Andrews v. Watkins' Estate

160 A. 176, 104 Vt. 321, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 4, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 160 A. 176 (Andrews v. Watkins' Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Watkins' Estate, 160 A. 176, 104 Vt. 321, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 151 (Vt. 1932).

Opinion

Powers, C. J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover from the estate of the late Harris R. Watkins a claim for the care and keep of a Shetland pony called “Pinto.” He presented this claim to the commissioners of the estate, and it was disallowed. He appealed *323 to the county court, where a jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in his favor. Exceptions by the defendant bring the case hereof or. review.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show the following facts: Pinto was a pony that Dr. Watkins’ son, Eustace, who died in 1924, had and used when he was a small boy. The Watkins family, which consisted of Dr. Watkins, his wife, and Eustace, was much attached to the pony. She was wintered by the plaintiff in 1917-1918 under an arrangement not here involved, and sometime about the first of May, 1918, she passed into the possession of a Mr. Hartin, who kept her three or four weeks. About the first of June of that year, Dr. Watkins went to the Allen farm on Shelburne Road where the plaintiff then lived, and engaged the latter to keep and care for Pinto at a price named by the doctor of twenty dollars per month. The pony at once came back to the plaintiff’s possession, and was kept and cared for by the plaintiff under the arrangement made as aforesaid from that time until the death, of Dr. Watkins. Two payments were made by him on account of this arrangement, both by check. During the time the plaintiff was keeping Pinto, he resided in various towns, usually in the hotel business, and always having the pony with him. Dr. and Mrs. Watkins called at these places to see the pony, and both manifested affection for her.

To meet the plaintiff’s claim and to make it appear improbable that any such contract was ever made, the defendant gave evidence tending to show that the price agreed to (according to the plaintiff’s evidence), was excessively high; that it was four or five times what a reasonable price would be; that it was that much higher than what Dr. Watkins had- paid the Prestons for satisfactorily wintering this pony. And it was claimed that this, of itself, stamped the claim sued on as fraudulent and unfounded. This theory of the defense developed early in the trial below, and was much relied upon throughout that trial. To meet this phase of the defense, the plaintiff pointed to the evidence of the affection of the Watkins family for Pinto, to the doctor’s expressed desire to have her well taken care of, and to make it more probable that he did make the contract relied upon, and especially to make the price sound more plausible, he offered the inventory of Dr. Watkins’ estate filed in the pro *324 bate court on October 31, 1930, about eight months after his death. The defendant objected; but the inventory was admitted and the defendant excepted. It showed a gross estate of over five hundred and sixty thousand dollars.

It is a rule of general application that on the question whether a person did a particular thing or made a particular contract or not, the character of the subject-matter, the relation of the parties to it and to each other, and ■ the circumstances affecting the probability of the thing having been done or the contract having been made as claimed, are relevant and admissible evidence. Gilfillan v. Gilfillan’s Estate, 90 Vt. 94, 101, 96 Atl. 704, and cases cited. But, ordinarily, the fact that a man is rich or poor is not such a circumstance and is not admissible as evidence that he did or did not make a certain contract. Frost v. Frost’s Admr., 33 Vt. 639, 649. Nevertheless, there are exceptional cases in which the financial situation of a party to the suit is deemed to be sufficiently relevant to be admissible. The case last cited was such a case. There, the plaintiff was trying to recover the sum of three hundred dollars per year for services rendered the decedent under an alleged contract in which that amount was stipulated for, though the evidence indicated that this was some three times what the services were reasonably worth. The defendant offered to show the amount of the decedent’s property at the time of the alleged contract to show that such a contract would have been largely disproportionate to his ability to pay. Subject to the defendant’s exception, this evidence was excluded, and held error. The Court took the position that it was admissible “as tending, in connection■ with the other evidence, to show that it was improbable that a man of his (limited) property would employ a housekeeper at so extravagant a price,” permanently. The opinion points out that it was the circumstances that the contract was for the life of the decedent and an apparently gross inadequacy of the service to the stipulated compensation that made the evidence admissible. The case presents, of course, the converse of the proposition advocated by the plaintiff here. But it is difficult to differentiate the cases on purely logical grounds.

Blaisdell v. Davis, 72 Vt. 295, 48 Atl. 14, 18, was a case wherein the administrators of an estate were claiming to recover an alleged loan. It appeared that the defendant married the *325 only daughter of the intestate and removed to and engaged in business in Wisconsin. The intestate and his wife were very anxious to get the defendant’s family back to Vermont so that they could have their daughter near them. The defendant’s evidence tended to show that Nelson, the intestate, proposed to the defendant that if he would sell out his business and move back to Barton to live, he (Nelson) would give him $6,000; and that he complied with this condition. He did not deny that he received the $6,000, but he insisted that it was paid to him under the above arrangement and not as a loan as the administrators alleged. The court admitted evidence tending to show that Nelson was worth about $50,000. This was received on the ground that it would be some evidence that he made the unusual contract that the defendant relied upon in defense. This ruling was sustained. The Court pointed out that the argument that no presumption that a man agreed to pay money arises from the fact that he has ample means to pay it did not reach the ground of admissibility. “Many facts,” says Mun-son, J., “that have no independent tendency to establish an issue, become admissible after other evidence has been adduced. This fact was offered as bearing upon the probability of a very unusual agreement as to the making' of which direct evidence had been introduced. The essence of the defendant’s claim was that Nelson had given $6,000 for the pleasure of having his daughter live near him. We think the possession of ample means would have a legitimate bearing upon the question whether such a contract had been made."

In Gilfillan v. Gilfillan’s Estate, 90 Vt. 94, 96 Atl. 704, 706, the plaintiff sought to recover for board and care of the intestate. She was the widow of his brother. The defense was that the intestate had given the plaintiff money, and that the board and care were furnished in consideration thereof. The defendant made the claim that the intestate let the plaintiff have certain stocks to apply on the board account. To meet this claim that the stocks were so to apply, the plaintiff was allowed to show that at the same time the intestate gave stocks to Walter G-ilfillan and to some of his other relations.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 176, 104 Vt. 321, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-watkins-estate-vt-1932.