Henderson v. Hewes

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 23, 2011
DocketPENcv-10-009
StatusUnpublished

This text of Henderson v. Hewes (Henderson v. Hewes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Hewes, (Me. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE DISTRICT COURT PENOBSCOT, SS. Docket No. CV-10-009 ;) r - P,~ /'/ __

VICKI HENDERSON, ET. AL., ) Plaintiffs, ) ) ) v. ) JUDGMENT ) ) ALAN S. HEWES, ) Defendant. )

FACTS This matter came before the Court for hearing on February 25, 2011. Plaintiff was present, both in her individual capacity and as personal representative of the Estate of Thomas A. Henderson, and was represented by Attorney Dearborn. Defendant was present and was represented by Attorney Peter Baldacci. On January 6,2010 Plaintiffs filed a three count complaint. Each count alleged breach of an agreement: count one for room and board, count two for a loan, and count three for a television.

Vicki Henderson and Alan Hewes are brother and sister. Over the years, Alan Hewes periodically lived with Vicki Henderson and her late husband Thomas Henderson. In the 1970s, Mr. Hewes lived with the Hendesons in Orono and then in Orrington. Ms. Henderson recalled that Mr. Hewes paid $20.00 per week toward his room. Mr. Hewes recalled that he did not pay for his room in Orono, but began paying $20.00 per week when they all moved to Orrington together. Given the passage of time, the Court cannot determine whose memory is the most accurate and the probative value of this testimony is limited.

Mr. Hewes next lived with the Hendersons in 2005. His home in Eddington had burned and he stayed with the Hendersons while he re-built the home. In 2005, Mr. Hewes was able-bodied. He spent very little time at the Henderson home as he was working, and he rarely had meals with them. Mr. Hewes paid $40.00 per week to the Hendersons during the year or so he spent with them around 2005.

In November of 2006, Mr. Hewes was involved in a motor vehicle accident that left him with serious bodily injury. He was rendered unable to work. Since he was unable to maintain his home, he sold it in May of 2007. Prior to the sale of the home, Mrs. Henderson spent time cleaning Mr. Hewes' house. While discussing Mr. Hewes' situation, Mrs. Henderson offered to have Mr. Hewes live with her again. Mr. Hewes said he didn't have the money. Mrs. Henderson responded something to the effect of "don't worry about it, just get better". Mr. Hewes then stated something to the effect of "when I get my settlements, we'll square up". Mr. Hewes moved into the Henderson home in May of 2007, and stayed for about two years. The Hendersons claimed Mr. Hewes as a dependent on their income tax returns. Mr. Hewes received settlements after he left the Hendersons' home.

LAW To establish a binding agreement, the mutual assent to be bound by all of its material terms must be reflected and manifested either expressly or impliedly in the contract and the contract must be sufficiently definite to enable a court to determine its exact meaning and fix any legal liability of the parties. Tune Roberts Agency, Inc. v ,676 A. ed at 48 (quoting Smile, Inc. v. Moosehead Sanitary District, 649 A. 2d 1103, 1105 (ME. 1994).

It is an elementary principle of contract law that mutual assent (i.e. a meeting of the minds) is judged by an objective standard. Zamore v. Whitten, 395 A.2d 435,440 (Me. 1978). The test is whether a non-party looking at the objective evidence would conclude that a contract had been formed. Id. Neither party is charged with knowing what subjective intent lurked in the mind of the other. Id.

Count One Count One of the Complaint alleges a breach of contract for payment of room and board.

There was no discussion between Mrs. Henderson (or Mr. Henderson) and Mr. Hewes about Mr. Hewes paying anything in particular to the Hendersons for room and board before he moved into the Henderson home in 2007. In fact, the Court finds that Mrs. Henderson told Mr. Hewes not to worry about it. This statement by Mrs. Henderson seems reasonable in light of Mr. Hewes' significant injuries, his no longer working and selling his house because he was unable to afford to keep it. It appears that Mrs. Henderson anticipated that Mr. Hewes would pay at least the $40.00 he had been paying before, if not more, since when Mr. Hewes moved in with the Hendersons after his accident he regularly ate with the family. Mr. Hewes, on the other hand, believed that his sister was offering assistance to him because of his injury and that she did not expect him to pay for this family assistance!.

The Court finds that Mr. Hewes, on more than one occasion, stated that he would "square up" with the Hendersons when he received his settlement(s). However, what he meant by "squaring up" is without definition. Despite his statements he would "square up", the Court cannot determine the exact meaning of this term and cannot fix the liabilities of the parties based on it. Mr. Hewes contributed his monthly food stamps (about $200.00/month) to the Hendersons' groceries and he allowed Mr. Henderson to use some equipment from which Mr. Henderson generated income. Mr. Hewes also helped out around the Henderson home on projects.

I Members of the Hewes family seem to help each other in various ways. Mrs. Henderson (formerly a Hewes) and her sister helped their brother, Mr. Hewes, by cleaning his house when he was injured. Ronnie Hewes helped the Hendersons install a wood stove. Mr. Hewes and his brothers own some equipment together. Michael Hewes loaned Defendant a chop saw to do work on the Plaintiffs' home.

2 It is the Plaintiffs' burden to establish that an agreement existed between the parties. Because Mr. Hewes' circumstances were entirely different after his accident than after the fire, the Court is not satisfied that the prior $40.00 per week agreement constituted a ' course of conduct' or that any course of conduct had application after the substantial change in Mr. Hewes' circumstances. The Court is also not satisfied that the parties had any meeting of the minds with respect to what, if anything, Mr. Hewes would pay to the Hendersons, or for what time period he would be liable to pay (for example, would he only have to start to pay after he recovered).

Plaintiff has not met her burden of proof, and the Court enters Judgment for the Defendant on Count One.

Count Two Count two of the Complaint alleges breach of an agreement by Mr. Hewes to repay a loan from Mr. Henderson.

During the time Mr. Hewes lived with the Hendersons he periodically borrowed money from Mr. Henderson. Mr. Henderson recorded the amounts Mr. Hewes borrowed in a booklet. Plaintiff has produced a booklet as Plaintiff's Exhibit # 8. While Defendant disagrees that Exhibit # 8 is the booklet in which Mr. Henderson kept the ledger, the Court is satisfied that the booklet contains the amounts of money loaned by Mr. Henderson to Mr. Hewes. The Court is satisfied that Mr. Hewes agreed that he would re-pay the money he borrowed.

The amount reflected in the booklet as the amount owed is $3,845.00. The loans as reflected in the booklet begin in June of 2008 and end in December of 2008. This time frame is consistent with Mr. Hewes' testimony that he did not begin to borrow money for awhile after he moved in with the Hendersons because he had'''escrow money" left from the sale of his home and that he did not borrow money for the last several months he lived with the Hendersons.

Mr. Henderson testified (in his deposition testimony before his death) that Mr. Hewes did not repay any of the money. Mr. Hewes contends that he re-paid $600.00 to Mr. Henderson, and that such payment is not reflected in the booklet. Mr. Hewes contends that he owed Mr. Henderson $750.00 when he left the Henderson home as that was the amount Mr. Henderson last told him he owed.

Mr. Hewes and Mr. Cote convincingly testified that Mr. Hewes sold tools to Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Zamore v. Whitten
395 A.2d 435 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1978)
Smile, Inc. v. Moosehead Sanitary District
649 A.2d 1103 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Henderson v. Hewes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-hewes-mesuperct-2011.