Lach v. Fleth, Admr.

64 A.2d 821, 361 Pa. 340, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1949
DocketAppeal, 16
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 64 A.2d 821 (Lach v. Fleth, Admr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lach v. Fleth, Admr., 64 A.2d 821, 361 Pa. 340, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 318 (Pa. 1949).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

Plaintiff brought an action of assumpsit against the administrator of the estate of Minnie B. Potter, deceased, for services which he claimed he performed for *342 her from August 21, 1930, until the date of her death on February 22, 1945; Mrs. Potter’s son, Ralph, died on August 21, 1930. Mrs. Potter was a widow. At the time of Ralph’s death he was engaged to a woman who later married a man named Hafner. She appears in this case as Mrs. Irene Hafner, a witness. It is claimed that after Ralph Potter’s funeral on August 21, 1930, Mrs. Potter asked Max Lach to enter her employ and “do the things for her that her son previously had done”, enumerating them, and that she said to Lach: “I’ll remember you in my will.” Several witnesses testified that Lach for a period of over 15 years performed the services requested of him up to the time of Mrs. Potter’s death. The suit was based upon a quantum meruit. Mrs. Potter died intestate.

The defendant called for proof of the plaintiff’s claim and also denied that the services, if rendered, were worth the 75 cents an hour which plaintiff demanded. Defendant also denied that the plaintiff spent the number of hours serving defendant as alleged. The defendant also alleged that “all services performed by the plaintiff for the decedent, Minnie B. Potter, were fully paid for and her liability therefor fully discharged, by a reduction in the rent orally agreed upon between the plaintiff and the said decedent when he became a tenant in her-house situated at 316 East Drinker Street, Dun-more, Pa.,” which he occupied as a tenant from the year 1939 until decedent’s death in February 1945. Defendant also averred “that the usual and customary rent charged for the use and occupancy of the said property” on Dunmore Street “was forty (4.0) Dollars per month, but the rent agreed upon between the plaintiff and the said decedent, in consideration of such services as he might be called upon to perform as handyman in and around said decedent’s premises and person, and for said decedent’s convenience and comfort, including any and all such services, if rendered, as plaintiff now alleges and now seeks to collect from said decedent’s *343 estate in this action, and that such reduction in the rent for said property, amounting to twenty (20) dollars per month, should he and was accepted and regarded as full and complete compensation for any and all services he might or should render decedent so long as he should occupy said residence at said reduced rental.”

Defendant also pleaded the statute of limitations as to any and all services alleged to have been performed by plaintiff prior to February 22, 1939, or six years prior to said decedent’s death. Defendant also pleaded that if these services were rendered as claimed they are presumed to have been paid for at periodic intervals, to wit, each and every month.

After trial a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $7,000. A rule granted to show cause why judgment for the defendant n. o. v. should not be entered was later discharged. This, appeal followed.

The evidence in this, ease is as follows. Mrs. Irene Hafner testified that she was once engaged to marry Mrs. Potter’s son, Ralph, and that she knew Mrs. Potter since 1925. Mrs. Hafner’s mother was married to Max Lach and the latter was, therefore, the witness’ stepfather. After the funeral of Ralph Potter, Mrs. Hafner went to Mrs. Potter’s home, where she heard Mrs. Potter say to Max Lach: “Max, now that Ralph is gone I have no one to turn to but you. I want you to work for me, doing the repairing here and at my cottage at Lake Ariel, driving the car and keeping it clean, cleaning the sidewalks off, taking the ashes out, cutting the lawn and the hedge; and all work that Ralph had done before I want you to do for me now. You’ll never be sorry. I’ll remember you in my will.” and she testified that Lach replied: “Mrs. Potter, I’ll be only too glad to help you out, as I have before.” She testified that when Ralph was alive he always “drove the car and kept it clean. He always cut the hedge and the lawn, taking care of the repairs at the house and at the cottage at Lake *344 Ariel, and take ashes out, do any repairing. He did all those things.”

Mrs. Hafner was a frequent visitor at Mrs. Potter’s home. She went there often for supper or dinner. She saw the plaintiff cutting grass and performing other services about the house. She testified that she also saw him cleaning and simonizing the car, cutting the grass and the hedge, cleaning sidewalks, painting porches, and taking care of the garden. At Mrs. Potter’s cottage at Lake Ariel she saw him cutting the grass and taking care of the fire. She also saw him repairing Mrs. Potter’s fences in Dunmore. She testified that Lach had no other employment except at Mrs. Potter’s from 1930 to 1935. From 1935 to 1943 he was employed part time as a laborer in the mines, and from 1943 to 1945 he was employed full time at the Pennsylvania Coal Company. When he had this regular employment his services for Mrs. Potter were performed before and after his regular working hours. She also testified that she knew Lach was not paid for his work at Mrs. Potter’s.

Mrs. Hafner testified that her mother and the latter’s husband, Max Lach, moved into the other part of Mrs. Potter’s house in May 1939 and paid a rental of $20 a month. While the previous rent of this house had been $40 a month, Mrs. Hafner testified that there was no agreement that the reduction of the rent by $20 was to be counted as compensation for Lach. She said that when Mrs. Potter rented the house to Mr. and Mrs. Lach that Mrs. Potter said: “The other half of the house is empty, Irene. I would like to have you move. The rent is $20 a month, but, you have to pay your own water rent; you’ve got to do your own papering and painting, your own plumbing, your own repairing.”

Miss Christine Pletcher testified that she lived near Mrs. Potter, whom she had known for fifty years. She said that Mrs. Potter declared: “She didn’t know what she would ever do without Max.” The witness added: *345 “I don’t know, myself, what she would have done.” The witness said she asked Mrs. Potter: “Don’t you ever pay Max?” and Mrs. Potter replied, “No, no, I don’t, we have an understanding”. She testified as to the extensive nature of Laeh’s work around both the Dunmore property and the cottage at Lake Ariel. She also testified that the rent of the house occupied by Lach was not reduced by $20 in order to compensate him for the work he did for Mrs. Potter.

Anson J. Laurie also testified as to the many times he had seen Lach work around Mrs. Potter’s home. He said he saw him taking care of the heating plant, cutting grass, shoveling snow, painting, repairing the house, cleaning the automobile, and driving the car. He also saw him doing work inside and outside the house.

Severin W. Sekol testified that he employed Max Lach from 1935 to 1943 as a laborer in the mines, that Lach received 75 cents an hour, and that from 1941 to 1943 the average wage for unskilled labor was around 80 cents an hour and from 1943 to 1945 around 90 cents an hour.

There were also other witnesses who testified to the performance of services by the plaintiff for Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A.2d 821, 361 Pa. 340, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lach-v-fleth-admr-pa-1949.