Colvin v. Barrett

118 A.2d 775, 151 Me. 344, 1955 Me. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 1, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 118 A.2d 775 (Colvin v. Barrett) 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
Colvin v. Barrett, 118 A.2d 775, 151 Me. 344, 1955 Me. LEXIS 64 (Me. 1955).

Opinion

Fellows, C. J.

This is an action of assumpsit brought by Nellie Colvin against the administrator with will annexed of the estate of John J. Morgan to recover for personal services alleged to have been rendered to the deceased, John J. Morgan, during his lifetime from July 1, 1950 to April 8, 1953. The defendant pleaded the general issue. The case was tried before a jury, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the defendant rested and moved for a directed verdict which was granted. The case is now before the Law Court on plaintiff’s exceptions.

It was stipulated and agreed by and between counsel that the claim and affidavit of the plaintiff was filed seasonably in the Probate Court. The evidence introduced by the plaintiff consisted only of a deposition of Leslie Drew who lived at 241 Walton St. in Portland during the lifetime of the decedent Morgan. The plaintiff lived at 249 Walton St. The *346 defendant’s testator, Morgan, lived at 235 Walton St. prior to his death. Morgan owned the tenements occupied by the plaintiff Nellie Colvin, the tenement occupied by himself, and the tenement occupied by the deponent Drew. The three tenements were approximately fifty feet apart, and plaintiff Colvin and deponent Drew rented of the decedent for more than fifteen years previous to his death.

After the death of Morgan’s wife in 1950, deponent Drew stated that he called on Morgan in his home frequently, if not daily. After Mrs. Morgan went to the hospital and after her death, Drew said that when he called on Morgan, the plaintiff Mrs. Colvin was there cooking his meals, washing his clothes, helping him put on his overcoat, cleaning up the house, and caring for him, and that he (Drew) paid his rent to Mrs. Colvin at Morgan’s request. In September or October, 1952 Morgan told Drew “I think Nellie is a good honest woman to look after my affairs. She keeps everything all straight and I think she should be well repaid for what she has done or is doing.” Mr. Morgan went to the hospital for treatment about March or April, 1953 and died in May, 1953.

Drew said he was a tenant of the deceased Morgan for about fifteen years and Mrs. Colvin was a tenant of Morgan for a longer period. Drew stated he paid his own rent during this period to Mrs. Colvin, and that Mrs. Colvin showed him (Drew) at four or five different times receipts for her rent signed by the deceased. “They were in the receipt book. She hadn’t taken them out. She said ‘there is my receipt right there’ and hers was the next one to ours.” Mrs. Colvin did not state that she had paid her rent, she simply showed her receipts. They were in Morgan’s receipt book. Drew testified that his calls were “sometimes before dinner, sometimes would go over after dinner; sometimes after supper.” Morgan never mentioned again to Drew that Mrs. *347 Colvin should be paid. Drew did “errands” for Morgan, such as driving his car for him, but was not paid. Any work Drew did was as a “neighbor, friend and tenant.” Morgan never said at any time to Drew that he had paid the plaintiff anything, and the plaintiff never told Drew that she had been paid anything. Drew did not know of his own knowledge whether or not Mrs. Colvin was to receive anything under Morgan’s will.

The last few months Morgan could not get on his coat or sweater himself and Mrs. Colvin had to “move him up to the table,” and help him to get to bed. “There were times that Mrs. Colvin had to steady his hand for him to sign the rent receipts.” But every receipt for rent received by Drew was signed by Morgan, although his hand was “shaky” at the last of his life.

At the conclusion of the reading of the deposition a verdict for defendant was moved for and directed.

The question presented is whether there was sufficient evidence submitted in the deposition offered by the plaintiff to require factual determination by the jury. There is no conflict of testimony of witnesses because there is only the one witness. Assuming, as we must, that the testimony of the deponent Drew is true, (Jordan v. Portland Coach Co., 150 Me. 149, favorable to plaintiff) does his testimony warrant a verdict for some amount in the plaintiff’s favor? Would a contrary verdict be sustained?

“It is a familiar principle that when services are rendered with the knowledge and consent of another under circumstances consistent with contract relations between the parties, a promise to pay is ordinarily implied by law on the part of him who knowingly receives the benefit of them, and is enforced on grounds of justice in order to compel the performance of a legal and moral duty.” Cole v. Clark, 85 Me. 336, 338.

*348 In a case brought by a daughter against the estate of her father, the court say: “The 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 rules 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.” There may be strong inferences, but no legal presumption. Bryant v. Fogg, Admr., 125 Me. 420. See also Saunders v. Saunders, 90 Me. 284; Leighton v. Nash, 111 Me. 525; Hatch v. Dutch, 113 Me. 405; Cheney v. Cheney, 122 Me. 556.

“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 generally. 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 Me. 290.” Bryant v. Fogg, 125 Me. 420, 423.

In a case involving goods and services where there was no family relationship and in the first count in the declaration *349

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Bluebook (online)
118 A.2d 775, 151 Me. 344, 1955 Me. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colvin-v-barrett-me-1955.