Doolittle v. McConnell

174 P. 305, 178 Cal. 697, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 548
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 8, 1918
DocketSac. No. 2605. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 174 P. 305 (Doolittle v. McConnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doolittle v. McConnell, 174 P. 305, 178 Cal. 697, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 548 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Defendant, as executor of the estate of Ellen M. Wilson, deceased, appeals from a judgment based upon a suit upon a creditor’s claim. The amount of the judgment was fifteen thousand dollars.

Mrs. Wilson died in 1907. By her will all of her property Was disposed of in a manner ignoring her niece, the plaintiff herein, her son, defendant herein, being the principal beneficiary under the testament.

The will was admitted to probate in May, 1907, and within the statutory time plaintiff presented a creditor’s claim for twenty-five thousand dollars for personal services rendered her aunt, Mrs. Ellen M. Wilson, under a specific contract. It Was set forth in the said claim that the services were rendered from August 6,1902, to the time of Mrs. Wilson’s death. This claim having been rejected by defendant, as executor of the estate of his mother, suit thereon was entered on June 10,1908. The original complaint was amended in 1909, as appellant contends, by abandoning the original contract as alleged in the creditor’s claim and counting upon one entirely different— a contention which we shall presently examine in detail. Upon the amended complaint two trials were held before juries, each trial resulting in a substantial verdict in favor of plaintiff, but each judgment was on motion set aside andm new trial was granted. Upon the third trial, in 1916, at which another judge presided, plaintiff was permitted to file a new amended complaint and was again victorious before a jury. No motion for a new trial was made, but this appeal is prosecuted from the judgment;

Appellant makes a number of specifications of alleged error based upon the supposed radical difference between the original cause of action set forth in the complaint and that upon which issue was finally joined and trial was had resulting in the last verdict. Among other assertions of appellant is one to the effect that the new cause of action pleaded in the last amended complaint was barred by the statute of limitations.

*700 In the original complaint it was alleged in substance that in 1902 Mrs. Ellen M. Wilson repeatedly represented to plaintiff ’s parents and sisters, who resided in Iowa, and to plaintiff herself, who had farming land in North Dakota, that said Ellen M. Wilson was wealthy; that her health was becoming impaired and that she was physically unable to manage her household affairs,-.that she was living alone; and that she desired plaintiff to accompany her to California. It was further alleged that Mrs. Wilson promised that if plaintiff would accompany her to California, would take care of her and would manage her household affairs, she would fully compensate plaintiff for such services, if not in Mrs. Wilson’s lifetime, then by provision in her will. It is averred that plaintiff accepted the offer made by her aunt and that she came to this state. There are very extended allegations regarding the manner in which plaintiff complied with her agreement and in respect to the details of the care and attention bestowed by her upon Mrs. Wilson up to the time of the latter’s death.

In the amended complaint of 1909 were alleged the same sort of duties which were to be performed by plaintiff under the agreement, and which according to the averments were performed during the same period as that specified in the original complaint and in the claim upon which it was founded. But it was averred that the contract was made not in 1902 but in 1887, by the plaintiff and Mrs. Wilson and the mother of plaintiff, and that by them it was agreed not that the plaintiff would then and there accompany her aunt to California, but that whenever Mrs. Wilson should write to plaintiff’s mother for plaintiff to come to this state and live with her the plaintiff would do so, relying upon the promise of the aunt to see that the niece would be well provided for. It-was alleged that in 1902 plaintiff came, in response to a request in a letter written to her sister, and that she entered upon the discharge of her duties in accordance with the agreement of 1887.

The amended complaint of 1916 differs very little from that of 1909. In both the time of the original agreement is given as the year 1887. In the amended complaint of 1909 the agreement alleged was that if plaintiff would come to California when requested, her aunt would see that she was well provided for. In the pleading of 1916, after the words ‘ ‘ provided for,” were added the words “during the life of said *701 Ellen. M. Wilson and that at the death of said Ellen M. Wilson, she, the said plaintiff, would be, by said Ellen M. Wilson, amply and fully provided for and compensated for her said services.” In this complaint for the first time occurs the formal allegation that Mrs Wilson did not by will or otherwise provide for plaintiff.

We are of the opinion that none of the minute and diversified specifications of alleged error, founded upon the supposedly vital differences between the contract set forth in the original complaint and the two described in the later pleadings, is of :any force. The essence of plaintiff’s action against the estate was her claim for services rendered during certain years pursuant to a certain agreement. Even if we should concede that the first complaint failed to state a cause of action, we would not be forced to the conclusion that the statute of limitations barred all possibility of recovery because there was no complaint which should have withstood an attack by demurrer during the time between the filing of the original and the preparation of the amended pleading. Nor is there anything so essentially different between the various contracts alleged and that finally proven as to require us to decide that either the one in the second or that in the third complaint set forth was at variance with the creditor’s claim against the estate. These phases of the pleadings are so well analyzed in the opinion filed by the learned judge of the superior court who presided at the last trial, that we take this occasion to quote and adopt his language used in ruling upon the application to file the second amended complaint. He said:

“Counsel for the defendant contend that the complaint on file (first amended complaint) does not state a cause of action and that the proposed amendment must therefore be treated as the commencement of the cause of action therein stated against which the statute of limitations has run.
“ ‘Where there is no attempt to state a new cause of action ¡ in an amended complaint, but merely the addition of matters essential to make the original cause of action complete, the amendment, though made after the expiration of the period of limitation, relates back to the time of the commencement of the action. This was expressly held by the district court of appeal for the first district in Rauer's Law etc. Co. v. Leffingwell, 11 Cal. App. 494, [105 Pac. 427], in which a rehearing, was denied by this court, where the original complaint on a *702 promissory note did not contain am allegation of nonpayment, an allegation absolutely essential to the statement of a cause of action. The amended complaint was filed after the statute would have run, if it had not been for the original complaint. ’ (Ruiz v. Santa Barbara Gas etc. Co., 164 Cal. 194, [128 Pac, 330].)

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 305, 178 Cal. 697, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doolittle-v-mcconnell-cal-1918.