John Seiler filed a claim for $1305.68 against the estate of John Weir, deceased. The items were six hundred dollars, board and lodging for two years; four hundred and eighty dollars for nursing, sewing, and mending for a like period, and $225.68 for goods, money, material, and labor furnished. The claim was allowed by the administrator of John Weir's estate and approved by the judge of the probate court. Peter Weir, a brother of the decedent, filed a contest which was tried according to the provisions of section 1636 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The questions of fact were presented to a jury and general and special verdicts were returned. The general verdict was in favor of the claimant, John Seiler, for $765.68. By the special verdict the jury answered "yes" to four questions by which the jurors were required to determine whether or not the claimant had furnished the sort of service, material, etc., demanded by him. To questions regarding the value of the things for which payment was demanded the jury replied that the board and lodging for two years was worth twelve dollars and fifty cents per month; nursing and mending ten dollars per month; goods, materials, money and merchandise, $117.95; work and labor, $107.73. The aggregate of these items is $765.68, the amount of the general verdict. The court received and filed the verdicts and caused them to be entered upon the minutes of the court, but it appearing to the court that the special verdict *Page 332 was inconsistent with the general verdict and that upon the special verdict John Seiler was entitled to judgment for the full amount demanded, such a judgment was entered for $1305.68, together with costs and disbursements to the amount of $133.30. The judgment was entered some days after the trial and reception of the verdicts and after motion of the claimant's counsel for such a judgment, which, by stipulation, was heard "only upon the record consisting of said Seiler's claim, the contest thereto, the general verdict and the special verdict." This appeal is from the order granting said motion and from the judgment.
It is apparent that the inconsistency between the general and special verdict, asserted by the claimant's counsel and found by the court, is not one of arithmetic. Both respondent and the court evidently held the opinion that the value of the items of Seiler's claim was not in issue, but that their validity was and that the finding that the estate owed the claimant for the services, materials, etc., for which payment was sought left the court no alternative except the entry of judgment for the amount demanded.
The only grounds of contest urged by Peter Weir were the following:
"1. That said claim was erroneously and inadvertently allowed by said administrator and by the judge of this court.
"2. That said claim is not a proper or legal claim against the said estate, or against decedent.
"3. That if said alleged board and lodging, nursing, labor and materials were, or either of them was furnished at all, the same were paid and discharged by decedent during his lifetime."
The amount, if any, due to the claimant from the estate could not be in issue under the first or the third grounds of contest, but appellant insists that the second ground did make issuable the value of the services, advances, goods, etc., for which Seiler demanded payment. Doubtless that was the theory of both litigants and of the court at the trial. There was no demurrer to the contest. The questions framed for and answered by the jury involved the very matter which the court afterwards held not to be in issue. The form of the questions and the answers in the special verdict may be perfectly illustrated by quotation of the first two which were as follows: *Page 333
"1. Did John Seiler furnish board and lodging to John Weir for the two years ending February 13, 1912?
"A. Yes.
"2. If your answer to the above question is `yes,' then state what the value of said board and lodging was.
"A. $12.50 per month."
It would be most unjust to deprive contestant of the fruits of his victory after a trial in which the value of the items of Seiler's account had been treated as issuable by everyone concerned. While the allegation that the claim was not a "proper or legal claim against the said estate" is not a model of pleading, we hold that in the absence of demurrer or any other objection it was sufficient to put in issue the value of the various elements of the claim filed by Seiler. There was no motion to strike out the findings of value as not being supported by the evidence. The general and special verdicts are in harmony on the amount awarded. Therefore we must assume that they were supported by the evidence. There was no inconsistency between the verdicts and the court erred in granting the motion on that ground. (Irrgang v. Ott, 9 Cal.App. 441, [99 P. 528];Obersteller v. Commercial Assurance Co., 96 Cal. 647, [31 P. 587].)
In respondent's brief occurs the statement that "no evidence was introduced by contestant Weir" as to the values of the services rendered and board and lodging furnished. This is denied by appellant. Both statements must be ignored by this court in view of the stipulation of the parties to the contest regarding the matters to be considered on the motion. These were "Seiler's claim, the contest thereto, the general verdict and the special verdict."
The record shows that the bill of costs was not served and filed within five days after the verdict as required by section1033 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but as there is no assignment of error in the taxation of costs presented by the record before us we may not review that matter.
The judgment should be modified by striking out the paragraph thereof in which the court expresses the view that the special findings are inconsistent with the general verdict and by awarding $765.68 on respondent's claim instead of $1305.68. In other respects the judgment should stand affirmed and it is so ordered.
Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred. *Page 334