Berg v. Moreau

97 S.W. 901, 199 Mo. 416, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 321
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 21, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 901 (Berg v. Moreau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berg v. Moreau, 97 S.W. 901, 199 Mo. 416, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 321 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

This is a suit in equity to enforce specific performance of an alleged oral contract between Francis Moreau, deceased, on the one part and Rosalie Berg, deceased, on the other, to make a will devising or otherwise conveying a certain small parcel of real estate in St. Louis county, and bequeathing certain chattels to said Rosalie Berg, in consideration of services to be by her rendered and which, it is alleged, were fully performed.

The chancellor, having decreed specific performance, defendant appealed. After the cause came here, Rosalie- Berg, plaintiff below, died testate, leaving her husband, John Berg, executor and sole devisee; whereupon on suggestion and by stipulation the cause was revived in the name of John Berg as respondent.

The learned chancellor made a finding of facts and pronounced thereon conclusions of law, as follows:

“The following facts are established beyond dispute.
“Francis Moreau was, in February, 1901, 79 years of age. He was somewhat feeble but led an active life and did not anticipate any immediate or sudden death. He lived practically alone. His only child was a son, living apart and somewhat estranged. The son was in independent circumstances, having a house and family of his own.
“Mr. Moreau owned a small homestead of 5.30 acres, worth $1,000 to $1,500, a detached farm of 85 acres of land, worth about $10,000, notes amounting to [422]*422about $2,000, and a horse and buggy, with some household effects about his house, worth together $135-.
“He needed the assistance of a woman, to live with him, keep house for him, minister to his wants and nurse him in sickness. He secured the services of Mrs. Berg, to stay with him with her husband, for this purpose. He was not to pay her or compensate her in money for her services. This is testified to by witnesses for plaintiff and for defendants. (Testimony of Wielandy, Constantine and Schrader, with that of others.) In lieu of wages he was to give her the homestead of 5.30' acres — for how long is disputed — with the horse and buggy and certain other personal property— which is also in dispute.
“Mrs. Berg, with her husband, moved to Mr. Moreau’s house and faithfully performed the services required of her to' his satisfaction from February 6,1901, to his death,' February 14, 1902. The reasonable value of her services for this period, so far as the same can be estimated in money, was $15 per month for eleven and one-half months, and $3.50 per day for the remaining 23 days, being in all $353.
“The use of the property for two years with the horse and buggy and all the furniture in the house, bequeathed to Mrs. Berg in the last will, were ’ of the value of $335 to $375.
“The disputed or uncertain matters in the understanding or arrangement between Mr. Moreau and Mrs. Berg are two, viz.:
“.(1) What personal property besides the horse and buggy, if any, he promised or agreed to give her.
“ (2) Whether he agreed or promised to give her the homestead property absolutely or only for two years.
“1. The uncertainty or indefiniteness as to the personal property appears in comparing the provisions of the first will with the oral testimony. In the will, which is followed by the petition, the testator under[423]*423took to give to Mrs. Berg ‘all my personal property ’ Mrs. Fitzwater (who wrote the will) in her testimony qualifies the words ‘all the personal property’, by the further words ‘everything in the house’ — ‘the house and all there was in it, the house and all his personal property.’ Mr. Sandoz testifies that Moreau stated he had given ‘all his house property to Mrs. Berg and the place too.’ Mr. Schrader testifies that he said ‘he had promised her the horse and buggy and the furniture in the house, and the place,’ etc.
“It is quite clear that in the connection in which the words ‘personal property’ were used, with the words ‘horse and buggy’ they were understood in the common sense, as meaning property of the same character, that is, specific goods and chattels,' and not money or choses in action. They included the household property, goods and chattels and horse and buggy, which were afterwards inventoried and appraised at $135.
“2. There is no uncertainty as to the interest or estate in the homestead property intended, except in Mr. Moreau’s declaration to Mr. Schrader, which is embodied in his last will also, that he had promised to give ‘the place there two years free of rent after his death. ’
“But it should be remembered that this was a declaration in his favor, not proper .evidence in his own behalf (although not objected to), and should be given but little, if any, weight, as against previous declarations against his own interest. These previous declarations had been, that Mrs. Berg was to get ‘the place’ (Testimony of Oldworth); ‘the place’ would belong to her (Genail); he would give ‘the place’ to Mrs. Berg (Levick); she can have ‘that little place, that 5 or 6 acres’ (Wielandy); he was going to give her ‘the property’ where Mr. Moreau lived — 5 acres and something, ‘this property’ (Constantine) ;‘the five acres and thirty one-hundredths’ — ‘this place I will give Mrs. Berg’ [424]*424(Mrs. Fitzwater); lie would like to have a deed made, was going to give her the place — the home place, the place where he lived — five acres of land (Sandoz); ‘this house and five acres and thirty one-hundredths of an acre,’ giving the boundaries (in the first will, dated February 3, 1902).
‘ ‘ These declarations are too strong and clear to be cut down, to an estate limited to two years by subsequent declarations in his own favor, under different influences, made when his days were numbered, and he could see that, as it was then likely to turn out, Mrs. Berg would have the better of the bargain.
“I. One can not escape the conviction that Mr. Moreau did enter into a parol agreement about February 6, 1901, wherein he promised, in consideration of her removing to his house with her husband and there living with him, keeping house for him, and ministering to his wants and nursing him in sickness, during his lifetime, he would, at his death, convey to her by will or otherwise the homestead place of 5.30 acres with the household goods and chattels in the house and his horse and buggy on said premises. The contract is clear, definite and unequivocal, in all its terms.. There is nothing uncertain, ambiguous, or unsatisfactory in the evidence.
“II. Such agreement, being by parol, could not be enforced if it had not been performed in whole or in part, so that it would be inequitable to- refuse performance. The performance by Mrs. Berg was complete and satisfactory. The acts of performance point unmistakably to the agreement or promise as the inducement thereof, and can not be accounted for in any other manner. Mrs. Berg was a stranger called into the house at the request of Mr. Moreau. She was therefore not likely to work without compensation, or merely for a home and board for herself and husband. The evidence, as well as the character of the work, indicate that she was to be compensated. The evidence [425]*425also shows that she was not to.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W. 901, 199 Mo. 416, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berg-v-moreau-mo-1906.