Anderson v. Christburgh

1936 OK 103, 55 P.2d 65, 176 Okla. 300, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 4, 1936
DocketNo. 26212.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1936 OK 103 (Anderson v. Christburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Christburgh, 1936 OK 103, 55 P.2d 65, 176 Okla. 300, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 174 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will be designated herein as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff, Mary J. Christburgh, sued defendant, Forest Anderson, for services rendered in earing for two grandchildren of defendant, upon his oral agreement to pay her the reasonable value of such services, alleging, after particularizing their character and duration, that her services were of the value of $5,250, and that defendant had paid her $25 thereon; and praying judgment for $5.-225, the balance claimed due.

Defendant answered by a general denial, and also by specific denials, which, in effect, were merely a reiteration of the general denial. However, during the trial defendant, was permitted to amend his answer by adding a plea of payment.

A jury was waived and the case tried to Che court. The court found for plaintiff, and rendered judgment in her favor in the amount of $2,225.

Defendant, by his appeal, seeks to reverse such judgment, arguing the following assignments of error: The overruling of his demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence; that the judgment is not supported by any competent evidence; the exclusion of certain competent testimony offered by him, and that the judgment is excessive.

There was no dispute in the evidence as to the period plaintiff cared for the children, nor as to the character of services she performed in this respect. Plaintiff took the children into her home at Oklahoma City; one of them, Felton Anderson, in October, 1928. and the other, Gladys Anderson, in March, 1929, and kept them, except for a vacation period, until June, 1933, during which time she furnished them board, room and clothing, sent them to school, and gave them practically the attention of a mother. The father of the children, a son of defendant by his first wife, had died in 1926, and prior to plaintiff’s custody of them the children had been living with their mother, Lenora Cross, who had remarried, and who resided about one-fourth mile from the home of defendant, a man of considerable wealth, in Seminole county. Plaintiff, no blood relation to the children, was the mother of Harriet Anderson, the second wife of defendant; this marriage taking place in 1927, and the relation continuing until Harriet Anderson’s death in 1932. Throughout tha existence of this marriage, defendant and plaintiff were apparently most friendly, and it was during visitsi she made to defendant’3 home in 1928, according to plaintiff's testimony, the agreement was made whereby she assumed the care of the children.

There was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to any agreement on the part of- defendant to pay plaintiff for keeping the children; the defendant asserting that plaintiff took the children for companionship, and without any procurement on his parr or any promise by him to pay her for their keep. Plaintiff ■was corroborated as to the making of such contract by another witness-, employed in defendant’s home at the time; there was clearly evidence to support the court’s holding that, the parties made the contract as plaintiff alleged. | J

There remained in the case, however, disputed issues as to the value of the servic.es rendered by plaintiff, and as to whether she had been paid as defendant alleged; the latter being an affirmative defense with the burden upon defendant to establish it. For a considerable part of the time plaintiff had charge of the children, she lived with them in a costly residence in Oklahoma City, built by the defendant in 1931, and defendant claimed to have paid the expenses of maintaining this place, as well as otherwise expending large sums of money for the benefit of plaintiff and the children, and that ’in this manner plaintiff had been more than paid. Defendant, however, admitted he built the Oklahoma City residence for the use of his wife and his own children, who spent a great deal of time in Oklahoma City, and defendant’s statements regarding the upkeep-of this place, and the money expended by him on behalf of plaintiff and the children, were stoutly controverted by plaintiff.

Defendant insists with, much vigor that the testimony of plaintiff concerning the making and carrying out of the contract, and as to the sums spent by her in maintaining the children, was so incredible under tha circumstances surrounding the parties, and in view of the financial condition of plaintiff, that it should have been wholly disregarded by tha trial court. We cannot agree with defendant. While the evidence disclosed plaintiff did not possess large means, yet it failed to show an inability on her part to make the outlays she stated from her own resources-, and the evidence was abundant *302 from other witnesses that plaintiff did pay for groceries, clothing, medical attention, and school expenses for the children, as well as performing services in cooking, washing, ironing, and otherwise contributing- in a motherly way toward their moral, mental, and physical welfare.

Neither do -we see anything unusual, considering- the status and relationship of the parties, in the manner in which the contract was made and carried out. It is the normal thing for a grandfather, when able, to contribute to the support of impecunious grandchildren ; and if he be wealthy, to entirely provide for them. In the light of rational human conduct, it is much more reasonable to think that the defendant, a wealthy man, would hire his -wife’s mother, a capable person with whom he was upon good terms, to take the children of his dead son from what appeared to be, under the evidence, a questionable environment, and give them needed care, than to believe the plaintiff, no blood relation to such children, would assume the responsibility of their rearing without any agreement for compensation. Nor do- we consider it at all incredible that plaintiff should have kept the children as long as she did without more strenuously pressing the defendant for payment. She testified that at times she had asked him to make payments, but he would tell her to wait until the amount got big enough to do something with. Knowing defendant to be a rich man, plaintiff may1 well have thought her eventual recompense was likely certain, and perhaps the ultimate reward would be tall the greater, if she refrained from annoying defendant with insistent demands, and allowed sufficient time for him to observe the results of her efforts with the children.

In accordance -with the views above expressed, we hold.the trial court did not err in overruling defendant’s demurrer to the evidence; we also hold there was sufficient evidence to sustain the judgment. Defendant concedes, as he must, the settled rule that where the parties to a law action waive a jury and try their cause to the court, if there is some competent evidence supporting the judgment, it -will not be disturbed on appeal. This is an appropriate case for (he application of such rule.

Defendant argues that errors were committed in the exclusion of evidence, but cites n<p authority to support the argument made. Whi e the plaintiff was under cross-examination, she was asked this question: “Tour daughter had authority to and did check on Forest Anderson’s account all her life?” After she had answered, “ I don’t know anything about that,” her counsel objected to the question, and was sustained. Whereupon defendant stated :

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 103, 55 P.2d 65, 176 Okla. 300, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-christburgh-okla-1936.