In re Estate of Anderson

273 N.W. 89, 199 Minn. 588, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 710
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 30, 1937
DocketNo. 31,180
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 273 N.W. 89 (In re Estate of Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Anderson, 273 N.W. 89, 199 Minn. 588, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 710 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Hilton, Justice.

This is an appeal from the order of the district court, Grant county, denying a motion to set aside a directed verdict and grant a new trial. The case arose on an appeal to district court from an order of the probate court disallowing the claim of Nellie Pepper (hereinafter referred to as appellant) against the estate of her mother, Jennie Anderson.

[589]*589Charley Anderson died in 1908 leaving a farm of approximately 157 acres in Grant county. Surviving him were his wife, Jennie Anderson, and six children, five boys and one girl, the latter being the appellant herein. One of the boys died shortly after the death of the father. Upon the probate of the father’s estate, Jennie Anderson received a life estate in the homestead of 80 acres. The remaining 77 acres and the personal property were decreed, one-third to Jennie, undivided and in common with the remaining two-thirds, which went to the children share and share alike. The mother continued to operate the farm “as boss,” receiving the Avhole-hearted cooperation of the children to whatever extent they were able to assist. As a result of these combined efforts, a $8,000 mortgage against the farm, existing at the death of Anderson, was paid 6ff, and a mew home was built thereon, the son William, who was a carpenter, doing much of the work and contributing $800 toward materials and labor. The balance of the cost was paid from the earnings of the farm.

William worked out as a carpenter after the two younger sons Avere old enough to assist in the farm work, but he stayed at the farm until his marriage in 1926. The son Allan was home until 1922, at Avhich time he left, and has since made his home elsewhere. The other tAvo sons, Herman and Carl, were at home and have worked the farm continually since the death of their father.

Appellant stayed at home until 1916, when she left to study and take up the millinery trade. For the first year or two she returned at frequent intervals for various lengths of time, but went to Minneapolis in January, 1918, to work at the millinery trade, apparently intending to make her own home and living. Two months later, after receiving a letter from her mother, she returned to the farm, two of the boys having been drafted for the war, and she has remained there ever since, Avith the exception of a few brief absences. In 1926 she married Jurgen Pepper, who has lived on the farm with her since that time. Much of the time Pepper has not engaged in work outside the farm but has confined his efforts to assisting in the work there.

[590]*590In 1925 the mother’s health began to fail, and asthma developed and continued, in varying degrees of severity, up to the time of her death in 1933. Prior to 1925, appellant had assisted in the usual work of housekeeping and the chores. After her mother’s health began to fail appellant’s duties were gradually increased. She took care of practically the entire housework and in addition cared for her mother.

Appellant filed a claim against the estate of her mother for $2,579.64, the alleged value of her services rendered since 1925. The claim was disallowed, and an appeal taken to the district court for a trial before a jury. At the close of appellant’s case the trial court granted a, motion for a directed verdict against appellant.

The two main points relied upon by appellant are (1) that the trial court erred in refusing to permit appellant to testify to the contents of the letter written by her mother to her in 1918, and (2) that the court erred in directing a verdict for the respondent. Additional facts will be found hereinafter as these points are discussed in order.

Appellant testified that she read the letter once when she received it, put it away with some other papers, and that it was destroyed by her sometime in 1930. It was sought to introduce her testimony as to part of the contents of the letter, and upon respondent’s objection the trial court ruled that the evidence was not admissible. The basis upon which the ruling was made does not seem clear. Counsel for appellant offered to prove that the letter contained the following language: “Two of the boys are going to war and we have a lot to do. I wish you would come home and help me.” We conclude that no error was committed in excluding this evidence. It is necessary to amplify appellant’s position somewhat in order fully to understand the question involved.

It is claimed that in 1918 appellant had left the parental home and set out to make her own way in life and take up an independent vocation, establishing a home of her own apart from that of her mother; that she returned home at the request of her mother to perform services for her; and that therefore the presumption that [591]*591services rendered by a child to the parent in the home are gratuitous does not apply. Counsel cites authority to support this contention and claims that the part of the letter offered would tend to prove the request to return home and render services and thus aid in establishing circumstances to show that the presumption did not apply here. He also contends that even if it be held that the presumption of gratuity did apply as to the services in question, the evidence of the contents of the letter was admissible because, in that event, the presumption could only be overcome by proof of an actual contract to pay for the services, and the evidence in question would tend to prove that contract, or at least an element thereof, vim., the request to render the services. We are unable to agree with either'of these claims.

No attempt was made to connect the alleged request in the letter with the services for which compensation is here sought, even remotely. As we read it, the request was to return home and render services, as the boys were going to war and appellant’s help was needed. The boys came back home a few months after appellant’s return and remained there, and it appears that she stayed voluntarily for the next seven years before she began to render services for which she claims a right to recover. There is nothing to indicate that any effort or inducement was made to keep appellant at home — nothing to show that she was not at liberty to leave again and resume her independent vocation if she chose to do so. The request can hardly be considered a request to perform services beginning at such a remote time as seven years in the future, there being nothing to show that the request originally made in the letter was extended at any later time, actually or impliedly, to include such services. There is no evidence from which we can conclude that the request as stated in the offer of proof in any way induced the rendition of the services. The verified statement and proof of claim of appellant filed in the probate court states that the understanding or agreement to pay for the services in question was made in May, 1925, and we fail to see any connection between that understanding and the request made seven years prior thereto.

[592]*592It follows that there was no error in excluding the testimony as to the contents of the letter. It was irrelevant and had no rational probative value as far as any of the issues in this case are concerned, and it is of course axiomatic that such evidence is not admissible. 1 Wigmbre, Evidence (2 ed.) p. 148, '§ 9. It would tend to prove neither circumstances to prevent the presumption of gratuity from applying in this case nor any element of a contract to pay for the services in question. What we have said makes it unnecessary to consider whether 2 Mason Minn. St.

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Related

Docken v. Ryan
6 N.W.2d 98 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1942)
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6 N.W.2d 98 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 N.W. 89, 199 Minn. 588, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-anderson-minn-1937.