Estate of Evans

22 N.W.2d 497, 248 Wis. 456, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 232
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 N.W.2d 497 (Estate of Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Evans, 22 N.W.2d 497, 248 Wis. 456, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 232 (Wis. 1946).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

Under the evidence the following appears without dispute in any material respect, to wit: The claimant is sixty-seven years of age, and resides on a Waukesha county farm with her husband, a forty-seven-year-old son, Gordon Jones, and two granddaughters, Helen Martin aged eighteen years and another aged thirteen years. William Evans, the deceased, had known claimant and her husband, Robert Jones, over forty-seven years; and they were good friends. In July, 1940, Evans came to their farm and asked if he could room and board with them, and they agreed he could do so for $7 a week, which he said was all he could afford to pay. He lived with them from July until September, 1940, when he returned to Milwaukee for a prostate operation. In February, 1941, the claimant and her husband agreed with Evans that he could return to their farm on the same arrangement; and he stayed there from April 15, 1941, until he died intestate on June 10, 1944, at the age of eighty-two years. He was mentally alert, *458 active, attended to his business, and was not incapacitated or bedridden until he began to rapidly fail in health three or four weeks before his death.

Mrs. Jones testified that when Evans came to live on the farm in 1940 he was addicted to wetting his bed and soiling his clothes considerably, which occurred almost daily; that on occasions he had difficulty with' his bowels; that after he returned in 1941 his bed wetting was not as aggravated as previously, but it still persisted; that she also took care of washing his clothing, cleaning up after him, washing bed sheets, on occasions bringing breakfast to him in bed, and rubbing his back with alcohol on several occasions; but that she kept no record of the services or the time involved in her work for and on behalf of Evans, and she never asked him for any more money for his care and room and board than the $7 which he paid her regularly. She testified, on an adverse examination, that it took her more than an hour a day to look after Evans. On cross-examination on the trial she testified:

“It would probably take an hour and a half washing Mr. Evans’ clothes, getting them dry and all that and bringing them in. It takes a good hour and a half to get them back on the bed and everything. I had to be satisfied with the $7 a week I received for the room and board at that time.
“Q. You were then satisfied to accept the .$7 a week, isn’t that correct.? A. Yes.”

And on redirect examination she testified:

“When I said I was satisfied with the $7 a week I meant just for the board I am satisfied. The $7 was to be for the board. He said that he could pay only $7 for that and that he would make his will. He said he would make his will and take care of me if I take care of him to the end of his days.”

(Additionál testimony by claimant and further redirect examination of her in relation to conversations between her and the deceased were objected to and her testimony was excluded as incompetent.)

*459 Helen Martin testified:

“I heard conversations between my grandmother and Mr. Evans relative to his paying for any services performed by my grandmother. Every once in a while he would mention that he knew he was a great bother to my grandmother and that he could not afford to pay any more than $7 a week for board and room, but he knew that she deserved a better payment and he always mentioned that he would see she was well taken care of. I heard him make that statement so many times I have lost track. I know he attempted to make a will. . . . He told me how he wanted the will made out. He wanted to cut off his children entirely but he did want to leave a trust for his two grandchildren. The rest would go to the person who had taken care of him until he was dead. . . . He didn’t say anything else about paying my grandmother greater board, he just kept saying he was going to see she would be taken care of. The first time I heard those words was about five weeks after he arrived the first time. He made the remark that if he could stay there he said he would see she was well taken care of. . . '. That is what he told Mary Jones, my grandmother, and it was within my hearing.”

Gordon Jones testified:

“I never heard Mr. Evans say anything to my mother relative to paying her additional compensation for her services for taking care of him and doing his work, but he told me a few times. He said whoever took care of him would be well taken care of.”

Robert Jones testified:

“I was familiar with the work that my wife performed for him. . . . He always said she would be well paid for in his will. I remember him telling her quite a few times and he told me quite a few times when we were together outside in the evening.”

A. practical nurse, residing in Waukesha and. familiar with the reasonableness of charges for practical nursing, testified,— in answer to a hypothetical question describing Evans’ diseased physical condition and the resulting consequences which necessitated the additional services claimed to have been rendered by claimant in addition to the furnishing of room and board, — ■ that the reasonable value of such services was $25 per week.

*460 The court stated in its findings of fact and conclusions of law (so far as here material) :

that the estate of Evans is in excess of $14,000; that when he, in 1940, made arrangements for his room and board, “he represented to the claimant at that time that he could not afford to pay much but it was agreed to pay her $7 a week for room and board and paid said sum each week he stayed therethat during the periods Evans stayed-with claimant, from July 15, 1940, until September 5, 1940, and again from April 15, 1941, to June 10, 1944, he “wet his bed daily, messed his pants nearly daily and sometimes more than once, and many times after noonday meal would vomit up his meal and . . . the claimant during these periods changed his bed, washed, dried, aired and remade his bed daily, cleaned, washed and dried his underwear and pants almost daily. ...
“8. That the time spent by the claimant in performing these services for the deceased was three to three and one-half hours per day, sometimes more, sometimes less, during a period from morning until late at night. ...
“10. That on many different occasions through the whole time that the deceased was at the home of the claimant, said deceased promised and agreed to pay her well for her services; other times, would be well taken care of and other similar promises.
“11. That the statements, promises and agreements were made in the presence of the claimant, her husband, her son and her granddaughter.
“12. That the claimant Mary Jones relied on the promises and agreements of the deceased that she would be well paid for taking care of him.
“13. That the claimant rendered all such services, with the expectation of being paid therefor. . . .
“15.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.W.2d 497, 248 Wis. 456, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-evans-wis-1946.