Court Opinion

ID: 8188593
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:11:26.105118+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:31.233355
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed October 9, 1906:
SiEKEOEER, J.
Plaintiff rests his right to recovery upon an implied obligation flowing from the contract for Mrs, Cuddy’s support and care, under which the plaintiff and each one of the other parties was bound in the same degree to discharge the common burden. He avers that for more than six *454years before tbe commencement of this action, he in fact discharged this obligation alone, and he demands that the defendants contribute their shares by reimbursing him for the excess he has paid on account of their failure to perforin their part of the common obligation. The right to contribution under similar circumstances is well established and its enforcement in legal actions has been sustained in the decisions of this court. Bushnell v. Bushnell, 77 Wis. 435, 46 N. W. 442; Mason v. Pierron, 63 Wis. 239, 23 N. W. 119; Faurot v. Gates, 86 Wis. 569, 57 N. W. 294. See, also, the following cases in other jurisdictions: Jacobsmeyer v. Jacobsmeyer, 88 Mo. App. 102; Odiorne v. Moulton, 64 N. H. 211, 9 Atl. 625; Fletcher v. Grover, 11 N. H. 368; Power v. Rees, 189 Pa. St. 496, 42 Atl. 26.
The defendants insist that since plaintiff’s wife is a party to the contract the court erred in denying their request to make her a party to this action. Prom the foregoing statement it clearly follows that plaintiff is entitled to enforce his alleged claim for contribution, and that he may do this by proceeding against any one or more of the persons liable to him for their proportionate share without proceeding against all persons so liable to him. It is apparent that plaintiff’s wife, as one of the parties.equally bound on the face of the agreement by the common burden, was not a necessary party to the action against the defendants to recover from them their proportionate shares of the amount due plaintiff under the contract. The claim that W. T. Cuddy should have been made a defendant in this action, upon the ground that he had assumed the lien of the mortgage given by Mary and Catherine Payne on their separate real estate, which he thereafter purchased, to secure the performance of the contract, is not well founded. This is not an action to enforce the mortgage security in favor of Mrs. Cuddy, but one for the enforcement of the personal liability of the parties to contribute their proportionate shares of the contract obligation. There is noth*455ing to show that W. T. Cuddy assumed this personal liability of the defendants.
Defendants requested that plaintiff’s wife and W. T. Cuddy be made parties to the- action, upon the ground that they are proper and necessary parties to a final determination of the questions presented under the allegations of the answer. It is contended that the allegations of the answer showing that they are necessary parties to the action constitute pleas in abatement, and that, since plaintiff failed to reply to them, they stand admitted, and therefore defendants’ request that they be made parties should have been granted. The court refused the request, and treated these allegations of the answer as new matter at issue without a reply, and tried the questions raised by them with the general issues in the case. Under sec. 2667, Stats. 1898, any allegation of new matter, not pleaded as a counterclaim, is to be deemed controverted by the adverse party. All special rules governing pleas in abatement and bar at the common law have been modified by the Code, and matters pleaded,-whether in bar or in abatement, are to be alleged in one answer and may be tried together in the court’s discretion, under the. Code and Circuit Court Rule XIV. Roys v. Lull, 9 Wis. 324; Wood v. Lake, 13 Wis. 84; Canfield v. Watertown F. Ins. Co. 55 Wis. 419, 13 N. W. 252; Freeman v. Carpenter, 17 Wis. 126; Bliss, Code PL §§ 3-5; Pomeroy, Code Rem. §§ 697, 698.
It is urged that error was committed because the court held that the evidence establishing the contract was not disputed and that by its terms plaintiff and his wife and the defendants became jointly and severally bounden to furnish support and care to Bridget Cuddy as therein stipulated, and that Bridget Cuddy had the right to live at the home of either the plaintiff or the defendants at such times and for such periods as she might desire. It is obvious that this contract was entered into by Mary and Catherine Payne, daughters of Bridget Cuddy, in order to assure to their mother support *456and care-for the remainder of ber life, and that slie should have the privilege of living at their respective homes if she so chose, and that the daughters, in consideration of such support and care, joined in a conveyance of the real estate, jointly owned by them, their mother, and brother, to their respective husbands, George and Albert Payne, who, in consideration of the transfer of this real estate to them, joined in the contract for support. The terms of the agreement, in the light of these facts and circumstances, clearly indicate that the parties to it were obligated to furnish the mother the care and support stipulated wherever she might choose to reside, and that it was not contemplated or agreed that such support was to be furnished solely at the expense of the party with whom she resided. To construe the contract as appellant contends would give its terms a special and strained significance which they do not naturally import, and would conflict with the apparent intentions of the parties.
