Hardy v. Hardy

28 A. 887, 79 Md. 9, 1894 Md. LEXIS 42
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 13, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 28 A. 887 (Hardy v. Hardy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. Hardy, 28 A. 887, 79 Md. 9, 1894 Md. LEXIS 42 (Md. 1894).

Opinion

Eoberts, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

It appears from the testimony in this cause that John Hardy, of Montgomery County, departed this life on the 13th of April, 1888, intestate, possessed of personal estate of inconsiderable value, and seized of valuable real estate, situate, in said county, and the District of Columbia. He left surviving him the following children, his only heirs-at-law, — Thomas O. Hardy, William Cephas Hardy, Joseph E. Hardy, Mary D. Hardy, and Elizabeth H. Smith, wife of Angus W. Smith. Letters of administration on the personal estate of the intestate were, by the Orphans’ Court of said county, granted to the appellant, who administered the trust. After he had qualified as administrator, the appellant presented to the Orphans’ Court, a claim against the estate of his father, the intestate, for thirty years’ services rendered him on the farm, upon which they both lived during the period of such service, and for thirty dollars cash loaned, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $4,530. This account was objected to, and never passed upon by the Orphans’ Court, but it does not certainly appear from the testimony what disposition, if any, was made of it. But in any event it is wholly immaterial, for it is quite clear that the personal estate is wholly insufficient to discharge so large a claim, and scarcely sufficient to pay the expenses of administration, [12]*12and the other claims owing by the intestate at the time of his death, and the personal estate having been finally settled by the appellant without paying any part of his claim.

The controversy before us arises out of the bill of complaint, filed on the 31st of July, 1889, by the appellant against all the other children and heirs-at-law of John Hardy, for the purpose of subjecting the real estate, sitirate in said county, of which said intestate died seized, to the payment of appellant’s claim for services in working on farm, &c., amounting to the sum of $4,504.17, and for cash loaned September, 1886, the sum of $30, aggregating the sum of $4,534.17, and alleging the insufficiency of the personal estate to pay the just debts due and owing by the intestate at the time of his death. A new claim is exhibited with the bill, the items of which are somewhat differently stated from the claim filed in the Orphans’ Court, but the difference between the two is quite immaterial. William Cephas Hardy was the only heir who answered the bill, denying the indebtedness of his father to the appellant in any sum, and setting up the bar of the Statute of Limitations against a recovery by the plaintiff. The appellant’s sister, Elizabeth H. Smith, and her husband, have answered the bill, admitting the allegations therein contained, and consenting to a decree for the sale of said real estate as therein prayed. The other defendants, Joseph E. Hardy, and wife, and Mary D. Hardy, were summoned but failed to appear, and the bill as to them was taken pro confesso.

Then followed the taking of testimony, which resulted in a record of more than one hundred and sixty printed pages, and certainly twice the size it should have been. Such a record in a case like this serves no good purpose, but compels an unnecessary expenditure of time and money; hence arises, in a great measure, the complaint [13]*13about the costs which parties are required to pay in this Court. The testimony which the record contains is undoubtedly very conflicting, and somewhat confusing; hut we have gone through its entire length, and given it thorough examination, and careful consideration. It is contended on behalf of the defendant, William C. Hardy, who alone contests the claim, that the complainant can only recover by showing an express, or implied understanding existing between him and his father, that the work and labor which he alleges to have performed for his father, was to he charged for, and to be met by payment, and that there is no evidence in the cause showing such an agreement. The first inquiry which naturally arises here, is one of primary importance, and that is, did the appellant render the services for which he now claims payment? The testimony of his two sisters, and his brother Frank, all testifying against their own interest, and hein'g persons who were more familiar with the daily life of their father, and better acquainted with the occurrences and circumstances existing at the home farm of the intestate, than any one else called to testify in this cause, assert that the appellant rendered valuable services to his father in working on the farm, and that his claim is a just one, and ought to he paid. Even William Cephas Hardy, who disputes the appellant’s claim, in answer to the 11th interrogatory in chief, which reads, “In 1863, when you say this money was paid to Thomas O. Hardy, and jrou also state that your father owed it to him, state if you can, for what your father owed him that money?” answered, “He owed it to him for his services, and gave it to him, I suppose, for that.” The claim is for services rendered between September 6th, 1855, and April 15th, 1888. We then have the admission of the contesting defendant that, in 1863, the intestate did owe the appellant for services and paid him the sum of $1000 therefor; if it he true, and we [14]*14think the testimony clearly establishes the fact, that the appellant worked, with intermissions varying as to time, for his father from 1855 to 1863, the year in which Cephas Hardy says his father paid appellant the sum of one thousand dollars for services which he had rendered, it would be hut a reasonable inference, that if, after the appellant left home in 1863, and shortly thereafter, at his father’s request, returned, and continued to perform service of like character, with that which he had rendered prior to the year 1863, that the service was not gratuitous, but was rendered with the implied understanding that a charge was to be made, and proper compensation was to follow. It is a fact well established by the testimony, that the appellant did a great deal more labor, and improved the place more than any of the other children. And it also appears that on various occasions he made arrangements with his other sons to pay them for work and labor to be performed by them on the farm, and agreed upon the amount of the compensation; and time and again has the intestate promised to pay the appellant for his services, commending him in the highest terms, for what he had done, and promising him that he should be conrpensatedl Within a few weeks of his death, when the shadows were lengthening in his life, when he was about to die intestate, when he knew that he had made no provision for a faithful son, he then said that he should be paid for his labor. We have found no difficulty in ascertaining from a decided preponderance of the proof, that the appellant has performed, during the period named, important services to his father. The next question which we must now consider is one that, in most cases of this character, presents some difficulty. It is but natural that children, after they have attained their majority, should oftentimes find the homes of their childhood a refuge in ill-health, and often after misfortune has overtaken them, [15]*15recollections of home, and its surroundings, become too strong to resist. When such is the case, whilst they may assist in the performance of duties connected with the home, yet if such duties are discharged without an express or implied understanding that they are to he charged for, and met by payment, there can be, and there should he, no recovery. To maintain a different rule could not fail to result in unworthy strife, vicious litigation, and dishonest schemes.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A. 887, 79 Md. 9, 1894 Md. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-hardy-md-1894.