Estate of Cates v. Brown

973 S.W.2d 909, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1428, 1998 WL 418764
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1998
DocketWD 54371, WD 54551
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 973 S.W.2d 909 (Estate of Cates v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Cates v. Brown, 973 S.W.2d 909, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1428, 1998 WL 418764 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the estate of Clyde E. Cates on a *911 claim made by Jesse L. Brown, that the estate owed him $44,638.00 for personal services performed over a period of ten years, from 1952 through 1962. The appellant contends that the trial court erred by granting the estate’s motion for summary judgment because Mr. Brown’s claim was timely filed and states a cause of action for an oral agreement to make a will in favor of Mr. Brown. The appellant also claims that the respondent’s motion for summary judgment was not in proper form and should not have been considered by the trial court. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

The appellant’s decedent, Jesse Brown, died after the trial court’s judgment was entered. Lois Fritze, personal representative, has been substituted as a party. The factual background of this case begins over 50 years ago. Jesse Brown first met Clyde Cates and his wife, Oddiece Cates, in 1946 when Mr. Brown was thirteen or fourteen years old. The Cateses lived five miles south of Harrisonville, Missouri. Mr. Brown lived nearby. He moved to Harrisonville and went to work first for a dairy and then for a greenhouse, making $5.00 per day. In 1952, Mr. Brown was unemployed. He met Mr. Cates, who told Mr. Brown that he had suffered a heart attack and could not work. Oddiece Cates was also sick and could not do much work. Mr. Cates asked Mr. Brown to come to work for him and help with his farm. In return, Mr. Cates agreed to furnish Mr. Brown room and board. He explained to Mr. Brown that he could not pay him anything at that time but that he would make it up to him once he got on his feet.

Mr. Brown started working for Mr. Cates on July 20,1952. Mr. Brown’s duties included milking eight cows, feeding chickens, working in the field, mowing pastures and mowing hay. Mr. Brown worked for Mr. and Mrs. Cates until July 20, 1955. He left because, although the Cateses seemed to be back on their feet, the Cateses had not offered to pay any salary. In August 1955, the Cateses found Mr. Brown in Augusta, Kansas, working at a gas station for 80 cents per hour. They begged Mr. Brown to return to the farm. Mr. Brown agreed to return to the farm. He did this, he later said, because he felt sorry for the Cateses. At the farm, he was given increased chores. He was provided room and board. Mr. Cates promised to pay Mr. Brown one dollar per day, but paid him for only two weeks. In the spring of 1956, Mr. Cates gave Mr. Brown five acres of crops. At this time, Mr. Brown was doing all of the labor on the Cateses 150-acre farm.

In the summer of 1956, the Cateses decided to go on vacation to New Mexico. Before they left, they went to Harrisonville. Upon their return, they told Mr. Brown that they had seen an attorney at the law firm of Crouch, Crouch & Spangler and made a will. Mr. Brown was told that when “anything happened” to the Cateses “everything” would be his. After that, compensation was not discussed, and the couple told him that everything would be his and not to worry about it. When Mr. Brown would get disgusted, he was told that everything was to be his.

In the fall of 1956, Mr. Brown made $400.00 on the five acres of crops that he had been given in the spring. He decided that this was not much money for two years of work, so in December 1956 he went to California. He did not tell the Cateses he was leaving, nor did he leave a note. Mr. Brown found employment at a laboratory at $2.00 per hour. The Cateses found him and started telephoning him, begging him to return. Mr. Brown returned to work for the couple on June 17, 1957. Once again, Mr. Brown did most of the work on the farm. He was given room and board. According to Mr. Brown at that time it was a common arrangement for laborers to receive their room and board in exchange for services. Mr. Cates gave Mr. Brown ten acres of crops, which Mr. Cates had planted in the spring, but Mr. Brown had to pay “grain rent,” which reduced the net yield of the crops. Mr. Cates helped Mr. Brown plant crops on 20 acres belonging to Mr. Brown in the spring of 1958. In 1959, Mr. Brown “made better” on the crops, but Mr. Brown still felt he was not being fully compensated. Both Mr. and Mrs. Cates kept reminding Mr. *912 Brown that everything they had was to be his. During this period, Mr. Cates increased the size of his farmland. Mr. Brown continued to do almost all of the work with some help from Mr. Cates. Mr. Cates did not hire any additional labor.

In 196Í, Mr. Cates was given a 120-aere farm east of Garden City, Missouri. Mr. Brown helped the Cateses move to the farm. He assisted in rebuilding the house on the property. He was never paid. The Cateses did not allow Mr. Brown to live with them, so he rented a house and six acres of land. Mr. Brown began working off his rented farm for his own living. Although he would help out now and then, Mr. Brown did not regularly work for the Cateses again. He continued to help the Cateses three or four times a week until his marriage in 1968.

On July 3, 1968, Mr. Brown got married. The Cateses were unhappy with this development. The Cateses refused to have anything to do with Mr. Brown or his wife. ■ Mr. Brown said that when he told Mr. Cates that he was going to get married, Cates said, “he would tear the will up if I got married, and I said, well, if his word wasn’t any better, it wasn’t no good, then the paper wasn’t worth a darn, either.” Mr. Brown had never seen a will. He believed that Mr. Cates was serious about his intention to tear up the will.

Mr. Brown did not. see Mr. Cates for many years. He moved to Pleasant Hill and then to Wheatland. In 1990, Mr. Cates came to visit Mr. Brown. He told Mr. Brown that Oddiece had passed away. Mr. Cates told Mr. Brown that he was “just like a long lost son” and was “still in his will.” Several other people heard Mr. Cates tell Mr. Brown that the will was “still in effect.” Mr. Cates died on February 11,1992. Mr. Brown found two wills; a 1977 will made out in favor of Harold and May Roberts and a 1988 will made out in favor of Aria Randol. No will was ever found naming Mr. Brown as a beneficiary. Mr. Brown checked with all of the‘lawyers in Harrisonville, and found no evidence of any other will having been drafted.

Aria Randol was issued letters testamentary as personal representative of Mr. Cates’, estate on September 14, 1992. On January 28, 1993, Mr. Brown filed a pro se claim against the estate of Clyde Cates. He alleged that the estate owed him $44,638.00 for services rendered over a period of ten years, from 1952 until 1962. The estate filed a motion for summary judgment on May 3, 1993. This motion was denied on June 28, 1993. A second motion for summary judgment was filed by the estate on April 11, 1996. After argument', the trial court granted the motion on December 17, 1996, without giving its basis for doing so. Mr. Brown died on December 30, 1996. The trial court granted a motion for substitution of a party claimant made by the personal representative of Mr. Brown’s estate, Lois A. Fritze.

SUMMARY JUDGMENT

The trial court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Adams Ford Belton, Inc. v. Missouri Motor Vehicle Comm’n, 946 S.W.2d 199, 202 (Mo. banc 1997).

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Bluebook (online)
973 S.W.2d 909, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1428, 1998 WL 418764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-cates-v-brown-moctapp-1998.