The appeals in these two causes are from judgments entered upon a report of a referee.
The appellants in each case presented a claim against the estate of Rudolph Bach, deceased, which, having been rejected by the administrator, were by stipulation referred to a referee to hear and determine, and after a trial were held by the referee not to be established.
We have carefully examined the testimony in each case, and are of the opinion that the decision of the referee was correct, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
The deceased was an unmarried man, who from the year 1884
During the last few years of his life he was troubled with a disease of his urinary organs, hut until a few months prior to his death he was not incapacitated from pursuing his ordinary vocation of a bookbinder. Nor was lie until his last illness confined to his home.
The appellant Peter Hughes is a physician, who claims to have rendered Mr. Bach medical services from April 3, 1888, until Ms death. His bill shows charges for attendance nearly every alternate day during that period until his final illness, when the attendance was on every day.
Mrs. Walsh’s hill is for services as a nurse. They appear, from the hill rendered, to have commenced a little earlier than the physician’s services. The charge is for the period from January 1,1888, to the death of the deceased. Two hundred and eighty-four weeks are charged for at five dollars per week and the balance of the period at fifteen dollars per week.
The physician’s hill amounts to $2,440, and Mrs. Walsh’s to $1,620.
In addition to these two claims, it also appears that an undertaker’s hill for the expenses of Mr. Bach’s funeral was presented to the respondent and rejected, which amounted to the sum of $1,406. As the deceased left no relatives and no immediate friends, it is fair to presume that the services rendered by the undertaker were upon the employment of Mrs. Walsh, especially as she testified that she was a witness in the proceedings instituted by the undertaker against the responde".:____support, of the claim.
Mrs. Waish was the chief witness in support of Dr. Hughes’ bill, and Dr. Hughes was the chief witness in support of Mrs. Walsh’s bill.
It would serve no useful purpose to point out the inaccuracies and inconsistencies in the testimony of these witnesses. It is suificient to say that we are satisfied that very much of their testimony is untrue.
Mr. Bach is shown to have been a man of very regular habits, and prudent and careful in his expenditures. He paid Mrs. Walsh regularly for his room and for such meals as she served him down to
The rule that a fact testified to by a disinterested witness who is not discredited, which is not in conflict with other evidence, is to be taken as legally established, and cannot be disregarded by the court or jury, is not applicable to this class of cases. The person who could contradict the witness, if his testimony is false, is not living, and the courts have uniformly enforced the rule that claims withheld during the life of an alleged debtor, and sought to be enforced after his death, must be established by satisfactory proof. (Kearney v. McKeon, 85 N. Y. 136; Rowland v. Howard, 75 Hun, 4.)
But the rule that the uncontradicted testimony of a disinterested witness is to be believed, is always subject to the limitation that the evidence is not improbable.
We are of the opinion that the testimony given in support of the claims presented by the appellants is improbable. It is not unlikely that there may be a just claim for services rendered during the last illness of Mr. Bach, but we are not satisfied that either of the appellants has a just claim for the amounts or for the periods stated in
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Pratt, J., dissenting.