Bick v. Mueller

142 S.W.2d 1021, 346 Mo. 746, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 538
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 142 S.W.2d 1021 (Bick v. Mueller) 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
Bick v. Mueller, 142 S.W.2d 1021, 346 Mo. 746, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 538 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at May Term, 1940, July 3, 1940; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at September Term, 1940, September 10, 1940. This is a suit for specific performance of an oral contract to convey real estate, made by Henry Boeschen in his lifetime, in consideration of services to be rendered by respondent (plaintiff), Anna Bick. The circuit court decreed specific performance and defendant has appealed. The property in question is situated on Labadie Avenue in St. Louis. It consists of a lot with a dwelling home thereon, in which Boeschen lived at the time of making the contract. It was worth between $4250 and $4500. Boeschen owned several other parcels of real estate, the value of which is not shown. He also had personal property, the amount of which likewise is not shown, except that it appears that at his death there was a check or note (apparently solvent) for about $1850. It does not appear that he owed any debts. The total extent and value of his holdings at his death, or at the time of making the contract, is not shown.

Boeschen had but one child, the defendant Marie Mueller, who was married and living with her husband in a home of their own. His wife died in January, 1935. After her death he was left alone in his Labadie Avenue residence. He was then old — about seventy-eight — and not in good health, though able to be around. It appears that after his wife's death he felt lonely and in need of someone to look after his comfort and help him take care of his property, particularly the Labadie Avenue property. In this situation he appealed to plaintiff, a married woman living with her husband and daughter. According to the testimony of Mr. Bick, who said he was present when the agreement was made between his wife, the plaintiff, and Boeschen, on March 4, 1935, the latter said he was blue and lonesome and wanted *Page 750 to know if they — the Bicks — would "room and board him" and plaintiff said she could not "room" him due to the limited room in their home. Boeschen then said he was getting tired of eating at restaurants and asked if plaintiff would give him his meals, "breakfast and supper and Sunday dinners whenever I want them if I am in town," and she said she would. Continuing, witness testified Boeschen said further:

"He said, `I also want you to come over and help me with my household on Labadie avenue because I am getting old and can't get around like I used to,' and he said, `My feet are bothering me and I want some one to help do my housework and laundry work and mend clothes, if necessary, and help me with my property.' Some were unoccupied and he wanted us to help clean them up, he said, `so I can rent them;' and she said, `Yes, I will do all of that,' and he said, `Anna, if you will do that for the rest of my life, help me and give me my meals, I will deed or will to you upon my death one of my pieces of property,' and my wife said, `All right,' and after awhile he said, `Which property would you prefer, the Labadie avenue property or the place in Overland on Hawthorne?' and my wife then said she didn't care which property she would get, she would be satisfied with either one, and after a discussion he said, `Well, since you are more acquainted with the Labadie avenue property and it is handier and closer to you, I will be glad to give you the Labadie avenue property upon my death.'"

Mr. Bick's testimony as to the making of the agreement was corroborated by the testimony of Marcella Bick, plaintiff's daughter, about seventeen years old at the time of the trial, who was present and heard the conversation. The only persons present when the agreement was made were Mr. and Mrs. Bick, their daughter Marcella, and Boeschen. According to the testimony of Mr. Bick and Marcella, Boeschen said on that occasion he had called at the Bick home for the purpose of making some arrangement if he could for plaintiff to care for and assist him. Plaintiff was not permitted to testify. Mr. Bick and Marcella testified that plaintiff began the performance of the duties she had agreed to perform the next day and continued so to do until Boeschen's death, on April 10, 1936. Both, especially Mr. Bick, described how plaintiff performed those duties. Marcella was going to school and was not so particularly cognizant of details as was her father. The latter described at length and in detail the arduous labor performed by plaintiff (and if his testimony is true it was arduous, requiring much time and labor) in cleaning up and putting and keeping in order the Labadie Avenue property in which Boeschen then lived alone and which had become rather run down and in bad order since his wife's death, and also in cleaning up and helping to keep in order the house on Hawthorne Avenue in Overland, a suburb of St. Louis, to which Boeschen moved about October, *Page 751 1935, and where he thereafter lived until his death. Bick said he would take his wife to the "Hawthorne" residence where she would work, cleaning up the place, keeping it in order, cooking for Mr. Boeschen, waiting upon him as he needed, etc., and come for her in an automobile at the close of the day.

Mrs. Dorothy McGinnis testified in substance that she had known the Bicks and Mr. Boeschen practically all her life and had been a frequent visitor at the Bick home, where she often saw Boeschen when he came there for meals after March 4, 1935; that in conversations with Boeschen he told her how lonely he was after his wife's death, that "he was ill, he was sick, and he had no one to turn a hand for him and no one to keep him, said his daughter Marie would not turn a hand for him;" "that he met Mrs. Bick, `he needed her help and he made an agreement with Mrs. Bick to take care of him, to cook his meals for him, to do his washing and ironing for him, to clean the various properties, such as cleaning and scrubbing and doing anything he asked her to do, take care of him until he died; that he would deed to her or will to her at his death the Labadie Avenue home.'" She further testified that Boeschen told her he was well pleased with what Mrs. Bick had done and was doing for him; that she was a good, hard-working woman; that he needed someone to look after him; "he always told me what Mrs. Bick had done about taking care of him and what a good woman she was." "He told me she done everything he asked her; he said she done washing, cooked his meals, and he was well satisfied and pleased with what she had done and was doing and was sorry he didn't go to Mrs. Bick's immediately after his wife's death."

It appears that for the last three or four months of his life, especially beginning in January, 1936, Mr. Boeschen was in a rapidly failing condition. He was then living at Overland. About the first of January P.F. Kirkpatrick was employed to "assist in taking care of him — in the nature of a nurse," though he was not a registered nurse. He testified that Boeschen was weak and emaciated, "had a growth on his lip" (other witnesses corroborated this) "and an open sore on his leg; that plaintiff would be out there four or five times a week; "she would do the sweeping and washing and ironing and the cooking for Mr. Boeschen and during the day she would have to take care of his bed, wash him and dress him and get him up and down to go to the bath room." He further testified that Boeschen's condition was growing worse all the time and by February "his leg was growing worse and had a terrible odor and he himself had a terrible odor;" that Boeschen had to be given enemas, which could not well be done by one person and that plaintiff assisted him in giving them; that "Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W.2d 1021, 346 Mo. 746, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bick-v-mueller-mo-1940.