It is urged that the defendant Catherine Payne could not bind herself at law as a party to this agreement, since it in no way affected her separate property or business. The contract made provision for the mother’s support and care for life. It seems she contributed to this object to the extent of transferring her interest in the lands conveyed to George and Albert Payne. Yet the parties evidently did not consider this a sufficient consideration to compensate for the undertaking, and the daughters obligated themselves to share this burden with their husbands equally by joining in the contract, and they secured its performance by pledging their separate estates under a mortgage. The fact that Bridget Cuddy was provided support and care for life by this transaction, which protected her daughters from liability under the statutes for furnishing her support in case she should become unable to maintain herself, furnishes good grounds for the taking of such steps as they might deem proper to protect themselves and their separate estates from such liability. *457Her support and care under this contract .therefore operated to the benefit and advantage of her daughters’ separate estates, and thus enabled them to make a contract in respect thereto, and brings the transaction within the class covered by the statute removing the common-law disabilities of married women to make binding contracts. Kriz v. Peege, 119 Wis. 105, 95 N. W. 108; Citizens L. & T. Co. v. Witte, 116 Wis. 60, 92 N. W. 443; Mueller v. Wiese, 95 Wis. 381, 70 N. W. 485; Stach v. Padden, 111 Wis. 42, 86 N. W. 568.
A number of exceptions to the reception of testimony are urged upon our attention. Plaintiff testified to the .respective values of the two pieces of land conveyed to him and the defendant in consideration of their assuming to aid in the support and care of Bridget Cuddy; as to her condition of health while she resided at his house, and the reasonable value of the support which he furnished her during the period for which he sued. The reception of this evidence as well as that of George Payne, Jr., concerning Mrs. Cuddy’s fear of the defendant, is urged as prejudicial because the witnesses had no knowledge on the subject, and because it had no relevancy to the issues tried. An examination of the exceptions -discloses that the evidence was material and competent, and that the witnesses testified from personal knowledge.
Other exceptions were urged against the rejection of evidence offered by defendants of conversations with W. T. Cuddy as to his assumption of the mortgage obligation and •of proof tending to show ill feeling between all the parties. The record shows that this evidence was either wholly immaterial or so slightly related to the issues litigated that no prejudice resulted from its exclusion. Defendants called the plaintiff’s wife as a witness in the case upon the ground that she acted as his agent in furnishing the support and care to Mrs. Cuddy for which he asked to be compensated, and as therefore competent to give evidence of the nature and kind” of support and care he furnished. We find no support for *458this contention. Plaintiff’s wife undoubtedly attended to the details of securing the provisions and other necessaries and performed the labor incident to furnishing the support and care for her mother in plaintiff’s household; this was done in the usual course in the management of the household affairs that she assumed and performed as plaintiff’s wife, in keeping house for him and his family in the customary way. It in no way tends to show that the relationship of principal and agent existed as to these matters between the husband and wife. Defendants’ counsel asked her generally, while testifying, whether her husband, the plaintiff, had sent any communication to the defendants or either of them through her. The court ruled that no basis of her agency was shown, and sustained an objection to the question. No suggestion was made to the court that this inquiry pertained to anything pertinent and material to the case, nor was there an offer to confine it to a competent and material subject. Hence the ruling must be sustained.
It is claimed that the first question of the special verdict is double, in that it covers two separate issuable facts, and that it is therefore objectionable. The question can bear no such construction. The inquiry covered by it is plain, covers but one question, and admits of a direct answer by the jury.
It is further contended that the court erred in refusing to-include in the special verdict two questions requested by the defendants, whereby the jury were asked to find whether Bridget Cuddy had the right to choose whether she would reside with the plaintiff or the defendants, and whether the defendants were liable under the contract for one half of the value of her support and care. We think the court very properly refused to submit these two questions. .As above stated,, the contract was not in dispute under the evidence, and it devolved upon the court, under the uncontradicted evidence-on the subject, to construe it.
The exceptions argued pertaining to the direction Of a ver-*459diet .for tbe plaintiff, to instructions given, and to tbe refusal to ebange tbe answers to questions of tbe special verdict are sufficiently covered by tbe foregoing considerations. We find, under tbe evidence, tbe amount-of damages recovered to be reasonably within tbe facts of tbe controversy, and tbe finding of tbe jury and tbe action of tbe court in refusing to ebange tbe verdict must be sustained. No question was raised as to tbe right to take judgment against tbe defendants jointly in this action, and therefore this question is not properly here for review. Tbe record shows no prejudicial error.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied November Y, 1906.