Moore v. Wetherell

74 A.2d 249, 77 R.I. 161, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 23, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 74 A.2d 249 (Moore v. Wetherell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Wetherell, 74 A.2d 249, 77 R.I. 161, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 57 (R.I. 1950).

Opinion

Flynn, C. J.

This is an action in assumpsit to recover the value of domestic services rendered by plaintiff to her mother during the latter’s life. Plaintiff duly filed her claim, which was disallowed by the defendant as executor of the mother’s will, and after a jury trial in the superior court a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for $18,820. Thereafter the trial justice granted defendant’s motion for a new trial unless plaintiff remitted all of the verdict in excess of $10,000. Plaintiff accordingly filed such remittitur and the case is before this court on defendant’s exceptions to the denial of his motions for a directed verdict and for a new trial unconditionally.

Plaintiff is one of seven children of Ellen J. Moore, hereinafter called the mother, who died January 7, 1946 leaving a will which was duly probated in the probate court of the city of Providence. Defendant is the husband of Esther Wetherell, one of said children, and he is also the executor of the mother’s will.

The evidence for plaintiff tended to show the following facts. In the fall of 1926 plaintiff at the request of her mother gave up her work in the Bourne Rubber Company in order to stay at home, do cooking, housework, laundering and ironing for her mother and father, and generally to take care of a ten-room house seven days a week from about 6:30 in the morning until 6:30 or later in the'evening. Her mother had promised: “ Tf you stay home and do the work — if you give up your job and stay home and do the work, I will see that you are well paid.’ As a matter of fact, she said she would see that I had the lion’s share.” When plaintiff suggested that she would not desire to look for a job if and when her mother might decease, the mother replied: “You need never worry about having to go out looking for a job, because you will be well provided for.” These statements were repeated substantially by the mother on several different occasions to certain mem[163]*163bers of the family and others, who also testified for plaintiff.

Up to 1937 plaintiff performed all the work with a little help from her mother, and also at her mother’s request assisted her father in caring for other property in which the mother had an interest. The mother’s eyesight and health began to fail noticeably about 1937 and continued progressively until her death in January 1946. During the last two years of her life she was in need of considerable nursing care which was provided by plaintiff day and night. Plaintiff received her own board and room, together with an average of about $100 a year for clothing and spending money.

In 1947 she received from her father and mother what purported to be properly executed deeds to several pieces of property. At that time she knew nothing of the will which had been executed by the mother in August 1931. She understood these deeds were her compensation for the services she had agreed to render. They were later set aside for want of valid delivery in a suit brought by Esther Wetherell, which was captioned Wetherill v. Moore, 73 R. I. 140. Thereupon, with permission of the probate court, plaintiff filed out of time her instant claim for services, and upon its disallowance by defendant as executor a jury trial was had in the superior court. Evidence was there introduced in support of the alleged promise of the mother and the performance of pll the services by plaintiff. Expert testimony was also given to the effect that services of that nature and extent would be worth $20 a week ordinarily and $35 a week where nursing care was added, as in the last two years of the mother’s life. The plaintiff was corroborated substantially by a brother, one of her sisters and the latter’s husband, and also by a cousin.

On the other hand defendant introduced testimony tending to show that the mother was not in failing health or in need of assistance for the housework from 1926 to 1936 or 1937; that in 1931 she executed her will, at which time [164]*164she was in good mental and physical health; that the will gave to plaintiff a one-third interest in certain property and a share in the residue; that the will never was changed thereafter although the mother continued in good health until about 1937, when she began to suffer failing health and eyesight; and that the mother always paid her bills. It was further testified by defendant’s wife that plaintiff did not leave her work on account of her mother’s request or needs but because she did not desire to continue with a new firm that had taken over the Bourne Rubber Company, and that up to about 1937 the mother did practically all the cooking and housework and waited on plaintiff, rather than the reverse.

Defendant presented no testimony, however, to satisfactorily contradict the evidence for the plaintiff that at least from about 1937 the mother was not able to do the housework and became progressively in need of attention, particularly during the last two years of her life. Nor did defendant present any evidence as to the value of plaintiff’s services if they were found to have been rendered in accordance with the mother’s request and promise to pay. No exception was taken to an extensive and fair charge by the court, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $18,820.

On defendant’s motion for a directed verdict the evidence must be viewed most favorably to the plaintiff. In our opinion there was evidence, if thus considered, which created material issues of fact for determination by the jury. Therefore defendant’s motion was properly denied and this exception is overruled.

In deciding defendant’s motion for a new trial the trial justice made certain preliminary observations not material to the issues and then passed his independent judgment on the evidence. He commented favorably on the credibility of plaintiff’s corroborating witnesses and unfavorably upon the attitude and credibility of defendant’s wife, who was the chief witness for defendant and whose testimony [165]*165tended to exaggeration and was materially contradicted in certain respects by other members of her family. Accordingly he expressly found that the verdict on the issue of liability was in accordance with the preponderance of the evidence.

But he also found that the amount of the verdict was grossly excessive. This was attributed to certain unfair and sympathetic arguments by plaintiff’s counsel to the jury, but in the expressed judgment of the trial justice such arguments did not produce or affect the verdict as to liability. He then analyzed the conditions prevailing at different periods between September 1926 and January 1946, gave credit to plaintiff for services rendered according to values that he personally considered reasonable, and finally ordered a remittitur of all of the verdict in excess of $10,000.

In our opinion the analysis and appraisal of the damages by the trial justice are reasonable and merit approval if there is evidence in the record to support the values which he used as bases in his computation. While his own experience, upon which he relied, probably provided a standard more in keeping with existing conditions and the evidence than did the testimony of the expert, we nevertheless find no evidence of such values in the record. The only testimony on that issue was by the expert who fixed a minimum of $20 per week for ordinary work and $35 per week when nursing care was added during tie last two years of the mother’s illness.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.2d 249, 77 R.I. 161, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-wetherell-ri-1950.