Alexander v. Cron

13 Ohio Law. Abs. 273
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 6, 1932
DocketNo 276
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Ohio Law. Abs. 273 (Alexander v. Cron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Cron, 13 Ohio Law. Abs. 273 (Ohio Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HORNBECK, J.

Much of the evidence is offered to support either the claim of compliance by plaintiff with her contract, as stated, or the defense of non-compliance.

The plaintiff was precluded from testifying and in consequence there is not that continuity of proof which would be expected if she were permitted to take the stand. However, it is testified, and not denied, that plaintiff was with Emeline for weeks before she was taken to the hospital when she and Marcia were sick at the same time; that she quit her job to do this work. No record evidence from the factory at which she worked is offered to dispute this specific claim, Marcia was in bed when Emeline died and for nine or ten weeks after. It is also in proof that plaintiff assisted in preparing the body of Emeline for burial and went with Wallace to buy her clothing.

It is not the claim of plaintiff that she stayed in the Colby home continuously nor that she agreed so to do, but that she helped in care and attention to Emeline during the major part of her sickness and likewise with Marcia; that she assisted at times in the work about the house working at the factory and in her own home during the day and going to Colby’s at night; that she sewed, at times washed and ironed, baked and cooked at her home for the Colbys; that she carried food to them at times, that she shopped for them and was subject to their call. There is support for all of these claims in the record as to some of them from persons unrelated to the parties.

There is testimony to the effect that when the witnesses were at the Colby home they did not see the plaintiff there. Most of these witnesses were infrequent visitors, and did not fix definitely when nor how often they were at the Colby home. Despite the generality of their statements several of them admitted that the plaintiff was there when they called. There is considerable in the record showing that the house was unkempt and dirt and dust had accumulated, a condition not unusual with old furniture though given considerable care. A washerwoman who stated she had been employed regularly once every two’ or three weeks for several years said that she had not seen plaintiff at the Colbys.

This testimony intended to disprove compliance with the contract upon which plaintiff relies is of little force or effect, because it conclusively appears that Mr. Colby was well satisfied with the services which plaintiff was performing for him and his sisters. Every witness who says anything on the subject, including those who were not of the family of plaintiff, and at least one of the witnesses for the defense, is to the effect that Mr. Colby on many occasions had commented with much favor and complete satisfaction upon the manner in which the plaintiff was looking after his sisters and assisting him in his home.

The proof of the contract under which plaintiff was working, it is true, comes from her husband and her family but it is definite and the only form of denial is by negative evidence, viz; persons to whom Colby had talked about making a will or about his property who would be asked if he had ever said to them that he had a contract with plaintiff to which they all replied that [275]*275he had said nothing.

The defense has urged that all three of the Colbys went to the hospital and died there. This is true but it was only the last few weeks of their lives that 'they were removed to the hospital. Emeline was there twenty days, Marcia ten and Wallace thirty-three.

The services of the plaintiff covered 10 years and began when all three of the Colbys were living. Emeline suffered a long spell of sickness through which it is testified the plaintiff assisted at the house and in her care. Marcia was sickly continuously during the 10 years before and after Emeline’s death and lived eight years after Emeline.

It is obvious that these old people needed attention outside of their own group. It is significant that, although there is considerable testimony offered to contradict the claim of plaintiff touching the extent of her services to the Colbys during the 10 years that she helped them, nowhere in the record is there the name of one person, other than the family, outside the colored washerwoman, who ever assisted in the slightest degree in any menial task about the Colby home. Then, too,’ at the death of Marcia and of Wallace Colby, it is established that the plaintiff was with their bodies, assisted in their preparation for burial and helped in the necessary work to be done at such a time. It is testified by the undertaker that the plaintiff was in practical charge during the period between the death and burial of Wallace Colby. The Colbys clearly constituted a reserved and eccentric family. They had no - close relatives and no intimates among any of their kin. It is established that Mr. Colby did not want the Colbys to succeed to any of his estate. The plaintiff was related to him distantly although almost as closely as the others of his heirs. When the three who had lived together enjoying their possessions alone recognized that their last years would bring need of help, it was most natural for them to arrange to compensate the plaintiff whose work pleased them by paying her for her services with the property' when the last one of them was through with it. There is no evidence that plaintiff received any money for her services through the years. It is probable that if Mr. Colby had paid her anything it would be found in his diary as it appears that he put down the cost of a meal that he ate at a restaurant on December 27, 1928.

But there are three monumental facts in this record, unusual and convincing of plaintiff’s claim. (1) The entry in the diary of Wallace Colby of date December 27, 1928. (2) The delivery of the key to the Colby home to plaintiff. (3) The assertion of ownership by plaintiff.

There is nothing to cast the slightest doubt on the correctness and authenticity of the record in the diary in the handwriting of Mr. Colby dated December 27, 1928 and made, no doubt, contemporaneously with the act recorded.

The entry reads:

“Thursday, 27, rained some last night. I did not get up until 10 A. M. I got dinner at rest. 30. I made my will to Ida Alexander and Ralph Roeth. I sent New Year’s cards J. W. Hercules, Cure, Jordan, Ida, Helen, Verese, Verda, Buzzard, Ada, Case.”

This is conclusive not only that he made a will but that Ida Alexander was his' beneficiary. That the will was made pursuant to his contract with plaintiff is the most reasonable explanation to be found on the record. It is also probable that according to his diary he had willed a farm which he owned on December 27, 1928, to Ralph Roeth. Roeth testifies that Colby told him when he bought the farm and made the first payment that he would not have to make the last payment which was not due for 10 years; that he would get the farm whether he bought it .or not.

Some testimony was offered originally in this court tending to show that one of counsel for defendant, Cron, Administrator, drew Mr. Colby’s will. This is denied. Though satisfied that the will was made we are content to take the statement of counsel that he did not draw it and that it was never in his possession.

Mr. Colby fell and injured himself, was taken to his home, sent for an ambulance and was removed to the hospital. Before going he said to Mr. Cron (page 25 of the record):

“You lock the back doors.” I says, “Shall I turn out the gas,” and he says “Yes,” and he said to lock the front door. He wasn’t able to move.

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Related

Mossholder v. Wiggins
36 N.E.2d 989 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1941)
Ortman v. Ortman
187 N.E. 588 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio Law. Abs. 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-cron-ohioctapp-1932.