Court Opinion

ID: 3502246
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:09:05.026948+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:05:22.171473
License: Public Domain

This is a claim against an estate for care and maintenance of a daughter of the deceased from the time she was six years of age until she was 16; from October 1, 1913, to December 22, 1923, under an oral agreement for compensation at $5 per week, no part of which was paid. Trial was by jury with verdict and judgment thereon for plaintiff. Plaintiff is the wife of a son of the deceased, and the little girl was cared for and supported in the home of plaintiff and her husband.
Defendant gave notice of the statute of limitations, and contends that in no event can plaintiff recover for support furnished more than six years before filing the claim. Under the alleged contract the pay at the rate of $5 per week was for a continuous service which was rendered and not closed until within six years before presentation of the claim. The point is without merit. Carter v. Carter, 36 Mich. 207.
Defendant also invokes the rule that household or home-rendered services of the wife belong to the husband, and the claim here made is for services rendered in the home, and, therefore, in law, the claim is that of the husband. The evidence justified the jury in finding that the contract was made with plaintiff, not only by express consent of her husband to that effect, but, as well, in directing his father to make the contract with her. The rule that services of the wife in and about the home belong to the husband is not one beyond the power of the husband to waive. A husband may, by his consent, permit the wife to contract for special services to be rendered another in their home and to receive pay therefor. Cogent reasons existed for consent in this instance by plaintiff's husband; the little girl was his sister; her mother was dead; she needed a *Page 665 
home and a woman's care and oversight, he was incapacitated by long-continued illness from earning enough to maintain his home and his wife was, in fact, the breadwinner.
The court instructed the jury to disallow the claim if the contract was between plaintiff's husband and his father. The court also instructed the jury:
"If you find that it was a joint contract between Frank Wisniewski and Mary Wisniewski, in which Frank Wisniewski, the husband, did not waive his right to remuneration, then you would also disallow the claim."
Objection was made to any testimony by the husband of plaintiff. The testimony of Frank Wisniewski, on direct examination, did not come within the statute (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14219) prohibiting an opposite party from testifying to matters equally within the knowledge of the deceased, so the objection, when made, was properly overruled. On cross-examination, however, Frank Wisniewski gave contradictory testimony. No motion was made to strike out all of his testimony, and his re-direct examination again disclosed the inapplicability of the statute. We find no request for instruction to the jury on this subject. The court was right under the state of the record at the time the ruling was made. The verdict was not excessive in amount nor against the clear weight of evidence.
The record presenting no reversible error, the judgment is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
BUTZEL, C.J., and CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred. *Page 666