Baker v. Lyell

242 S.W. 703, 210 Mo. App. 230, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 200
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 703 (Baker v. Lyell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Lyell, 242 S.W. 703, 210 Mo. App. 230, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 200 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

ALLEN, P. J.

This proceeding was begun in the Probate Court of Shelby County, on September 13, 1919, by the filing by plaintiff, Sallie A. Baker, of a demand against the estate of Sarah E. Cochran, deceased, as follows :

“To Labor and Services from July, 1914, to September, 1918, 51 months at $20.00 per month.... $1020.00
“To Nursing during illness, 77 days 165.00
“Total............ $1185.00”

The trial of the cause in the probate court resulted in a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $700. Upon defendant’s appeal to the circuit court and a trial there de novo, before the court and a jury, there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the full amount of the demand, to-wit, $1185, and the defendant estate has appealed to this court.

Mrs. Sarah E. Cochran died intestate in Shelby County on May 6, 1919, being about seventy years of age. The plaintiff, Sallie- A. Baker, is a niece of Mrs. Cochran; plaintiff’s mother,' Nannie Baker, now deceased, having been a sister of Mrs. Cochran. The evidence shows that approximately forty years prior to the trial of the cause below there was a separation between plaintiff’s parents, James Baker and Nannie Baker, at which time plaintiff was a baby but a few weeks old. Upon separation from her husband plaintiff’s mother went to the home of her sister, Mrs. Cochran, taking plaintiff with her. Thereafter the three lived together in the home of Mrs. Cochran, as members of one house *233 hold, -until plaintiff was about eighteen years of age when she married one Smith. Plaintiff and her husband lived together for but a period of about seven months when she separated from her husband and returned to Mrs. Cochran’s home. The time of plaintiff’s return to Mrs. Cochran’s home, after separating from her husband, is not definitely fixed by the evidence but it appears to have been about the year 1896. From that time plaintiff and her mother continued to live at Mrs. Cochran’s home, the three women living as one family, until sometime in 1913 when plaintiff, on the advice of her physician, went to Montana, with her mother, on account of her health, remaining there until about July 4, 1914. It appears that the tilled land upon Mrs. Cochran’s farm was rented to tenants; that Mrs. Cochran owned some live stock, and that prior to plaintiff’s first trip to Montana she and her mother had some stock upon the place. Neither of the three women had good health. Mrs. Cochran had bronchial asthma for many years. Plaintiff’s mother had a tubercular condition diagnosed by her physician as tabes mesenterica. And plaintiff became afflicted with tuberculosis.

Letters in evidence from Mrs. Cochran to plaintiff, to which we shall later refer, indicate that plaintiff returned from Montana at the urgent request of Mrs. Cochran, who was then advanced in years and in declining health. Plaintiff remained with her aunt until September, 1918, when, it seems, she was compelled to return to Montana on account of the precarious condition of her own health. Testimony of witnesses for plaintiff tends to show that during the period here involved, viz., from July, 1914, to September, 1918, plaintiff rendered services in Mrs. Cochran’s home and upon her farm, consisting of cooking, washing, sewing, putting up fruit and other housework, feeding and watering stock, milking, marketing produce, nursing Mrs. Cochran and dressing a wart on the latter’s hand, said to have been of a cancerous nature.

*234 Prior to the trial below plaintiff’s mother had died. Plaintiff was, of course, not a competent witness in her own behalf. Consequently plaintiff’s case rests upon the testimony of witnesses who saw plaintiff performing services of the character mentioned, from time to time, during the period involved, testimony as to certain statements or declarations made by Mrs. Cochran and the letters in evidence, written by Mrs. Cochran to plaintiff while the latter was in Montana. In one of' these letters, dated at Shelybville, Mo., March 30, 1914, Mrs. Cochran wrote to plaintiff:

“Sallie I will write again I want you to write and tell me when you are coming and what you have to say about me and my home and what I have wrote to you & your mother op have you gone to stay and not giving any ideah to me about what I have offered I would like to know right away I do not know what I will do I have tried to get different ones failed so far to stay with me I cannot sleep nor rest nor eat only a little I am in great trouble did you know yesterday was my birthday 68 years old Please write and tell me what you and your mother are going to do I do not know what I will do if you do not I cannot sleep all alone. It seems my stomach and neck and head will kill me taking 3 kinds of medicine all the time I do not know what I am to do if you do not give me any hope I do not know how I am to stand it. . Please come while I am on earth if will not be long Oh do come I think if you knew my condition you would not hesitate I am not as well every letter I write you can depend I am telling the truth no scare it is true facts about myself Please do come while I live do not weight till I am not there to see Oh if I could make you believe ask your Papa if you do not believe me do not weight till two late to all O do come Tour Aunt Sallie
“Please do pome as soon as you can Sallie I will pay you and your mothers way to come home do come now. ’ ’

In another letter to plaintiff, Mrs. Cochran said: “If I get down I do not want a trained nurse I want you and *235 your mother to be with me until the last. I cannot live alone.”

The record shows no other portion of the correspondence between the parties. However, as said, the evidence does show that plaintiff, with her mother, returned from Montana to Mrs. Cochran’s home early in July, 1914, and remained there until September, 1918.

Dr. Carson, a physician who treated Mrs. Cochran and plaintiff and her mother as well, testified that he had a conversation with Mrs. Cochran on the day prior to her death, and that Mrs. Cochran said that she wanted to compensate plaintiff for her services; that she wanted to reward plaintiff for her kindness, and compensate her for her services during the number of years she had been there. The witness stated that Mrs. Cochran asked him if she was competent to make a will, and that he told her that she was not physically able to do so. On cross-examination the witness said that in reference to compensating plaintiff Mrs. Cochran referred to plaintiff’s companionship and services.

Being recalled, the witness, referring to plaintiff’s trip to Montana in 1913, said: “She was not able to do what was to be done there and I advised her to change. ’ ’ When asked what he saw plaintiff doing around the house, he said: “Well just the ordinary household duties around the house, the work, and I think she took care of the cows. He stated that plaintiff took care of Mrs. Cochran whenever the latter needed attention; that Mrs. Cochran was not confined to her bed all of the time. He was asked whether he had seen plaintiff giving any personal attention to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W. 703, 210 Mo. App. 230, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-lyell-moctapp-1922.