Bryant v. Fogg

134 A. 510, 125 Me. 420, 1926 Me. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 A. 510 (Bryant v. Fogg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. Fogg, 134 A. 510, 125 Me. 420, 1926 Me. LEXIS 81 (Me. 1926).

Opinion

Bassett, J.

Suit brought by AddieF. Bryant against the administrator c. t. a. of the estate of her father, Cyrus W.' Foster. One part of the claim filed in the Probate Court and set forth in the writ, which was dated August 26, 1924, was for housekeeping and care of the father from April 1,1915, to May 22,1922, three hundred and seventy-one weeks at $6 per week, $2226; the other part was for groceries and provisions furnished the father from April 1,1915, to May 8,1921, three hundred and seventeen weeks at $5 per week $1585. The only question submitted to the jury was the recovery for housekeeping and care for six years prior to the date of the writ, viz.: from August 27, 1918, when the statute of limitations began to operate, to May 22, 1922, one hundred and ninety-four weeks. The verdict was for the plaintiff $978. The case comes up on general motion.-

Cyrus W. Foster, a civil war veteran eighty years old was in April, 1915, living on his farm in Palmyra. His wife was very ill. They had two children, a son Frank P. Foster who also lived in Pahnyra at some distance from his father and a daughter, the plaintiff, who lived in her home in Pittsfield village. The son at his father’s request went for and brought back his sister to the farm. She came April 1. The mother died on April 17. The plaintiff remained continuously at her father’s home until he was taken to the National Home at Togus on May 22,1922, by the son, who had been appointed his guardian. He remained thereuntil his death February 25, 1923. The plaintiff while in her. father’s home did all the house work being the only woman there. The father was occasionally attended by a physician until October, 1921 when from the infirmities of age and a complication of physical ailments he required frequent and regular medical treatment. In August, 1918 a man was employed to run the farm and did so, constituting one of the family, until the father left. On October 8,1921, a male trained nurse was employed to take [422]*422care of Mr. Foster and remained until March 4, 1922. It was not controverted that the plaintiff did all the household duties and that, when Mr. Foster had sick spells, washings had to be done almost each day. The son, when asked what his father said in reference to the employment of his sister at the time she came, replied: “He never said anything to me in particular.” Mr. Eldridge, who ran the farm, testified:

Q. “If she (the plaintiff) went away for a day did Mr. Foster make any remark?

A. “He did.

Q. “What did he say?
A. “He would like' to have her at home.

Q. “When she would go away for a day, be absent for a day, during this time what would he tell you?

A. “He said he would like to have her at home.
Q. “Did he make any statements as to whether he needed her services?
Q. “What did he say about that?
A. “He said he needed her.”

This is all the evidence of any conversation of the father about the services.

The brother testified that shortly after the father went to and was living at the Home, the plaintiff spoke to him, he being then guardian, about filing an account; that he did not pay her anything because, as he explained, he and his sister were, so far as they knew, the only heirs, he had paid out considerable money on the father’s account, he and the plaintiff were going to see the father through and did not know how much would have to be paid out and he and the plaintiff could settle with each other any differences or accounts.

The only evidence offered by the defense and admitted without objection was a letter from the brother to the defendant dated July 9, 1923, a part of which wás “I have taken up the matter of the monument with Mrs. Bryant and she feels that on account of the lack of courtesy, and even decency shown her by one Charles F. Tibbitt of Augusta it will be her duty to place in your hands a bill from her at a nominal price covering her seven years of service and her estimated expenses .... This 'bill will be forwarded to you in a few days.”

[423]*423The law of this State with reference to payment for services by a relative or member of the household has been clearly and definitely stated. To recover there must be a contract. It may be express or implied. It is implied as a matter not of law but of fact. It must be proved in accordance with the ordinary rule of burden of proof. It is not enough to show that valuable service was rendered. It must appear that the one who rendered expected compensation and the one who received so understood or under the circumstances ought so to have understood and by his words or conduct or both justified the expectation. There is not in any given case a legal presumption of any kind that the services were rendered gratuitously or for compensation. Saunders v. Saunders, 90 Maine, 284; Leighton v. Nash, 111 Maine, 528; Hatch v. Dutch, 113 Maine, 405; Cheney v. Cheney, 122 Maine, 556.

“It is then incumbent on the plaintiff to satisfy the jury that the services were rendered under circumstances consistent with contract relations between the parties and that the defendant either expressly agreed to pay for the services or to give certain property therefor or that they were rendered by the plaintiff either in pursuance of a mutual understanding between the parties or in the expectation and belief that he was to receive payment and that the circumstances of the case and the conduct of the defendant justified such expectation and belief.”

“If it can properly be said that there is any presumption in a given case that the services rendered to a father by a son after he becomes of age, are gratuitous, it is clearly a presumption of fact and not of law. It is not a uniform and constant rule attached to fixed conditions and applicable only generically. It is' a conclusion from a process of reasoning which the mind of any intelligent person would apply under like circumstances, and it is applicable only specifically. It rests on probability and is the effect of evidence, the result of inferences to be drawn from the facts in the case at the discretion of the jury, — the force of it varying according to circumstances.” Saunders v. Saunders, 90 Maine, 290.

“It must be shown that the plaintiff expected to receive compensation and the defendant’s intestate so understood, by reason of a mutual understanding or otherwise or that under the circumstances he ought so to have understood. . . . Whether the plaintiff expected compensation and whether the defendant’s intestate so [424]*424understood or ought so to have understood are questions of fact, and must be determined in a case like this where there is no testimony from either of the parties, by a consideration of the circumstances, of their relations to each other, of their conduct respectively, and of the probabilities.” Leighton v. Nash, 111 Maine, 528.

Since the law of this State has been so definitely settled and stated and the questions in any given case reduced to questions of fact, the numerous and varying decisions (see extended note 11 L. R. A., N. S., 873) of other States, in many instances seeming to be in conflict with each other and with our decisions, are often inapplicable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A. 510, 125 Me. 420, 1926 Me. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-fogg-me-1926.