McCollough v. Lee

235 Iowa 753
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1944
DocketNo. 46594
StatusPublished

This text of 235 Iowa 753 (McCollough v. Lee) 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
McCollough v. Lee, 235 Iowa 753 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

The claim was originally filed in two counts, the first being based on decedent’s oral promise to bequeath claimant $1,000, and her breach thereof by bequeathing but $100, thereby leaving a balance of $900 owing claimant. The second count, after amendment, was based on quantum meruit for alleged services rendered over a period of twenty or more years in decedent’s household, of the reasonable value of $900, no part of which had been paid. Near the close of the case, and apparently not in the presence of the jury, claimant dismissed count one.

Decedent and her husband operated a farm near Webster City for many years. In 1916 they took into their home, out of the state school at Mitchellville, the claimant. She was a stranger to them and about seventeen years old. She worked in the home for about a year, for wages which she admits receiving. After working elsewhere for a time she married and moved to [755]*755Minnesota. Later she and her family moved onto a farm about ten miles from the Hollis home, where they lived for about fourteen years, or until they moved to Webster City. In 1940 the decedent and her husband, Frank Hollis, left the farm and moved to Webster City. There the husband died in February 1942, and the decedent in November of that year.

The claimant testified, and there is some corroboration by others, that during the time Mr. and Mrs. Hollis were living on the farm and in Webster City she was at their home many times each year, performing household services consisting of laundry work, cleaning,. and customary work about the home, and sometimes personal care of the decedent.

The executrix admits that occasionally the claimant, during the last year or two of decedent’s life, performed some services in the Hollis home, but alleges that for any and all services which she performed for the decedent or the latter’s husband, at any time, she had been fully paid.

Since there may be another trial upon this claim we will not review the testimony nor discuss it further than is necessary for a decision -of the particular issues submitted on the appeal.

Defendant’s motion for new trial was based upon thirteen separate grounds, each and all of which were expressly overruled by the court, except the third ground, alleging that “the verdict is grossly excessive,” which was sustained.

There was evidence, much of it by direct testimony of the claimant, that she had been paid at different times for the services performed by her, by Mr. Hollis', while he lived, or by the decedent after his death. Neither the testimony of the claimant nor any other evidence discloses the specific total amount the claimant ivas paid. But there is evidence by which the jury could have computed that claimant was paid a substantial sum for services performed. The court instructed the jury that it should credit the defendant for any such sums it found had been paid. The jury allowed claimant her full claim of $900, without crediting thereon any payments.

Claimant testified as follows:

“When I would go up there to wash, Grandpa would give, me fifty cents, and if they had lard more than they needed, I [756]*756took two or three pounds of lard or something like that. They figured that was my payment at thát time. Q. What do you mean, Mrs. McCollough? A. Well, that was supposed to have been payment for what I did or my services. * * * Q. How often were you there, tell us that? A. Well, I was there once or twice a month all of the time. * * * Q. While you lived six miles out of town? A. Yes. * * * Q. Who paid you for that? A. Part of the time Grandpa would give me fifty cents or a dollar, and part.of the time he didn’t give me anything. Q. How often didn’t he give you anything? A. I never kept track of it. Q. Well, if you don’t know the jury can’t be expected to. At times when he paid you a dollar you took that as pay for your work, didn’t you? A. Yes. * “ * Q. Did Mr. Hollis pay you for those times? A. Well, if he did it was just like other times. lie give me fifty cents or a dollar. Q. Did he pay you when you were out there and did the work? A. Some of the times and sometimes he didn’t. Q. Sometimes he would paj^ you as much as a dollar for coming out there? A. Yes. Q. Did you take it? A. Yes. * * * Q. Mr. Hollis was the paymaster, wasn’t he? A. Well, he was. when she could get it'across for him to. Q. Well, whenever he paid you — or whenever you were paid, he was the fellow that paid you, wasn’t he? A. He was up until the last year of his life. Q. Of course, after he got so sick, and after his death, he couldn’t pay you, but during all those years out-in the country when you would go to see them from time to time and he gave you a dollar or fifty cents, he was the fellow that paid you? A: Yes. * * * A. T went to visit, and when they needed help I went to help. Q. Did they pay you when you went to help ? A. Yes. Q. Did you get paid when you went there to help or didn’t you? A. I didn’t get what I should have had. # * * A. I went every two weeks to wash .and clean and spent all day. T got fifty cents for the washing. Q. The washing didn’t take more than about half a day, did it? A. No. Q. Don’t you think that was prettjr fair? A. No, I don’t. Q. Did you make any objection to it? A. Ño, I didn’t tell them anything about it. Q. That was while Grandpa Hollis lived, and he paid you? A. Yes. * * * Grandpa paid me for the washing while he lived, but after Grandpa died I didn’t get [757]*757it. I didn’t ask anybody for it. * * * Q. You remember at the last trial you said they always paid you when you did any work for them? A. I don’t remember as to that. If it is in the record it is possible that I said it. .1 think I meant at that time, if I remember right, that I was paid for the washing, but as to the other work, there was lots of other work that T did that I didn’t get paid for. * * * Q. After Mr. Hollis died every time you Avent up there and did the washing she paid you? A. Well there were a few times she didn’t. She didn’t pay me every time. Q. But every once in a while she would pay you? A. Yes.”

From her own admissions, as above set out — and the record discloses no reason why they should not have been believed— the jury could have found that during the eighteen or tAventy years of her sendee she did the Avashing at the Hollis homo eA'ery two weeks and that she was paid for the same, although there was other Avork for Avhich she AAras not paid. These payments over these years Avould amount to a substantial credit. The appellant makes a claim that the jury might have been warranted in finding these payments were but gifts to her. At one place in her testimony she said that occasionally when Mr. Hollis gave her fifty cents or a dollar for her services she considered the “payments” as gifts. The jury could not have found these amounts to have been gifts without disregarding the instructions to the jury.

I. We held in In re Estate of Willmott, 211 Iowa 34, 38, 230 N. W. 330, 332, 71 A. L. R. 1018, “that payments of money made by a debtor to an existing creditor, or made by one who is under obligation to pay to the receiver thereof, will be deemed presumptively to apply as credits upon the obligation, and not as gratuities or gifts. ’ ’ This is sound law.

II.

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235 Iowa 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccollough-v-lee-iowa-1944.