In Re Estate of Unangst

240 N.W. 618, 213 Iowa 1064
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
DocketNo. 41094.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 618 (In Re Estate of Unangst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa 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 Unangst, 240 N.W. 618, 213 Iowa 1064 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Morling, J.

We find it necessary to decide but one question, and that is whether plaintiff has made a case for the jury on her claim to an implied contract with decedent for the services and board for which she seeks to recover. She pleads that the board and services were rendered under an implied contract with decedent that she would receive reasonable compensation therefor. The claim is in six items in the same form, the first from September 7, 1912, to September 7, 1917, 250 weeks, “for care, washing, ironing, mending, and board of George W. Unangst at $3 per week $750; ’ ’ the second from September 7, 1917, to September 7, 1921, 200 weeks, at $4 per week, $800; the third from September 7, 1921, to September 7, 1925, 200 weeks at $5, $1000; the fourth from September 7, 1925, to September 7, 1927, 100 weeks, at $6, $600; the fifth and last from September 7, 1927, to August 17, 1929, 100 weeks, at $10, $1000, — total $4150. All of the items were submitted to the jury, who returned a verdict for $2765.

Decedent was the owner of a farm of 83 acres, which was the home of himself and family. His wife died in 1905. His son Joe, then unmarried, and granddaughter Jessie were members of the family and continued to live with him, Jessie doing the housework. There was an arrangement between decedent and Joe by which Joe rented the place for one-half of the corn and oats, $50 for the pasture, and $4 an acre for the hay land. In June, 1912, Jessie married, and left the farm. In September, 1912, plaintiff and Joe were married, plaintiff taking up her home with Joe on this farm. The furniture belonged to decedent, who continued in the home, and as plaintiff testifies, decedent and Joe “just continued the former arrangement. They didn’t have any new contract from year to year. * * Joe owned the stock, including horses and cattle. * * * They had settlements each year. I know that my husband paid his father *1066 cash for the hay and pasture each year. They had their settlements usually at home, with nobody present but my husband, his father, and myself. * * * That continued clear down to the old gentleman’s death in August, 1929. * * * About a month or so before the old gentleman died.” At the time of plaintiff’s marriage decedent was about 68 or 69. Plaintiff testified:

“Mr. Unangst, the old gentleman, occupied the house just the same after our marriage as before. He had a bedroom. * * * the rest of the house was used by the family: that is, by me and Joe and the old gentleman, and that continued clear down to the time of the old gentleman’s death. The old gentleman ate at the table with the rest of-the family. I did the cooking and the housework for the family, that is, myself and Joe and the old gentleman, during all of the years that I have lived there. I got the meals and did the family washing and looked after the house generally. I did that for the family. The old gentleman was the owner of the place, and when I moved there the house was furnished the same as when the old gentleman was living there with his wife, and the same furniture was there during the period after the old gentleman’s wife’s death down to the time when I went into the home as Joe’s wife. The home was occupied there at the time I went in as it had been for a great many years, the same furniture and everything. * * * I was occupied there just as housewife on the farm, and have been ever since I was married, down to the present time. Joe was running the place. I mean by that that the old gentleman went on staying there and allowed Joe to stay there and have a share of the crop. * * * In 1912, immediately after our marriage, the old gentleman was working in the fields part of the time. He fixed fences a few days. * # # He did some plowing. ® * * The old gentleman assisted in doing the chores and helped with the milking. He took care of the bam some, including the- horses. He did his share of the milking ® * * He. assisted some with the other farm work. * ® * The house needed some chimneys that fall. # * * He did that work. .* * # Besides this he fixed what needed fixing .about the buildings, mostly on the hen house. * * * He fixed up and repaired some other buildings. * * * -The old gentleman was in reasonably good health that fall, and kept himself busy about the farm during all that fall. ' What I have *1067 testified to with reference to wbat he did. in the fall of 1912 was true, generally speaking, during the following year * # * The following year he assisted in planting the corn and in putting in the crop. * ® He took care of the garden all of the years irp until the last. Besides .that, he assisted some in putting in the crop, and assisted some in tending the crops and harvesting them and in. doing the fall work. • Sometimes he assisted in getting in the hay. * * That continued during the subsequent years down to 1920 just about the same. * * * After 1920 he continued to help do the. chores, assisted with the milking every winter. * * * In the winter of 1920 he did not help milk, because he had stomach trouble * * * Every winter after that he had spells with his stomach and couldn’t help with the milking from 4 to 6 weeks. Up until 1925 he was still occupied on the farm, assisting with the work about as before. He was on the place assisting with the chores, taking care of the garden, assisting with the milking, fixing up and making necessary repairs about the farm. After 1925, the old gentleman continuéd to do some work about- the. farm. In winters he was confined to his bed, part of the time. # * * He continued his work, doing chores and making garden and so on, until about two years, before his death. # # * During those years I was doing the cookr ing and keeping of the house. The expenses came from my chickens. The chickens paid the expense of keeping the house up. There was no arrangement that I know of between Joe and his father with reference to the chickens. My only means were those that I got from the farm, and what Joe did. Whatever went into the house was the proceeds that came from the farm. * * * I think I kept about 150 old hens each year, and then raised some chickens. The raising of these chickens was part of -the means for getting income from the farm. * * * Those chickens belonged to me. With the proceeds from .the sale of chickens and eggs I got groceries and what I needed for the house. The chickens were not fed from the old gentleman’s grain. ® * # In the lease of the premises by Joe there was no share that the old gentleman was to do, but he just did: his share of the work, built fences and.repaired buildings.”

There are more or less differences between claimant and her witnesses regarding details; but the foregoing is sufficient as a *1068 general outline of the testimony, except that the evidence shows that claimant, during decedent’s periods of ill health, was very attentive to his needs. She did his washing and ironing. There is no claim of any express contract concerning board or services.

A witness (Herger) testified that about 1915 or 1916 decedent “told me he was doing just what he felt like doing, to help pass away the time. No particular job. He said he had a good home, that they were taking good care of him. He could not expect a daughter to give him any better care than he was getting. He said he meant to take care of Effie (claimant) and see that she was paid for all she had done for him. I communicated this to Effie.”

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Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 618, 213 Iowa 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-unangst-iowa-1932.