Ireland v. Spickard

68 S.W. 748, 95 Mo. App. 53, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 9
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 748 (Ireland v. Spickard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ireland v. Spickard, 68 S.W. 748, 95 Mo. App. 53, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 9 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

The conspicuous facts disclosed by the evidence in the present case may be chronologically stated in this wise, namely: James J. Lawson, a man possessed of a considerable estate and far advanced in years, with his wife-Nancy C., had been, for some time prior to April 4, 1894, residing and boarding with the plaintiffs while the latter occupied certain premises of the former consisting of a house, lot, barn and orchard, and that on said date such latter entered into a written contract with such former to the effect that such latter thereby “agreed to remain in the house where they now reside at the present price and figures of board, which is fifty dollars each three months, with garden, house, lot, barn and orchard free of charge, and in this agreement the parties of the second part agree to remain with the parties of the first part as long as they can agree, and at any time should either of the parties of the first part die, the parties of first part still agree to remain with the other with half of the present price, [57]*57and when both of parties of the first part are no more, this agreement shall be void.”

A little over a month after this said contract was entered into the said James J. Lawson departed this life, after which occurrence his wife continued to live with the plaintiffs until April 18, 1899, paying for her board twenty-five dollars quarterly as provided in said contract. At each quarterly payment the plaintiffs executed their receipt in full “for all demands up to date.” Luring the time the wife continued to reside with plaintiffs, after the death of her husband, she was, much of the time, in such an ailing, sick and infirm condition as to require constant care and attention, which were given her by plaintiffs. The plaintiffs furnished her wood and meals for her numerous visitors during the time she resided with them after the death of her husband.

A few months after she moved away from the plaintiffs ’ residence, she died, leaving an estate of several thousand dollars in valuation. The defendant is the administrator of her estate, with the will annexed. The plaintiffs presented to the probate court an itemized account against her estáte for the care and attention given her by them, for the firewood furnished her and meals provided for her visitors. In the circuit where the cause was removed by appeal, the plaintiffs had judgment, and the defendant administrator, etc., appealed here.

I. The defendant objects that the trial court erred in allowing the plaintiff, H. J. Ireland, to testify in the case. It appears from the record that Spickard and Perry, two of the witnesses called by the defendant, testified at the trial to the effect that after the death of the deceased the said plaintiff had stated to them, at a certain time and place, that the deceased was not indebted to him, and that he would not bring in a nurse-bill against her estate, and also that he had been well paid for everything he had done for her. The plain[58]*58tiff, over the objections of the defendant, was permitted in rebuttal to testify that he had not made the said admissions to which the witnesses Spickard and Perry had testified. The testimony of the plaintiff was contradictory of that of the defendant’s witnesses Spickard and Perry, relating to certain admissions made by him to them after the probate of the will of the deceased. For this purpose the plaintiff, under the statute (section 4652, Revised Statutes 1899), was competent to testify. He did not testify as .-.to any matter connected with the interest or with -any transaction with the deceased, or to any matter of which she had any knowledge or connection. "We have no doubt that the plaintiff was competent to testify, as he did, to any fact independent of transactions or connections with the deceased, -and that, therefore, the trial court did not err in overruling the defendant’s objections to the admission of his testimony. Callahan v. Riggins, 43 Mo. App. 130; Stanton v. Ryan, 41 Mo. 510; McGlothlin v. Hemry, 59 Mo. 213; Martin v. Jones, 59 Mo. 187; Wade v. Hardy, 75 Mo. 394; Banking House v. Rood, 132 Mo. loc. cit. 263; Eyermann v. Piron, 151 Mo. loc. cit. 114.

II. The defendant further objects that the court erred in permitting Gregory Lawson — a son of James J. Lawson — who was a witness for plaintiff, to testify that his father and stepmother, Nancy C., had lived with plaintiffs several years prior to his father’s death and the making of the written contract, and that during that time his father, if sick a week, would pay plaintiff, Mrs. Ireland, for her services, besides his board bill, from five to twenty dollars. He further testified that at one time when his father had been sick two weeks he had paid her twenty dollars, and that in his last sickness had hired additional help and had paid one party two hundred and seventy-five dollars to help the plaintiff, Mrs. Ireland, take care of him, and that besides this he paid her for her additional labor in taking care of him a fifty-acre tract of land for which he had paid [59]*59six hundred dollars. The defendant’s contention is that since the said James J. Lawson died in about six weeks after the making of said contract, that the payment of the money and the conveyance of the land to the plaintiff, Mrs. Ireland, could not have been as a reward for her services for so short a period.

The right of the plaintiffs to recover is made, by the parties to this action, to turn upon the construction of the contract, the plaintiffs insisting that their claim is consistent lyith its terms and provisions, and the defendant to the contrary. The rule is well settled that in cases like this where the contract is doubtful and admits of different interpretations, it is competent to show the construction put upon it by the acts of the parties themselves, and that interpretation when established will be adopted by the courts. There is no better way of ascertaining the meaning and intention of the parties in making an agreement than is shown if all the parties acted on a particular meaning. Foster v. Wollman, 87 Mo. App. loc. cit. 667, and cases there cited; Union Depot v. Railway, 131 Mo. 305, and cases there cited. It appears that said James J. Lawson and his wife resided with plaintiffs for several years before the making of the written contract, paying to them quarterly the same amount of board as is specified in the written contract. As we understand it from the language of the contract, the terms and conditions under which the said James J. Lawson and wife were and had been residing with plaintiffs were not changed by the written contract. That the latter was, in effect, the same as the former. But if all the payments were made by the said James J. Lawson to the plaintiff, Mrs. Ireland, to compensate her for extra care and attention after the date of the written contract, this would show that the parties did not intend and mean by the terms of the contract to obligate plaintiffs to nurse and care for the said Lawson and wife, or either of them, when sick, for the small amounts quarterly paid the former [60]*60by the latter for board. This, under the rule just referred to, was an interpretation of the contract by the parties themselves.

Besides this, the contract should have accorded to it a reasonable interpretation. Ehrlich v. Insurance Co., 88 Mo. loc. cit. 256.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 748, 95 Mo. App. 53, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ireland-v-spickard-moctapp-1902.