Court Opinion

ID: 7133247
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:21:11.355331+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:32.271995
License: Public Domain

CHIEF JUSTICE PRYOR
delivered the odixion oe the court.
The appellee instituted this action against the executor of Mollie Newton for services rendered the testatrix from December, 1879, to December 28, 1892, valued at $250 per an-num, and credited by $100, leaving an indebtedness on the part of the testatrix to her of $3,150, for which she obtained a judgment.
It is alleged in the petition that the services were rendered under a contract made with Mrs. Newton by which she agreed to pay the plaintiff, Field, a reasonable compensatioñ for her services by making provision for their payment in her last will and agreed that the devise should be an adequate compensation for the work and labor of the defendant under the contract.
*189After some preliminary motions made by the defense had been disposed of the appellant (the executor) filed an answer in the case denying that any such contract was made, and pleading payment for all the services rendered by the appellee up to the 31st of October, 1888, filing with this pleading a receipt, purporting to have been signed by the appellee, that reads:
"Received of Mollie Newton, fifty dollars, in full, this October 31, 1888. TILL FIELD.”
Also three other receipts for $50 each, one dated the 23d of December, 1889, one 17 th of February, 1891, and one 24th of December, 1891.
It is also alleged that the appellee was furnished with a home by the testator; was clothed and maintained by her in consideration of the services rendered, and a long itemized account kept by the testator showing the sums of money and other expenses incurred and paid for the appellee by the testator accompanied the answer. This account is not filed or pleaded as a set-oif, but for the purpose, no doubt, as the pleader supposed, of evidencing his version of the contract.
The reply of the appellee admits the execution of the receipts, dated in February, 1891, and December, 1891, but denies the execution and delivery of the receipt purporting to be in full and dated on the 31st of October, 1888, and also denies the execution of the receipt dated December 23, 1889. As to the many items set forth in the account or memorandum filed with the answer of the defendant for moneys advanced and clothing -furnished, etc., such as are admitted, the appellee claims were gifts made to her by the testatrix, and not in payment for her services.
It is contended by the appellant that the testimony of the appellee failed to sustain the alleged contract and that mo-*190¡Ion fox» a nonsuit should hare prevailed. There was much testimony as to the character of the services rendered, and the value as fixed by many of the witnesses exceeded the amount claimed in the petition, and the court below instructed the jury that, although there was no express contract established, the plaintiff was entitled to recover a reasonable compensation for her labor for the last five years preceding the institution of the suit, the court confining the recovery to this period of time as the statute of limitations had been pleaded to the original cause of action.
In the absence of an amended pleading, offered or filed to correspond with the proof, it was adjudged below that the express contract could be abandoned and a recovery had upon an implied agreement arising from the facts established, and in this we think the court erred.
Under the Code, if there are averments in a petition presenting a state of facts from which the law would imply a promise to pay, it is not necessary to allege an express promise, but an averment that the goods were sold and delivered at the request of the defendant, or that the labor and services were performed by the plaintiff for the defendant at his special instance and request, would be held sufficient, and the averment of an express promise to pay, and nothing more, is mere surplusage, adding nothing to the complaint and requiring no proof to sustain it. (Bridges v. Reed, 9 Bush, 329; Drake v. Semonin, 82 Ky., 291.)
But the case before us is based on an express agreement to pay for the services at a particular time and in a particular way, the defendant’s testatrix agreeing to make a will by which she would, in some of its provisions, make compensation to the appellee for the services rendered. The breach of the contract is then set forth, and upon the hearing it *191turns out that no such contract was made, and, therefore, the appellee must go out of court or amend her petition so as to recover upon a quantum meruit.
There is a fatal variance between the contract as alleged and that the law would imply by reason of the services having been rendered at the request of the defendant. It is not pretended that this action is based upon an implied contract, but that, as the express contract has failed for want of proof, a recovery may be had, without pleading upon, an implied agreement. This can not be done. (Bull v. McCrea, 8 B. M., 424; Frankfort Bridge Co. v. City of Frankfort, 18 B. M., 41.)
