Drake v. McGee
Drake v. McGee
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff, the daughter of Nancy McGee, deceased, filed a claim against the estate of her mother for services rendered the latter in her lifetime. As originally stated, the claim was in the form of a statement of account for services performed from March 1, 1890, to March 1, 1910, 1,040 weeks, at $10 per week, — $10,400; and services performed from March 1, .1910, to July 7, 1914, 208 weeks, at $25 per week, — $5,200: Subsequently, she elaborated her statement into two divisions, claiming to have performed the services pursuant to oral agreements made with her mother, one about March 1, 1890, and another about October 2, 1906.
The administrator denies the claim; alleges that, during the period for which plaintiff claims compensation, she was
There was a trial to a jury, which returned a verdict for plaintiff for $6,500. At the request of the defendant, the court submitted to the jury two special interrogatories, as follows:
“I. -Was there an oral contract made between Nancy McGee, deceased, and Hannah Drake, claimant, on or about March 1, 1890, for the performance of services?
“2. Was there an oral promise made by Nancy McGee, deceased, on or about October 2, 1906, by which Nancy Mc- ■ Gee promised to pay Hannah Drake for services performed in the family?”
To each of these questions, the jury answered, “Yes.”
The appellant argues for a new trial on the following grounds:
1. Appeal and error:review: presumptions: exclusion of evidence. I. The defendant identified and offered in evidence the will alleged to have been left by Nancy McGee; but plaintiff’s objection thereto, as being neither competent nor material nor relevant to the issue being tried, was n . sustained, and error is assigned upon this ruling.
The will is not set out in the abstract, and we must presume the court was correct in its ruling that the instrument had no legitimate bearing as evidence in the case.
-In the same connection, it is said that the court remarked, in the presence of the jury:
2. Trial : conduct of court:remarks relative to materiality of offered evidence. “I read the will, and there is nothing in it that will support the contention you are making for it, and therefore the objection is sustained.”
This, it is argued, must have prejudiced the defense in the minds of the jurors. Just how the statement could harm the defense, except as any and
II. At the close of the evidence, defendant moved the court for a directed verdict in his favor, upon the first count or division of the plaintiff’s claim. The motion was denied, and this also is assigned as error.
We do not find that the record justifies the objection. In the first paragraph of the court’s charge to the jury, it set out the claim and defense substantially as pleaded. It contains no statement of the kind of which appellant complains. In the second and third paragraphs, however, the court does inform the jury that plaintiff was making the claim that, by the terms of the alleged agreement of March, 1890, the mother was to pay for the services rendered by plaintiff out of her estate; and that, unless the jury found the fact to be as stated, plaintiff could recover nothing whatever on the first count of her claim. Now it is true that, in her claim as filed, plaintiff did not show what the alleged agreement with her mother provided as to the time of payment, but on the trial, there was evidence in her behalf fairly tending to show that such payment, if any, was to be made at her mother’s death, or out of the property or estate left by her, and the court was within the proper scope of its duties in saying to the jury that such was the plaintiff’s claim. Parties presenting or filing a claim for allowance in probate are not held to niceties of pleading. Had the defendant asked a more specific statement as to the agreed time of payment, it would have been within the court’s discretion to order it. No such order being made, it was clearly proper for plaintiff to prove] as best she could, the fact as to what time of payment was understood or agreed upon, if at all," when the alleged agreement for service on her part was made. There was no error in the charge in this respect.
IV. It is said that, although the statute of limitations was pleaded as against the first count of the claim, the court failed to submit that issue to the jury.
We are of the opinion that this point is well made. We have had occasion to consider this question in Hanley v. Fidelity & Casually Company, decided June 26, 1917, and it is unnecessary to repeat the discussion there found. But we shall have to say, in any event, even without application of the rule just referred to, that there is clearly enough evidence to go to the jury on these interrogatories, and that the answers could not be set aside or ignored as having no support in the evidence. Indeed, counsel’s argument is not so much that there is no evidence, as that it is weak and un
The same remarks are applicable to counsel’s further contention that the general verdict is not sustained by the evidence. The case is no exception to the well known rule that a contest between relatives over property left by á dead ancestor is quite sure to be bitter and productive- of irreconcilable disputes in testimony. We shall not attempt here to discuss the relative credibility of the witnesses or the comparative reasonableness of the stories told on part of the plaintiff and defendant. These were questions for the jury alone, and we must leave them as they were by the jury determined. It is enough to say that, upon the evidence offered, the jury could properly find that the plaintiff, during the 24 years from 1890 until her mother’s death, faithfully labored with and for the mother and family. In that time, the father, the sister, .a brother, and finally the mother herself, sickened and died, and the burden of their care was largely carried by the plaintiff. It is true that, during a part of this time, she kept house for her son, living near at hand; but at no time, if we may believe- the testimony on her part, was her hand or help withdrawn. It is the not unusual case where, as a family grows up and scatters, some one of the children gradually comes to be the main prop and support and help for the parents in their declining years; and if, in estimating the value of such services in terms of money, it seems to be large, other members of the family should not forget that the service was long and wearisome, nor that the very fact of the presence and service of the one child remaining in the old home has given to them freedom and opportunity to carve out their own fortunes in the world at large, and they should be willing that such service be recognized with just compensation, not to say with reasonable liberality. Ridler v. Ridler, 93 Iowa 347.
The evidence as to the value of plaintiff’s services was the subject of widely differing estimates. The amount found
We find no prejudicial error in the record, and the judgment of the district court is — Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hannah Drake v. William McGee, Administrator
- Status
- Published