sets out an express contract, was true. This answer was not objected to, nor -was any motion made to strike it out until the next term after the action had been tried and judgment perfected on the finding, but the motion was denied. The circuit court is charged with the duty of making up its own record, and its action in this respect, and its determination as to what transpired in court, cannot be questioned for alleged want of conformity with the truth, either on mandamus or by appeal. State *666ex rel. Roe v. Noggle, 13 Wis. 380; Bunn v. Valley L. Co. 63 Wis. 632, 633. The record, imports absolute verity, and whatever objection might have been made to the answer has been waived or lost, and the answer must now stand as a part of the case.
The court allowed the respondent to testify, in answer to the question, “What did you expect to receive for the work you did there?” and his answer was: “Expected she would pay me well if I did my work well and stayed there until she died, and then the property was to be mine. That is what I expected.” It was competent, we think, to show by his answer that he rendered the services with the expectation that he would be compensated for them, and not with the intention that they should be gratuitous. To that extent, at least, the fact did not necessarily involve any personal communication or transaction with the deceased, and was, we think, competent; but, in order to have excluded it on the ground that it involved a personal transaction or communication with the deceased, the subject should have been pursued by the appellants’ counsel so far as to show that his expectation was founded upon some such communication or transaction. In so far as the answer implies that there was an express contract between them on the subject, it would seem to be incompetent, but the rejection of this part of the answer does not, in our opinion, materially affect the correctness of the finding.
We have regarded the case as within the general rule holding that the relationship existing between the parties rebuts the presumption which would exist in other cases that compensation was intended. As between remote relatives, at least, there is great reason for holding that the presumption that the services were intended to be gratuitous is relatively weakened, especially if, as here, the parties had not previously been domiciled together. Quigly v. Harold, 22 Ill. App. 269. And a more liberal rule may perhaps be *667applied where the evidence is such as to rebut the presumption arising from the relationship and mutual intercourse between the parties that the services were to be gratuitous, by evidence falling short of an express contract. It would seem to be doubtful, at least, whether the present case, in view of its peculiar facts and circumstances, falls within the general rule. Bish. Cont. § 223; Hill v. Hill, 121 Ind. 261; Ensey v. Hines, 30 Kan. 704; Morton v. Rainey, 82 Ill. 215; Cauble v. Ryman, 26 Ind. 207; Smith v. Denman, 48 Ind. 65.
2. The agreement of the deceased to convey or devise and bequeath her real and personal property as compensation for the respondent’s services was clearly within the statute of frauds (sec. 2304, R. S.) as to the real estate, and, the contract being indivisible and failing in part, the whole agreement therefore fails; but the respondent may recover for his services rendered under such promise or agreement what they may be shown to have been reasonably worth, and such void promise or agreement cannot be set up as a defense to the claim, but it may be shown in evidence to rebut the presumption that the services in question were rendered gratuitously. Ellis v. Cary, 74 Wis. 177; Freeman v. Foss, 145 Mass. 361; Wallace v. Long, 105 Ind. 522; Schwab v. Pierro, 43 Minn. 520, 523, and cases cited.
3. The objections that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations of six years, and that there can be no recovery in this proceeding for want of previous demand, are clearly untenable. The cause of action quantum meruit did not accrue until the death of the intestate, and there was then no one upon whom to make a demand. The law does not require impossibilities. There was but one way left in which to demand compensation, namely, the one provided by law and pursued by the respondent, by filing his claim against the estate of the intestate in the county *668court for allowance. This brings the case clearly within the principle of the case of Tucker v. Grover, 60 Wis. 240.
4. It is strenuously insisted that the court erred in allowing interest on the amount found due from the time of the death of the intestate, instead of the date of presentation of the claim to the county court, but the exception to the conclusion of law of the circuit court, in pursuance of which the judgment was given, is too general to present that question. There is no exception specifically presenting it. The conclusion of law contains substantially three propositions, namely: (1) That the respondent is entitled to recover $1,730; (2) that he is entitled to interest thereon from January 30, 1892, at seven per cent, per annum; (3) that he is entitled to recover costs. The first and third propositions we find to be coi’rect; and the rule is that, where an exception covers several propositions, it is a general one, and is not available if any one of them is correct. Gilman v. Thiess, 18 Wis. 528; Musgat v. Wybro, 33 Wis. 515; Paggeot v. Sexton, 23 Wis. 195; Gillett v. Wisconsin Cooperage Co. 44 Wis. 463. Where the finding shows that interest has been allowed from too early a date, the error should be specifically pointed out,, so that the prevailing party may remit the excess and avoid the necessity and costs of an appeal. Dean v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 43 Wis. 305.
It follows from these views that the judgment of the circuit court is correct.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.