Jackson v. Ely

57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 450
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 450 (Jackson v. Ely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Ely, 57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 450 (Ohio 1897).

Opinion

Bradbury, J.

The record discloses only two questions that we think are of sufficient importance to require consideration; both of which rise out of the testimony of Mrs. Jackson, plaintiff in error.

The action was brought by Mrs. Jackson to recover the value of personal services bestowed by her on John Ely, the testator, during the last two years of his life. The services began in May, 1889, and continued until his death in April, 1891. He had reached an extreme old age when the services began, and they were such as an old and failing-person might be expected to require. She moved into a house belonging- to him and as she 'contends, under a contract which provided merely for his board and the care of his room, and, perhaps, for his washing, but not for nursing and other personal attentions. No other person than herself and family was in or about the house, or in a situation to bestow on him such personal attention as -one of his age might ordinarily require,, and from the time she began the occupancy of his house and to board him and care for his room, whatever personal attention he received was given by her, except at a certain period or periods, when severe illness required the services of a nurse. From time to time, during the period she was there, she and the testator came to an agreement, and he paid her the sum agreed to be due her, taking on each of these occasions, twenty-two or twenty-three in all, an instrument signed by her all of which were alike in substance and very nearly alike in form, their phraseology differing, where at all, only in the most immaterial particulars, and in many [457]*457instances one is an exact copy of another, except as to date and amounts. The following is a sample:

“$4.50. Wooster, April 14, 1891.
This is to certify that I have this day settled with John Ely, and he has paid me all he owes me up to this date and I have no claims or demand against him of any kind whatsoever.
Mrs. H. Jackson.”

This is the last of the series, and was executed and delivered to the testator only three days before his death. A week later, and after the death of the testator, his executor, who it seems bore the same name, came to a settlement with Mrs. Jackson at which time the following instrument was executed by Mrs. Jackson and delivered to him:

“$23.00. Wooster, April 21, 1891.
This is to certify that I have this day settled with John Ely, and he has paid me all he owes me up to this 'date and I have no claims or demands against him of any kind whatsoever.
Mrs. H. Jackson.”

On the trial, this series of instruments were put in evidence by the executor in support of his contention. After the defendant had closed his evidence, .the plaintiff, Mrs. Jackson, was called as a witness in her own behalf, and over the objection of the defendant, founded on her incompetency as a witness, as well as on the inadmissibility of her testimony, she was permitted to testify touching the items that were included in the settlements, evidenced by these writings. Her attention was called to them one by one, until she had explained, substantially, all of them. Taking, for example, No. 5 of the series, which reads:

[458]*458“$15.50 (No. 5.) Wooster. Ohio, May 13,1890.
This is to certify that I have this day settled with John Ety, and he has paid me all he owed me up to this date, and I have no claims or demands against him of any kind whatsoever.
Mrs. Wm. Jackson.”

This was handed to her and she testified in regard to it.

“Q. Look at Exhibit 5.
A. That is for the same; boarding and meals; that is for the S3.00; a week’s boarding or some meals for grandpa and for his washing and ironing and mending and caring for his room; that is what that is for.
Q. Was it given for taking care of him?
A. No, sir, it was for his washing and mending and ironing and caring for his room and boarding.”

Whatever the general rule may be as to the reception of parol evidence to explain a mere receipt, it is not admissible, at least in Ohio, to vary the terms of a contract although, the contract should be included in an instrument which was also a receipt for money or property. Stone v. Vance et al., 6 Ohio, 246; Bird v. Hueston, 10 Ohio St., 418, 421, 430.

The line that divides receipts, open to parol explanation from written contracts to which nothing can be added to or taken from by parol evidence, has not been satisfactorily established, and eases can be found, which it is extremely difficult if not impossible to reconcile. That the above instrument (No. 5), is something more than a mere receipt seems quite clear from an inspection of its terms. It states that the parties had come to a settlement in respect to every claim or demand [459]*459that had before then existed between them. The sum of money stated in the margin, $15.50, manifestly is a part of the instrument, it represents the amount found to be due upon an adjustment of whatever items were then open between them. True, the instrument does not expressly state who was found to he the debtor, hut the unmistakable inference is that it was the testator; neither did he sign the paper; that, however, was the case with the instrument in States. Vance et al., 6 Ohio, 246. There, only the party that. received the property signed the instrument which was in the form of a receipt, but, nevertheless, it was held to embody the terms of a contract binding- on all parties. The fact that the party not signing, takes into his possession, control and custody, the instrument, establishes his assent to its terms.

A settlement is a contract between two parties by means of which they ascertain the state of the accounts between • them and strike a balance. Bouvier defines it in contracts as “An agreement by which two or more persons who have dealings together so far arrange their accounts as to ascertain the balance due from one to the other.” Volume 2, 634; 22 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 488.

In Gass v. Ellison, 136 Mass., 503, the Supreme Court held a writing in the following terms to constitute a contract that could not he contradicted by parol. “Received of Mr. Elmer Ruggles a note on six months for fifty-one dollars, with interest as full payment, as per claim.” The court, speaking through Morton, C. J., says: “If this could be treated merely as a receipt, it might be open for plaintiff to show by parol that it was not intended as full payment and satisfaction of his claim against Ruggles. But it is more than a receipt. It is not [460]*460only an acknowledgment of the receipt of Ruggles’ note for fifty-one dollars, but is a statement of what the note was received for. It was received as full payment for the plaintiff’s claim against Ruggles. If the plaintiff should sue Ruggles, this contract would be a bar to the suit, because it is conclusive evidence of a settlement and satisfaction of the claim against him.” See also, Brown v. Cambridge, 3 Allen, (Mass.) 474.

If under our statutes Mrs.

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Related

Goss v. Ellison
136 Mass. 503 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-ely-ohio-1897.