Cobble v. McCamey

790 S.W.2d 279, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 828
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 18, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 790 S.W.2d 279 (Cobble v. McCamey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobble v. McCamey, 790 S.W.2d 279, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 828 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

SANDERS, Presiding Judge (Eastern Section).

The Defendants, as co-executors of the will of Elizabeth Cobble, deceased, appeal from an award to the Plaintiffs for personal services rendered to the deceased during her lifetime.

Mrs. C. Elizabeth Cobble (Mrs. Cobble) died intestate in Greene County on October 7, 1985. Her will was admitted to probate and Defendants-Appellants Vera Lee McCamey and Edward McCamey (MeCam-eys), who were named as primary beneficiaries in the will, qualified as co-executors of the will. The Plaintiffs-Appellees, Claude Cobble and Lenora Cobble (Cobbles) filed a claim against the estate in the amount of $41,729.40 for personal services rendered to Mrs. Cobble between 1972 and 1985. The McCameys filed exceptions to the claim. Upon the trial of the case it was the position of the Cobbles that prior to 1972 they entered into an agreement with Mrs. Cobble that in exchange for their taking care of her farms and assisting her as needed, she would leave them enough land and money in her will to compensate them for their services.

The proof shows Mrs. Cobble was a widow whose husband died in 1966. She had three farms in Greene County. After her husband’s death a Mr. Hogan looked after the farms until 1969 when he became ill and could no longer look after them. The Cobbles were close neighbors of Mrs. Cobble’s and Claude Cobble was a cousin of Mrs. Cobble’s deceased husband. In June, 1969, Mrs. Cobble went to the home of the Cobbles and they had a conversation. The conversation was excluded from the evidence in the record before us but after that conversation the Cobbles began working for Mrs. Cobble. They used their own farm machinery and bushhogged her fields; they grubbed cedar bushes, built fences, cleaned out fence rows, mowed the fields, cleaned the barns. The record reveals they did just about everything that would be required to maintain the farms in good condition. The Cobbles did not tend or harvest the tobacco on the farms; Mrs. Cobble rented the tobacco allotments to other farmers. The Cobbles also looked after the personal needs of Mrs. Cobble. She had back trouble and could not stand for long periods of time. For this reason she did very little cooking and Lenora Cobble frequently took her meals to her. To further enumerate the services rendered by the Cobbles would serve only to lengthen this opinion. Numerous close neighbors of the Cobbles and Mrs. Cobble corroborated the testimony of the Cobbles and no evidence was offered to the contrary.

The Cobbles also testified they were never compensated for their services and there is no proof in the record to the contrary. There was also substantial evidence of statements made by Mrs. Cobble in her lifetime to third parties evidencing her intentions to compensate the Cobbles through her estate. The testimony of Faye C. Vanderslice, who was perhaps Mrs. Cobble’s closest personal friend, removes all [281]*281doubt as to Mrs. Cobble’s intention on this issue. From 1970 until about a year before Mrs. Cobble’s death they were together two or three times a week and visited with each other by telephone almost daily until about a week before Mrs. Cobble’s death. Mrs. Vanderslice’s testimony is replete with accounts of Mrs. Cobble’s telling her of the things the Cobbles did for her on almost a daily basis, how much Mrs. Cobble appreciated what the Cobbles did for her and her intention to reward them in the future. The following is a good summary of her overall testimony:

“Q. Was Mr. and Mrs. Cobble the people she [Mrs. Cobble] relied upon and depended on?
“A. That’s right. She said she could always depend on them. They was always right there, and she told about how nice they kept the fields and things, and that they used their own gas and everything — cleaned up the fields, and mowed the lawn, and everything.
“Q. Now, I believe you told Mr. Woolsey that she always paid her bills, but did she tell you that she expected Mr. and Mrs. Cobble to have pay for what they’d done?
“A. She said she didn’t pay them now because she was going to leave them a farm and some money so they wouldn’t have to work too hard. Now, this was repeated to me not one time, it was five hundred or a thousand, or maybe two thousands if I’d kept track of it.” There was also testimony of other witnesses which corroborates the testimony of Mrs. Vanderslice.

In an effort to contradict the claims of the Cobbles the Defendants offered into evidence a number of composition notebooks which contained numerous entries and notations relating to purchases, payments for labor, etc., made by Mrs. Cobble in her lifetime. The records failed to show payments to the Cobbles for any work or services during the period in issue. It was the theory and insistence of the Defendants that Mrs. Cobble was an honest person who paid her debts and since the records failed to show payments to the Cobbles, that was proof they did not perform the services claimed. The Defendants asked that the notebooks be filed as exhibits but the chancellor sustained Plaintiffs’ objection on the grounds they were hearsay and it was not shown they qualified under the Uniform Business Records Act (T.C.A. § 24-7-111).

The chancellor found the issues in favor of the Cobbles and fixed their award at $32,129.40. The McCameys have appealed, saying: (a) The chancellor was in error in denying the admission of the notebooks into evidence; (b) The evidence does not support the amount of the award; and (c) The Appellees should be estopped for failure to assert their claim in the deceased’s lifetime. We find the Appellants’ issues without merit and affirm the chancellor.

The chancellor filed an excellent memorandum opinion which we adopt in part as follows:

“In asserting a claim against an estate for services rendered the decedent, the cause of action necessarily is based upon either contract or quasi contract. Nashville Breeko Block & Tile Co. v. Hopton, [29 Tenn.App. 394], 196 SW2d 1010 (1946). To bring a contract into existence there must be an offer and an acceptance of that offer. The offer and acceptance may be expressed or implied from the parties’ conduct. Murray v. Grissim [40 Tenn.App. 246], 290 SW2d 888 (1956).
“ ‘Contracts implied in fact arise under circumstances which, according to the ordinary course of dealing and common understanding of men, show a mutual intention to contract. Such an agreement may result as a legal inference from the facts and circumstances of the case. Weatherly v. American Agricultural Chemical Co., 16 Tenn.App. 613, 65 SW2d 592 (Tenn.App.1933).’
“ ‘In order to make out an implied contract for the rendition of services, facts and circumstances must be shown which amount to a request for services, which is the offer to contract, and the performance of the requested services, which is the acceptance of the offer.’ ”
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
790 S.W.2d 279, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobble-v-mccamey-tennctapp-1989.