In Re Estate of Hauer

63 S.E.2d 853, 135 W. Va. 488, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1951
Docket10299
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 S.E.2d 853 (In Re Estate of Hauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court 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 Hauer, 63 S.E.2d 853, 135 W. Va. 488, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1951).

Opinion

Fox, President:

This proceeding originated before a commissioner of accounts of Kanawha County, who had before him the settlement of the estate of H. B. Hauer, who died January 22, 1948, and left an estate, made up in its entirety of personal property, which was appraised at $156,812.81. He died testate, and distributed his estate among various legatees. No question is raised as to the validity of the will. The matters involved on this writ of error grow out of an alleged agreement made between H. B. Hauer and his two brothers in relation to the joint support of *490 their mother. Aside from questions relating to an allowance of counsel fees, and the fee of the commissioner of accounts', no other contested, matter arises on the record before us.

As stated above, the dispute arises over the expense of providing for Emma H'auer, who was the mother of H. B. Hauer, T. K. Hauer and H. M. Hauer. The father of these three men died in 1912 leaving no estate, and the care of his widow, Emma Hauer, fell on the three sons named above. She lived until April, 1946. It appears that in 1942 she suffered serious injuries in an accident, and that following this accident there was an admitted oral agreement among the three Hauer brothers by which she was to be taken care of by H. B. Hauer, because he was then, by comparison with his brothers in the best financial condition to do so, and the expenses thereof to be shared equally among the three. Following this 1942 agreement, it seems to be admitted that H. B. Hauer provided for their mother; it may be that H. M. Hauer in some way contributed thereto; and it is clear that T. K. Hauer recognized his obligation to pay his one-third of the total expenses of such care, which, it is claimed, amounted to $10,306.41.

The .will of H. B. Hauer, dated November 12, 1947, was admitted to probate in the County Court of Kanawha County, and Roy B. Rollins, one of the executors named therein, qualified as the sole executor of said will. In looking over the papers of H. B. Hauer, he found a copy of a letter, dated November 8, 1946, addressed to T. K. Hauer, 420 Augusta Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, evidently written by H. B. Hauer, and admittedly received by T. K. Hauer, which reads as follows:

“Dear Brother:
“I am enclosing an itemized statement of the amount of money I spent during Mother’s illness, for which amount I have cancelled checks.
“Right after mother had her accident and I talked to you over the phone, you told me to take *491 complete charge of the situation, since I was the only one in the family at that ..time, financially able.
“You also told me and wrote me several letters that you would reimburse me for your part of the expense.
“Since you sold your business and made some money lately, I would appreciate it very much if you would mail me a check' by return mail for $3435.66, your part of the expense.
“I purchased $40,000.00 worth of road building equipment this summer and fall and could use the money very conveniently.
“Hoping that your business, is good and you are enjoying good health.
Yours truly,”

Attached to the letter was a copy of an itemized statement, at the end of which was the following:

“H. B. — $6,952.41
“H. M.— 3,354.57
“3) 10,306.98
“3,435.66”

T. K. Hauer did not respond to this letter in any way, and later gave as his reason therefor that he had a claim against H. B. Hauer for his share of the expense of providing for his mother for the thirty years prior to 1942, as will hereinafter appear. He did not at any time controvert the claim asserted by H. B. Hauer in the letter quoted above, and was willing to concede the same as against what he claimed H. B. Hauer owed him.

After the estate of H. B. Hauer was committed to the commissioner of accounts, and after a conference with H. B. Hauer’s executor, T. K. Hauer filed a claim against the estate of H. B. Hauer in the sum of $21,830.95. The account against the H. B. Hauer estate is made up as follows: T. K. Hauer estimates his contribution to the *492 support of Emma Hauer, at the rate of $2,000.00 per year, beginning with the year 1913, and continuing to August, 1942, to be $59,333.33; and house rent for twenty-nine and two-thirds years amounts to $16,466.00, making the total cost of such maintenance and house rent $75,799.33, of which, according to T. K. Hauer, H. B. Hauer should have paid one-third, minus the sum of $3,435.66 that he was indebted to the H. B. Hauer estate for his share of the care of his mother after 1942, thus leaving a net balance of $21,830.95 which he claimed the estate of H. B. Hauer should pay him. T. K. Hauer being a legatee under the will of H. B. Hauer, the executor of H. B. Hauer, presumably in order to protect his estate, filed a claim against T. K. Hauer for the $3,435.66, referred to in the letter of November 8, 1946, copied above, which he claimed T. K. Hauer should pay to the estate, and it was upon these conflicting claims that evidence was introduced before the commissioner of accounts, and upon which he made his report on April 25, 1949. The commissioner disallowed the claim filed by T. K. Hauer, and sustained the claim of the H. B. Hauer estate for the $3,435.66, and found that this amount should be collected from the T. K. Hauer estate. The County Court of Ka-nawha County, on August 18, 1949, upheld this report, to which action a writ of error was applied for to the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, on December 2, 1949, and refused on December 22, 1949. It appears that T. K. Hauer died during the progress of the litigation, and on June 12, 1950, at the instance of his ancillary administrator, we granted this writ of error.

In our opinion, the sole basis for the claim of the estate of T. K. Hauer, which amounts to $21,830.69, is the contention that there was a written agreement in 1912 between H. B. Hauer, H. M. Hauer and T. K. Hauer that T. K. Hauer should provide for the maintenance and support, so far as he was able to do so, of their mother, Emma Hauer, and that the expenses thereof should be' equally borne by each of them, with settlement to be made at a later date. Unless such written agreement *493 be produced, or if lost, its contents established, the claim of T. K. Hauer’s estate must be denied, because it is well settled that aid by a son to his mother will be presumed to be gratuitous, unless such aid is extended in circumstances from which it can be reasonably implied that it was not so intended, and that the parties' contemplated that the party furnishing the aid should be reimbursed for. money advanced or services rendered. This is the rule where a claim is filed against the estate of the person for whom services were performed, and should be applied with more force where liability on the children of the deceased person is sought to be enforced. For a general discussion of this subject see Ireland v. Hibbs, 125 W. Va. 31, 22 S. E. 2d 706;

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E.2d 853, 135 W. Va. 488, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hauer-wva-1951.