Dickover, Admr. v. Owen

151 N.E. 349, 84 Ind. App. 463, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 41
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 1926
DocketNo. 12,413.
StatusPublished

This text of 151 N.E. 349 (Dickover, Admr. v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickover, Admr. v. Owen, 151 N.E. 349, 84 Ind. App. 463, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 41 (Ind. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Nichols, C. J.

Action by appellee against the estate of appellant’s decedent on a claim for services rendered decedent, and a second paragraph for damages' for breach of alleged contract to make a will bequeathing to appellee all of decedent’s estate. Without demurrer, issues were joined on the claim by a general denial. There was a trial by jury which resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee on the first paragraph of the claim for $2,965, on which judgment was given against the estate. The second paragraph of claim was withdrawn by the court’s instruction from consideration by the jury. By this paragraph of claim, it was averred that the decedent promised and agreed with appellee, who was a niece of the decedent, that if she would come from her home in the city of Detroit, Michigan, and live with the decedent, and move her family and household goods from said city of Detroit to the home of decedent in *465 Hamilton county, Indiana, and become her housekeeper and nurse, and assist her in the management of her farm and business affairs, she would, at her death, give and devise to appellee all of her property both real and personal of which she might die the owner. It is averred that appellee accepted the terms of said offer, and, because of such promises, appellee did move from her home in the city of Detroit to the home of the decedent, resided therein, and performed for the decedent the above services as required of her; but that the decedent breached her contract, and wholly failed to give and devise to appellee her estate, which was of the value of $8,000, or any part thereof.

While there is no cross-error assigned by appellee because of the court’s action in withdrawing this second paragraph of complaint from the consideration of the jury, we have set it out in substance as above because of the influence which, as it seems to the court, it must have had upon the jury in the verdict rendered by the jury. It is to be observed that this second paragraph of claim was before the jury until the close of appellee’s evidence, at which time appellant’s motion to withdraw from the jury was sustained, and thereafter, the court, by an instruction, withdrew the paragraph from the consideration of the jury. Before its withdrawal, evidence was heard to sustain its averments, but such evidence, being oral, except one letter written in 1919, and the contents of another letter in which were the promises that appellee should have the estate left, evidently the court deemed the same insufficient either for the enforcement of the contract or damages for its breach. The court’s ruling in withdrawing the second paragraph might have been questioned in view of proof of the contents of the letter containing the promise, but this question is not before *466 us. After the withdrawal of this paragraph of complaint from the consideration of the jury, there was no question of a contract, or of a breach of a contract, for the jury’s determination. The only question which the jury had to consider thereafter was that of the value of appellee’s services under the allegations of the first paragraph of the claim. Whether appellant’s decedent had at any time promised appellee that, at the death of such decedent, appellee should have the whole of her estate, or any part thereof, and whether such promise and agreement on the part of appellant’s decedent had been breached was not for the jury’s consideration. We do not determine as to whether the court erred in sustaining appellant’s motion to withdraw the second paragraph of the claim from the consideration of the jury for, as above mentioned, no cross-error is assigned. Appellant earnestly and forcefully contends that the recovery is grossly excessive. It is a well-established rule of law that a verdict will not be set aside for excessive diimages or excessive recovery where the same is not so excessive as to induce the belief that the jury acted from partiality, prejudice, corruption, or other improper motive, and that the verdict of the jury should not be disturbed unless it appears to the court at first blush to be grossly excessive. Alexander v. Thomas (1865), 25 Ind. 268 ; Kawneer Mfg. Co. v. Kalter (1918), 187 Ind. 99, 118 N. E. 561 ; Citizens Tel. Co. v. Prickett (1919), 189 Ind. 141, 125 N. E. 193 ; Grabowski v. Benzsa (1923), 80 Ind. App. 214, 140 N. E. 76. But it follows as the converse of this rule of law that if a verdict of the jury is so large as to induce the belief that the jury was moved by prejudice, partiality, or corruption, or that some improper element was taken into account in its determination, then it becomes the duty of the court on appeal to intervene by reversal, or in a proper case order a remittitur.

*467 By the undisputed evidence in this case, it appears that appellee, with her three children, came to the home of decedent in the latter part of June, 1920, and that her husband came in September following. They lived together as a family, the husband farming the land after he came and dividing the products with decedent until in November, 1921, at which time, the decedent, having married Mr. Dickover, administrator appellant herein, she moved to Arcadia. During the seventy-four or seventy-five weeks that decedent remained on her farm, she was once sick with pneumonia for two weeks and called a physician who attended her during that sickness. At another time she was sick for three or four days and called her physician again. This physician testified that the value of appellee’s services as he saw them were worth thirty-five dollars per week. Another witness testified that her services for seventeen weeks until her husband came were worth thirty-five dollars per week. Appellee’s witnesses did not testify to the value of her services when the decedent was not sick, and after her husband came, but appellant’s witnesses put the value of such services from five dollars to seven dollars per week. After the decedent moved to Arcadia, appellee’s services consisted in assisting the decedent to clean house occasionally and in making some curtains, pillow cases, and in washing some bedding for two. beds twice a year. Appellee, contending that the verdict is not excessive, says that for the first seventy-four weeks, or until the decedent moved to Arcadia, appellee should receive thirty-five dollars per week, and for the fifty weeks from the time that she moved to Arcadia until her death, she should have received ten dollars per week. It must be kept in mind that the allowance to appellee under the issues as they stood at the time the jury returned its verdict must be for services rendered and not for a *468 breach of contract, and this court is suspicious, under the facts and circumstances, that the jury may have taken into consideration some improper element. By instruction No. 1, the court informed the jury that, “as to the several items for the claim for services * * * it will be your duty to determine what services were performed by the complainant for the decedent and the nature and extent of the services, and it will also be your duty to determine whether there was any contract price,” etc.

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Related

Grabowski v. Benzsa
140 N.E. 76 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1923)
Alexander v. Thomas
25 Ind. 268 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1865)
Kawneer Manufacturing Co. v. Kalter
118 N.E. 561 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1918)
Citizens Telephone Co. v. Prickett
125 N.E. 193 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 349, 84 Ind. App. 463, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickover-admr-v-owen-indctapp-1926.