McGrath v. O'Hare

156 S.W. 826, 175 Mo. App. 9, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 187
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 826 (McGrath v. O'Hare) 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
McGrath v. O'Hare, 156 S.W. 826, 175 Mo. App. 9, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 187 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

The original petition in this cause was filed on the 17th of January, 1908, and demanded judgment on an account made up of many items, beginning November 18,1893, aggregating $1500. Judgment was prayed in the original petition for this amount and interest, the latter placed at $1000', a total of $2500. On the 4th February, 1908, the death of the defendant was suggested and in .October of that year the cause was revived against her executor, and on the 7th of May, 1909, an amended petition was filed in which it is alleged that beginning with November, 1893-, and until the month of October, 1899', plaintiff had deposited, loaned and turned ov§r to her mother all of her weekly wages each week, from which was to be deducted $3.60 a week for board and lodging, showing weekly balances and interest to January 16, 1908, amounting to a total of $2538.40. It is further alleged in the amended petition that between January 1, 1900, and January 16,1908, on dates not specified with great particularity, plaintiff had advanced or loaned to her mother, or paid out on account of her mother, various small sums, $3.75 at one time, $4 at another time, $2.50 at another time, and $2.03 at another time, within the period last stated, and judgment is asked for these amounts and interest thereon from the dates of the payments. It is further in evidence, but not in the petition, that in 18991 plaintiff gave her mother ten dollars for a wrap.

The answer to the amended petition, denying every allegation, avers that whatever sums of money plaintiff paid1 to her mother, except the items after October 1,1899, the last charge in the account for wages alleged to have been turned over to her mother, were voluntary contributions for «the support and maintenance of her mother’s family, of which plaintiff was a member, and [13]*13in return for which plaintiff received hoard, lodging, clothing and expense money, and that the payment of the money and the furnishing of the hoard, lodging, clothing and expense money, was treated by the plaintiff and her mother as a discharge by them respectively of the reciprocal duties arising from the relation of parent and child, members of the same family, without regard to whether the one exceeded the other in value. The answer further pleads the Statute of Limitations as a bar.

• The cause being at issue was referred to a referee with directions to try all the issues therein and report his decision to the court. The referee proceeded to hear the testimony in the cause, no witnesses being produced by defendant. At the conclusion of the hearing the referee submitted his report which in substance is as follows:

That plaintiff, then Miss Margaret Talty, now Mrs. Margaret McGrath, lived with her mother, Mrs. Bridget Talty, and1 worked for the St. Louis Paper Box: Company for sometime before she became of age,, which occurred in November, 1893, and thereafter until September 30, 1899, with the possible exception of two or three weeks. Plaintiff kept no account of her payments to her mother, so far as appears by the evidence in the case, nor did hex mother. The evidence of plaintiff touching the payments by her to her mother and the items and dates of them, consisted in the production of the pay rolls and books of her employer. These showed that her earnings varied from $4.50 to $11.65, on one occasion reaching as high as twelve dollars, but the greater part of the time varying between six dollars and ten dollars. These wages were handed to the plaintiff in a sealed envelope which as a rule she opened when received, counted the contents and then on reaching home handed them over to her mother. This was a general custom but was not always followed. If there was loose change in the envelope plain[14]*14tiff occasionally took it out. At other times she would make small purchases for herself out of the money before handing the envelope to her mother, but she took home the greater portion of her wages to her mother, who on some occasions said in the presence of others that she would save the money for plaintiff. She also said to some of those present that she deducted three dollars a week for plaintiff’s board, giving her ten cents a day for car fare and also would give her spending money. “How much of the wages received by plaintiff,” reports the referee, “she thus turned over to her mother the evidence does not disclose, nor how much the mother expended out of such wages for clothing for plaintiff, or how much she gave her for spending money, does not appear. Beginning with October, 1899, plaintiff paid her mother three dollars a week for board and kept the remainder of her earnings for herself. During the entire time the plaintiff turned over either her entire wages or a part of her wages to her mother, she lived with her mother, who had no other income but the plaintiff’s wages, and who supplied the food, lodging and clothing and did her washing and ironing. Plaintiff was married in 1900', and for a short time thereafter lived with her husband in the house belonging to and next door to her mother. In May, 1900, plaintiff gave her mother two dollars. Nothing was said by either party what the money was for, or whether it was to be returned. ... In the spring of 1900, plaintiff gave her mother $3.75, which was to pay for a carriage at the funeral of a friend. ’ ’ At the christening of plaintiff’s baby in 1903, plaintiff gave her mother two dollars and in the fall of 1903 she gave her five dollars. The referee found as to all of these that they were gifts and that whatever money plaintiff may have given to her mother between November, 1893-, and the 1st of October, 1899, were voluntary gifts made by plaintiff to- her mother during which time the mother provided for plaintiff’s needs. No demand was [15]*15ever made by plaintiff upon her mother to return any part of the money so given nor was any promise, ever made by the mother to return any of these moneys. The referee further found that in October, 1907, plaintiff had paid to a physician two dollars for making an examination of her mother, the examination made at the request of the daughter, plaintiff.

As his conclusion of law on the above facts the referee found:

“First. That there was no legal duty on the part of Mrs. Bridget Talty to repay or return to plaintiff any part of the money given by plaintiff to Mrs. Bridget Talty, and no legal obligation against the estate of Bridget Talty for repayment of such moneys, or any part thereof.
Second. That if turning over by plaintiff to her mother of plaintiff’s earnings, or a portion of such earnings, from November 18, 1893, to September 30, 1899, constituted an account as between plaintiff and her mother, then such account was closed on September 30, 1899, and was barred by the Statute of Limitations at the time this suit was filed in January, 1908.
“Third. The amounts given by plaintiff to her mother in 1900,1903,1905 and 1907 have no connection with each other or with any of the amounts given by plaintiff to her mother between November, 1893, and October, 1899, and form no part of the account of moneys given by plaintiff to her mother between said last mentioned dates. ”,

The referee thereupon recommended that judgment be rendered in favor of defendant.

On the coming in of this report exceptions were duly filled to it by the plaintiff and on consideration were overruled by the court and judgment rendered in accordance with the report of the referee in favor of the defendant.

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272 S.W. 711 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 826, 175 Mo. App. 9, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-ohare-moctapp-1913.