Succession of Simon
Succession of Simon
Opinion of the Court
Alida Lopez, the appellee, presents a two-fold claim against the Succession of Isidore Simon:
First. ' For the recovery of jewelry (or its value), donated to her by manual gift by the deceased and by her subsequently deposited with him for safe keeping.-
Second. For the recovery of the sum of $650, on a quantum meruit, for services rendered decedent as clerk and manager of his store during the year preceding his death.
The manual gift of the jewelry by the deceased to the claimant, to whom he was engaged to be married, is fully established by the testimony of several credible witnesses who were present on that occasion. To attack the verity of plaintiff’s claim, the defense relies upon the fact that the claimant failed to assert her ownership of the jewels when, in her presence, they were found in the decedent’s bank box at the time it was vainly searched in an effort to find a testament; but her failure to assert
The defense further claims that her testimony as to-having deposited the jewels with decedent should not be believed because it is shown that she possessed at the time one or more bank-boxes of her own in local bank vaults where the jewels might have been safely kept. Considering the relationship of the parties, it is not unusual or remarkable that she should have preferred to have entrusted their safe-keeping to the one from whom she had received them; and, in any event, this minor incident alone, is not sufficient to authorize the rejection of her testimony which is so fully and strongly corroborated upon the other and more salient features of the transaction..
The judgment appealed from ordered the delivery of the jewelry or the -payment of their value and there is no error therein in that regard.
II.
As to the claim for compensation for services rendered, the record discloses with certainty that at decedent’s request Alida Lopez entered his employ on January 1,1905, and continued therein until May 1, 1905, when she went to Europe; that on her return from Europe in October, 1905, she resumed her position and maintained same till his death in December of that year. She occupied the position of clerk and assistant manager and during his absence from the city, as well as during the sickness which resulted in his death, she conducted the business and acted as his sole representative. Her duties required her constant attendance during business hours and at
The gift of the jewelry by decedent to the claimant was made at the time and apparently in celebration of their engagement, in September, 1904; but during his life decedent failed to compensate her for her services and at' his death no will was found, so that his entire' estate, • inventoried at $38,000, was inherited by his surviving brothers and sisters.
“When services are rendered of a valuable nature' in the expectation of being renumerated in the will of the person to whom they are rendered and an implied promise to that effect has been held out to the party performing the same and he is not mentioned in the will, he will be entitled to reasonable compensation out of the estate of the deceased.”
Succession of McNamara, 48 An. 45; Mimmo vs. Walker, 14 An. 581.
“Where one renders valuable services to another' at his request, an implied contract for renumeration is raised.”
Beall vs. Van Bibber, 19 An. 434; Succession of Penenihet, 23 An. 294; Camfrancq vs. Phille, 1 An. 197.
The claim of the defence that the relationship of the parties was such as to rebut the presumption that the services were not gratuitous, is not well founded, for
The nature, value and extent of the services rendered as shown by the record fully justify the amount allowed by the judgment of the lower court on this branch of the case.
It is accordingly ordered that 'the judgment appealed from be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.