Hatch v. Dutch

94 A. 487, 113 Me. 405, 1915 Me. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 30, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 A. 487 (Hatch v. Dutch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatch v. Dutch, 94 A. 487, 113 Me. 405, 1915 Me. LEXIS 166 (Me. 1915).

Opinion

King, J.

The plaintiff recovered a verdict of $529.39 against the estate of her father, Lincoln Hatch, for services rendered by her in his home from April 6, 1904 to July 29, 1908, and the case comes to this Court on the defendant’s motion to have the verdict set aside as against the evidence.

The case shows that in April, 1904, Lincoln Hatch with his wife was living on his small farm in Wells, Maine. He was a carpenter by trade and worked chiefly at that occupation, nevertheless, he did some farming on his place, and kept a horse, three or four cows, and some hens. His six children, consisting of two daughters, Etta and Annie, and four sons, were grown up. Etta was then married and lived in Attleboro, ^Massachusetts, arid Annie, the plaintiff, then '22 years qf age, was also in Attleboro employed in a jewelry factory. Mrs. Hatch, the wife and mother, was sick of consumption from which she died January 5, 1905.

The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that on April 6, 1904, she left Attleboro and came to her father’s home in Wells to do the housework and care for and nurse her mother, which she did until her mother’s death on January 5 following; that thereafter she continued to live with her father in his house as his only housekeeper until July 29,1908, when on account of illness she went to her sister’s ■ home in Attleboro; that during the time she so lived at her father’s home she did the housework and such other labor as the only woman in such a home customarily does, including such chores about the place as were necessary to be done by her in her father’s absences from home while working at his trade.

Her father died intestate January 10, 1910, and administration on his estate was granted to George S. Hatch July 19, 1910. An inven[407]*407tory of the estate was accepted and filed May 2, 1911, showing real estate valued at $1600, but no personal property. December 19, 1911, upon the application of the administrator alleging that Annie S. Hatch had presented to him a claim against the estate which he deemed “exhorbitant, unjust or illegal,” commissioners were appointed by the Probate Court under the statute to determine, what amount, if any, should be allowed on said claim. On January 16, 1912, the commissioners made their report allowing (including interest) $1620.77, which report was ordered accepted and recorded.

September 13, 1912, two of the sons of Lincoln Hatch petitioned the Probate Court to have its decree accepting the report of the commissioners annulled and reversed on the alleged grounds, that the claimant had neither presented her claim to the administrator in writing nor filed it in the Probate Court, supported by affidavit as required by the statute, and that the claim had been allowed by connivance and fraud between the administrator and the claimant, and without notice to the other heirs. Thereupon, after notice and hearing, the Probate Court revoked its previous order accepting the report, and ordered a new commission issued to the same persons “for a full hearing of the parties interested in said claim and in said estate, in order that said petitioners and all others interested in said estate may be given the opportunity to be heard before said commissioners.” Such new commission was issued and on September 2,1913, the commissioners made their report allowing on said claim (including interest) $1885.57. which report was ordered accepted and recorded. From that decision of the commissioners an appeal was taken by the administrator de bonis non of said estate, and this action was commenced by the claimant November 4, 1913.

1. At the trial it was claimed as a defense to the action that the plaintiff did not present her claim to the administrator in writing, or file it in the Probate Court, supported by affidavit as required by statute, before the administrator applied for the appointment of commissioners to determine the validity of her claim. But this Court held in Whittier v. Woodward, 71 Maine, 161, that the application of the administrator for the appointment of commissioners to determine the validity of a claim against the estate is an admission or waiver of the presentation of the claim to him. Moreover, in the case at bar, there was evidence sufficient to justify the jury in finding that the plaintiff did in fact so present her claim to the administrator. She so [408]*408testified, and produced in evidence what she identified as a copy of her claim in writing, subscribed and sworn to by her on May first 1911, and she testified that immediately thereafter she gave the original of that copy to the administrator.

2. It is beyond doubt that the evidence fully justified the jury in finding that the plaintiff served her father as his only housekeeper for a period of more than four years, and that her labor in that service was of substantial value to him, for which she received no material pecuniary compensation.

When valuable services are rendered by one person at the request, or with the knowledge and consent of the other, under circumstances not inconsistent with the relation of debtor and creditor between the parties, a promise to pay is ordinarily said to be implied by law on the part of him who knowingly receives the benefit of the services. But if in a particular instance there is evidence arising from the situation, conduct or family relation of the parties tending to show that the service was rendered without expectation of pecuniary payment, it cannot be said as a matter of law that a contract is implied ©n the part of him to whom the service is rendered to pay for it. And when the relations of the parties are such as to warrant the inference that the service was rendered gratuitously, by way of hospitality, or by reason of any obligation, legal or moral, it becomes a question of fact for the jury to determine whether it was in reality gratuitous or rendered upon the basis of contract. Saunders v. Saunders, 90 Maine, 284, and cases cited.

■ It was incumbent upon the plaintiff in this case to satisfy the jury that the services sued for were rendered by her to her father under circumstances consistent with contract relations between them, and that her father either expressly agreed to pay for the services, or that they were rendered by her in the expectation and belief at the time that they were to be paid for, and that the circumstances of the case and the conduct of her father justified such expectation, and that he so understood it, or that he had sufficient reason to believe that she expected to make him her debtor for the services. That was the real issue involved in the trial. And in the absence of any exceptions to the charge of the presiding Justice it is to be assumed that full and adequate instructions were given the jury to enable them to understand that issue and to appreciate the kind and degree of proof required to establish the plaintiff’s claim against her father’s estate. [409]*409Upon that issue the jury found in the plaintiff’s favor, and their finding should not be set aside unless it is so clearly wrong as to compel the conclusion that it was the result of prejudice or bias, or a failure to comprehend the facts and the legitimate inferences to be drawn therefrom.

The plaintiff was a witness in her own behalf, without objection, to matters relating to her claim happening before her father’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A. 487, 113 Me. 405, 1915 Me. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-dutch-me-1915.