Miller v. . Lash

85 N.C. 51
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 85 N.C. 51 (Miller v. . Lash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. . Lash, 85 N.C. 51 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff se.eks to recover from the defendants, administrators'of I. G. Lash, compensation for services rendered their intestate in the management and supervision of his domestic affairs and providing for his servants at Bethama, for a series of years succeeding Í849; and also for her special personal care and attention to the intestate himself, at his residence in Salem, for more than two years and a half preceding and until his death on April 17,1878. The summons was sued out, after an ineffectual demand, on the 80th day of September following. There was much testimony offered to show the nature and value of the plaintiff’s services, and the high estimate put upon them by tbe deceased, but there was no evidence of any special contract or understanding between tbe parties *53 ;as to their duration or .compensation.; and th.e defendants insisted, from -their relations and -.dealings with each other, .-as disclosed by the witness, -it was to be inferred that what was done'by either was intended to be and was .gratuitous; and-'they further contended that, if the plaintiff was in Jaw •entitled to .remuneration, she could recover for such services •onfy as were performed within .three years next preceding the bringing of the action. There was proof of declarations ■of the intestate of his high appreciation of the plaintiff’s -services, of -their extent and usefulness, and of his intent to make a-liberal provision for her in his w ill on account -of "them; and -of her declarations to the effect that she was not .-acting as a hireling ■nor to he ..rewarded as such. It was also shown .that.at the intestate’s instance, a paper w-riting was produced on -one .occasion., hearing h-is signature, and then attested in his presence b.y a witness. The instrument -was not read by the witness nor explained by the deceased, .•and he-knew nothing of its nature or contents.

Numerous-exceptions were taken-daring the .trial, .which, with the testimony (much of it wholly .irrelevant to the points presented) .reiterated with -equal particularity of detail in the-case prepared -on the .appeal accompanying the record. But it is necessary in our view o.f the case to notice and pass-upon one only — that .arising -on the defense under-the-statute of .limitations.

Among the instructions prepared -by «the plain tiff’s counsel and presented .to the-court-to be submitted to .the jury, ■the third is in the following-words.: If the jury believe that the plaintiff -was to serve the defendants’ intestate for no certain or determinate-time,.and not from year to year, then no part of the claim for services is barred by the statute of limitations. The court so -charged, adding, “ if the services were to be paid for by the-week, month or year, then the .-statute will bar the action for all sums which were due to ¡he paid three years prior to ..the bringing of the action,,• -if *54 the services were to be continuous, and no amount fixed to-be paid, and no time fixed for payment, the'statute will not begin to run until the death of the intestate.”'

The defendants’ counsel requested and were refused this-modification “ In the absence of express contract a right of action accrued,.as the services were rendered on the implied promise,, and, as there was no credit, the law implied, that every day’s service was to be .paid, for what it was-worth.”

To these rulings exception is taken, and out of them arises the question we propose to examine, which is, whether-services-thus rendered for-a series of years under no definite-contract as to duration, rate, or mode of compensation, other than that implied by law, are without the operation of the-statute of limitations until put an end to by the death or positive act of one of the parties?

The authorities cited in the argument for the- plaintiff: seem to establish the proposition that where personal services are performed by one person for another during life-under a contract or mutual understanding,.fairly to-be inferred from their conduct'and declarations and the attending circumstances, that compensation therefor is to be provided in the will of the party receiving the benefit of them,, and the latter dies intestate or fails to make such provision,, the subsisting contract is then broken, and not only will the-action then lie for the recovery of their reasonable value-freed from the operation of the statute, but it could not be-maintained before. It is equally plain that if the services were given in the mere expectation of a legacy, without a contract express- or implied, and in reliance upon the gratitude and- generosity of the deceased, the action cannot be-sustained. Little v. Dawson, 4 Dallas, 111; Sevires v. Parsons, 5 W. & S., 357; Nimmo v. Walker, 10 La. An. Rep., 581 Riddle v. Backus, 38 Iowa, 81.

In Osborne v. Governors of Guy’s Hospital, 2 Strange, 728 *55 Chief Justice Raymond told the jury that if the plaintiff did not expect to be paid for transacting eertain stock affairs of the .deceased, but to be considered for it in his will, “they could not find for the plaintiff, though nothing was given 'him by the will, for they should consider how it was understood by the parties at the time of doing the business, and a man who expects to be made amends by a legacy cannot after-wards resort to his action.”

In Patterson v. Patterson, 13 John., 379, Van Ness, J., delivering the opinion of the supreme court of New York, in' a case where the evidence showed the existence of such •mutual understanding as to the mode of remuneration, and suit was instituted, during the life of the recipient, remarks t ■“ The defendant is bound to make, and it is presumed will make, such a provision for the plaintiff in his will as will do him perfect justice, and whieh may be perfectly satisfactory to him, or which, in judgment of law, may amount to a satisfaction.” He adds that, upon failure, the plaintiff can maintain his action upon a quantum meruit, but he cannot ■until such failure oceurs. This statement of the law is substantially embodied in the second of the series of instructions asked and given, and would not be obnoxious to complaint if there were evidence of facts to which it would properly apply. But the testimony does not disclose any definite agreement or such facts as warrant the deduction of a common or mutual understanding, so as to make a contract ■broken by intestacy and give legal validity to the demand. ■Certainly frustrated expectations of a bounty, not the offspring of agreement, furnish no ground in support of an action.- The evidence does, however, authorize the inference involved in the verdiet and necessary to its support, that the services were not, nor intended to be, gratuitous, although there was none to enable the jury to solve the inquiry contained in the third instruction, upon the answer to which is made to depend the applicability of the statutory *56 bar to any part of the claim, extending as it does over a period of twenty-nine years.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.C. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-lash-nc-1881.