Grue v. Hensley

210 S.W.2d 7, 357 Mo. 592, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 8, 1948
DocketNo. 40616.
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 210 S.W.2d 7 (Grue v. Hensley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grue v. Hensley, 210 S.W.2d 7, 357 Mo. 592, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 666 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*595 ELLISON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Gasconade county (on appeal from the probate court) sustaining a motion of the respondent administrator of the estate of William F. Wortmann, deceased, to dismiss a probate demand for $13,910 against said estate, filed by the appellant Zelpha Hoffmann Grue. The ground alleged in the motion was that the demand split a cause of action against the estate growing out of a single transaction, in that appellant had filed earlier that year another demand against the estate based on the same transaction, which had been compromised and allowed. There are only two questions.in the case: (1) whether the trial court’s judgment was erroneous on the face of the record; (2) or whether the court should have reserved its ruling on the administrator’s motion until it had heard the cause on the merits, and then made its decision.

The facts seem to be that the intestate was old and decrepit, but operated a farm and a store at -Rosebud. The appellant resided at his home for several years, rendered some nursing and domestic service to him and clerked in his store until his death in December, 1945. His estate was administered in the probate court of Gasconade County. Within due time, in August, 1946, appellant filed her first demand aforesaid, which merely stated an account against his estate for $441.32, consisting of eleven items covering insurance and taxes she had paid for him out of her own funds between February 8, 1944 and August 7, 1945. It contained the affidavit required by Sec. 192, R. S. Mo. 1939-Mo. R. S. A. that she had given credit to the-estate for all payments and offsets to which it was entitled, and that the balance claimed was justly due. That demand was taken up by [9] the probate court in October and its judgment recited appellant agreed to ‘ ‘ accept the sum of $150 as payment in full on said demand of all her claims against said estate.” The court approved the com-' promise and ordered the administrator to pay it, which he did.

Thereafter on or about December 7, 1946, only five days before the expiration of the one year allowed by See’s 182, 196 for filing probate ■ demands, the appellant filed her second demand, here involved. It contained five paragraphs, stating an account for services rendered the deceased aggregating $13,910.00. It started: “To services rendered by claimant to William F. Wortmann, deceased, from February 14, 1942, to.December 7, 1945, as follows:” The first paragraph detailed nursing and personal services; the second, do- *596 mestie services; and the third, management and operation of his store. The fourth paragraph was as follows (italics ours): “Complete management of all personal and business affairs of deceased, including collection of rents, banking, payment of obligations, sale of stock, recovery of farm machinery, sale of farm, and the performance of the numerous and varies errands and attendance to details required in connection with the handling of the affairs of deceased and covering the period from February 14, 1942, until his death.”

The respondent administrator, as stated, filed a motion in the probate court to dismiss this second demand, contending that it arose -out of the same alleged contract as the smaller demand the appellant had previously filed in August; that the latter had already been completely adjudicated; and that the asserted items in the second demand were all past due when the first demand was filed, and should have been included in it. In addition the administrator filed an answer containing general and special denials and allegations of: misconduct and appropriation of estate property by the appellant; set-off or payment by reason thereof; and compromise, adjudication and payment of the former demand, operating as a bar to the prosecution of the claims stated in the second demand.

The probate judge overruled the respondent administrator’s motion to dismiss the demand and the case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for appellant for $7500. The administrator appealed to the circuit court. There the claimant filed a motion to strike the administrator’s motion from the files. The circuit court overruled that motion and sustained the administrator’s motion to dismiss the demand. The claimant then appealed to this court. Thus the issues are raised. Appellant’s theories are sufficiently disclosed by the first two points in her brief. They are as follows.

(1) “Two separate claims . . . do not relate to the same cause of action unless it appears that the same evidence will support each claim and unless it also appears that the same measure of damages will apply to each claim.” (2) “Where two demands against an estate are not founded upon one express contract, and each is based upon a separate obligation implied by law, wholly separate and distinct causes of action are stated. Separate demands against an estate, one based upon quantum meruit for personal services rendered, and another based upon debt for reimbursement of amounts paid to satisfy obligations of decedent, are wholly separate and distinct causes of action, ’ ’

As we understand, the first sentence in her second point means that her two probate demands severally were based upon separate obligations (contracts) implied by law, which precludes the application of the' rule against splitting a single cause of action just as if there had been two different express contracts. And the second sentence means that the two demands constituted separate causes of *597 action because the first sounded in debt for reimbursement of a definite sum of money paid by her to satisfy her decedent’s obligations; whereas the second demand is in quantum meruit for an indefinite sum of money representing the reasonable value of. her services, which she fixed at $13,190. The first point in her brief attempts to state an exclusive test by which it may be determined whether her two demands constituted a single cause of action: and that test is whether the same evidence will support each demand, and the same measure of damages will apply to each.

Confessedly the questions thus presented are difficult. The tests for determining whether a cause of action is single and cannot be split, have been said 1 to be: (1) whether separate actions brought thereon arise out of the same “act, contract or transaction”; '(2) or, whether the parties, subject matter and evidence necessary to sustain the claim are the same in both actions. Our decisions 2 have pretty generally employed the first of these tests, and use one or more of the words “act”; “contract” or “transaction”. And our Civil Code, itself, now and in the past, has used the word “transaction” as stating the basis of a cause of action, or .claim, or counterclaim. 3

But the phrase “cause of action” and the word “transaction” both have broad meanings. The former does not refer to the form of action in which the claim is asserted, but to the cause for action, i. e., the underlying facts combined with the law giving the party a right

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.2d 7, 357 Mo. 592, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grue-v-hensley-mo-1948.