It is insisted, however, by the appellee that the recovery was had upon the express contract, and the testimony authorized the jury to find that such a contract was made. It is, therefore, proper to look to the testimony on this point. There are only two witnesses by whom the contract is attempted to be established. The contract, if made, was entered into in the year 1879, near or quite fourteen years before these witnesses were called to testify. Mrs. Acuff says that the testatrix, in her presence, said to the appellee “if she would break up housekeeping and go and live with her she would pay her well for her work, and would remember her in her will. Could not remember the exact words.” This witness says the appellee, as she supposed, was to be paid by the year, and there was an understanding as to how much was to be paid.
The other witness, a brother of the appellee, states that the appellant advised his sister to break up and live with her; that she was perfectly willing to pay her for it, and “when I die you will bo provided for.” That was about the run of the conversation.
This is about the substance of the conversation or the *192statements of the testatrix made in the presence of these witnesses in the year 1879, and upon which it is claimed this verdict was based. The will of the testatrix was read to the jury, in which she had provided for h#r old family servants, and seems to have omitted from its provisions, if such a contract was made as is alleged, one who from the testimony had received SO' many acts of kindness from the testatrix and with whom she had lived and associated for many years and whose claims upon her were equal to that of any of her associates. This conduct is inconsistent with the terms of the alleged contract, and, as appears from the testimony, is inconsistent with the liberal gifts made to the appellee during her lifetime. The testimony, however, is insufficient to sustain the alleged parol agreement. It is neither satisfactory nor consistent with appellee’s own proof.
These parties were related to each other. The mother of the appellee had died, and, at the invitation of the testatrix, who had no family or kindred with her, she went to the 'latter’s home, and for thirteen years rendered for her, as the proof shows, valuable services, and for which she should be compensated if payment had not been made; but the bare statement that she would be provided for or remembered in the will of the testatrix will not justify the conclusion that testatrix made a contract by which she would make a devise equivalent in value for the services of the appellee, and, having failed to do so, the courts of the country should make provision for her out of the testatrix’s estate.
That appellee performed services for the decedent is not questioned, but if entitled to remuneration she should have amended her petition and asked for the value of her services upon a quantum meruit count.
As to the receipt purporting to be in full it must be re*193garded as in full of all unsettled demands up to that date, in the absence of some explanation showing for what the receipt was given. The execution of these receipts are not in fact denied, and some of them recite “for services rendered,'” but they are not to be held conclusive of a settlement at the-date of their execution, and the jury, as to the receipt of October, 1888, may determine from the entire testimony as to whether or not that was in full of services to that date, the court telling the jury that if defendant’s testatrix paid to the plaintiff $50 on the‘31st of October, 1SS8, and “it was accepted by the appellee in full of the amount due her at that date, they can not find anything for services rendered prior to that time.”
There is one other question as to the competency of the testimony of the appellee. She was offered as a witness to prove, and did prove, the character of the services rendered by her and their value; the condition of the testatrix as to health, and the trouble she had in waiting upon her.
The Code provides that “no person shall testify for himself concerning any verbal statement of or any transaction with or act done or omitted to be done,” etc., by a person who is dead. (Civil Code, sec. 606, sub-sec. 2.)
The facts established by the appellee were made the basis of her recovery, and if the creditor can make the estate of one dead his debtor, by establishing upon hi's own testimony a state of facts arising from, transactions had with the deceased, and from which the law will imply a promise to pay, then the mischief intended to' be remedied by this provision of the Code remains in all such cases, and a recovery allowed on the testimony of the plaintiff. If this claim had been asserted in a count for work and labor performed for the testatrix at her request, a verdict could be sustained on her tes*194timony, and, therefore, her statements were clearly incompetent. She proves the time she worked for the testatrix; the services performed for her, and the ill health of the testatrix, requiring her attention.
These were all, in the tone, spirit and meaning of the Code, transactions with the decedent, had with the deceased and no one else and so directly connect the deceased and the claimant as to render it irrational to say the acts of the claimant were not transactions with the decedent.
The case of Fuller v. Wallace’s ex’or, reported in 6 Ky. Law Rep., 742, reported and decided by the Superior Court, will not be regarded as establishing a different construction of this provision of the Code.
The claim of the plaintiff that the grounds for a new trial are too indefinite can not avail. Where exceptions and objections have been made to the admission of testimony during the trial, or the instructions given at its termination, it has been held sufficient to state in the motion for a new trial that the court erred in admitting incompetent testimony, and erred in its instructions given for the plaintiff, or in refusing to give those asked by the defendant.
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
The appellee should be allowed to amend her petition.