In Re: Estate of Scott

9 S.E.2d 528, 122 W. Va. 352, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 62
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1940
Docket9036
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 S.E.2d 528 (In Re: Estate of Scott) 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 Scott, 9 S.E.2d 528, 122 W. Va. 352, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 62 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

This case comes to us from the Circuit Court of Monroe County. A proceeding for the settlement of the estate of Anna A. Scott, deceased, originated pursuant to Code, Chapter 44, Article 2, before a commissioner of accounts who made a report upon which the County Court of Monroe County acted, and which finally was considered by the circuit court of that county upon appeal. The questions at issue are the right of John G. Scott, plaintiff in error here, to recover from the estate compensation for labor and services performed and rendered by him for Anna A. Scott in her lifetime, and the amount of such compensation. The commissioner of accounts made a finding in favor of John G. Scott for $3,897.00, with interest on $3,852.00 thereof from June 19,1936, the date of decedent’s death, until paid. ' The county court reversed the finding of the commissioner of accounts and allowed the said Scott to recover the sum of $10,494.00 with interest from June ,19, 1936; the circuit court reversed the county court and re *354 instated the commissioner’s finding. The plaintiff in error asks a reversal of this ruling of the circuit court.

The issues involved are (1) whether the plaintiff in error was entitled to recover anything for the work and services performed by him, raised on cross-assignment of error; (2) whether, if entitled to recover, the statute of limitations barred such recovery beyond a period of five years preceding the death of Anna A. Scott; and (3) whether or not by reason of a letter appearing in the record, and which will be hereinafter considered, the right of the plaintiff to recover prior to March 1, 1929, was barred. The several points require a detailed statement of the facts as developed by the record.

J. Harvey Scott and Anna A. Scott lived together as husband and wife in Monroe County. No children were born of their marriage. John G. Scott, a nephew of J. Harvey Scott, lived with them for several years prior to 1908, at which time he removed with his parents to the State of Oklahoma. Harvey Scott died in the year 1918 and devised and bequeathed all of his property to his wife, Anna A. Scott, then about fifty-five years old. This property consisted principally of a farm of three hundred and ten acres in Monroe County, and certain livestock, farm equipment, etc. It appears that after the death of her husband, Anna A. Scott employed a farm manager who remained with her until the spring of 1919. In December, 1918, she made a trip to the State of Oklahoma for the apparent purpose of attempting to persuade John G. Scott, then a young man thirty-one years of age and unmarried, to return with her to West Virginia, and manage her farm and look after her business generally. She remained in Oklahoma until about the first of March, 1919, and while there, between Christmas and New Year’s, made a proposition to John G. Scott that if he would return with her to West Virginia to manage her farm and look after her business affairs, on her death all her property would go' to him, which, of course, involved either a conveyance of the property, effective at her death, or a bequest or devise thereof to him by will. At the time this proposition was *355 made, Scott was recovering from an attack of pneumonia, and it was made while he was in his room in the home of his mother and in the presence of several of his brothers and sisters, four of whom testified as- to what occurred. This testimony comes from people who are presumed to be interested in the result of the. plaintiff’s present claim by reason of the close family relationship. Aside from this, there is no character of suspicion thrown upon these statements, and considering the circumstances as a whole, the Court is not disposed to say that their testimony was insufficient to establish the existence of the contract in question. In addition to the testimony of these close relatives, we find that about the first of March, 1919, John G. Scott came to West Virginia and remained on the Anna A. Scott farm, managed the same and looked after her affairs until her death, except for a period of about four months in 1928 and 1929, when he returned to Oklahoma on account of his mother’s death, and remained there during the illness of a sister. No serious question is raised as to the services performed by John G. Scott during all of these years, and it cannot be denied that he gave his entire tim'e to the management of the farm, engaging in no independent business on his own behalf; nor can it be overlooked that he devoted to the interests of Anna A. Scott the most productive years of his life, without receiving any compensation in the form of salary or wages. Furthermore, during these years, and up as late as two years before her death, Anna A. Scott repeatedly indicated her intention that at her death her property should go to John G. Scott, and spoke of him as having been the same as a son to her, saying, in effect, that her deceased husband, if living, would not be satisfied if anyone else should have his property, although it is shown by the record that during this period Anna A. Scott at times criticized the plaintiff in error. However, at no time was there any serious breach in their relationship, or any substantial departure from the duties imposed upon him under his alleged agreement with her.

*356 We think it clear, therefore, taking the evidence as a whole, and considering all the circumstances, that the plaintiff in error has clearly established an agreement on the part of Anna A. Scott that in return for his services he was to have at her death the property of which she might die seized and possessed. She did not convey this property to him, nor did she make a will bequeathing and devising the same to him, and her failure to do so constituted a breach of her contract upon which he is entitled to assert his claim for compensation upon a quantum meruit basis.

We now come to the statute of limitations pleaded by the administrator. If it applies, then the plaintiff cannot recover for a period beyond five years next preceding the date when the statute ceased to run, but if it does not apply, then the plaintiff would be entitled to recover for the full period during which he performed services under the asserted contract. It must be observed here that the contract which we have held to have been established was not one for the payment of money, but was an agreement to transfer property at a future date, namely, at the death of Anna A. Scott. At no time during all the years in which John G. Scott was performing his part of the undertaking could he have instituted any character of action against Anna A. Scott to enforce this contract or to recover any sum of money or property thereunder. The statute of limitations begins to run from the date when a right of action accrues, and, therefore, if we treat the plaintiff as being entitled to recover by reason of the contract made in December, 1918, then it inevitably follows that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until Anna A. Scott breached the agreement, and that breach occurred at the time she departed this life without having vested John G. Scott with title to the property she then owned. It may be said that, strictly speaking, the plaintiff does not seek to enforce or recover under the contract, and that is true, because, under that contract, he was to receive her estate, not money as wages or salary.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E.2d 528, 122 W. Va. 352, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-scott-wva-1940.