Page v. Page

61 A. 356, 73 N.H. 305, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 61 A. 356 (Page v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Page, 61 A. 356, 73 N.H. 305, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 40 (N.H. 1905).

Opinion

Walker, J.

If the plaintiff had been a member of his mother’s family when he rendered the services for which he seeks compensation, or if, technically, the relation of parent and child had existed between them, it is conceded that he could not recover in the absence of a contract found to exist as a fact. The ordinary legal presumption, arising from the rendition of valuable services with the assent of the defendant, that he promised the plaintiff to pay for them, does not apply when the relationship of *306 the parties affords evidence that payment was not contemplated, or that the labor was gratuitously performed. If a son while a member of his father’s family performs labor which is valuable to the father, he is not entitled to recover therefor in the absence of evidence showing a contract in fact, because the family relationship subsisting between them is evidence that both parties understood that the benefit was gratuitously rendered; and if this evidence is not rebutted or explained by other evidence, it gives rise to a conclusive presumption against a promise of payment. In such a case the plaintiff does not sustain the burden of proof. He does not make out a prima facie case, and a nonsuit is properly ordered. The situation of the parties living in a single family as father and son is a very different situation from that existing between strangers who live in distinct families. A presumption of law, based upon the known understanding of men in general in reference to payment for labor performed when they sustain the former relation, is necessarily different from that which arises by a similar process of reasoning when they sustain the latter relation ; in the one case payment, in the other non-payment, accords with the known custom or practice of men in general in similar situations; and this presumption is applied by the courts upon an appropriate state of facts, as a matter of law. Hertzog v. Hertzog, 29 Pa. St. 465, 469. The court in effect declares that the jury shall not be permitted to find the fact of a contract from evidence which is universally deemed to show that no contractual relation was intended.

In Disbrow v. Durand, 54 N. J. Law 343, 345, it is said: “ The reason of this exception to the ordinary rule is, that the household family relationship is presumed to abound in reciprocal acts of kindness and good-will, which tend to the mutual comfort and convenience of the members of the family and are gratuitously performed; and where that ,relationship appears, the ordinary implication of a promise to pay for services does not arise, because the presumption which supports such implication is nullified by the presumption that between members of a household services are gratuitously rendered. The proof of the services, and as well of the family relation, leaves the case in equipoise, from which the plaintiff must remove it or fail. The great majority of cases in which this exception . . . has been given effect have been between children and their parents, or the representatives of the parents’ estate, and that fact appears to have led courts of some of our sister states to speak of it as restricted to cases where such relationship in blood existed; but it is not perceived how, within the reason for the exception, it is to be limited by mere propinquity of kindred. It rests upon the idea of the mutual *307 dependence of those who are members of one immediate family; and such a family may exist though composed of remote relations, and even of persons between whom there is no tie of blood.”

“ Under certain circumstances, when one man labors for another a presumption of fact will arise that the person for whom he labors is to pay him the value of bis services. It is a conclusion to which the mind readily comes from a knowledge of the circumstances of the particular case and the ordinary dealings between man and man. But when the services are rendered between members of the same family, no such presumption will arise. We find other motives than the desire of gain which may prompt the exchange of mutual benefits between them, and hence no right of action will accrue to either party, although the services or benefits received may be very valuable.” Williams v. Hutchinson, 3 N. Y. 312, 317, 318; Livingston v. Hammond, 162 Mass. 375, 377.

“ Generally, where one man performs services for another at his request, or with his knowledge and without objection, the law implies a contract on the part of the person receiving the benefit of the service, to pay a reasonable compensation for it; . . . but this rule does not apply where it appears that the service was intended and understood to be gratuitous, or without expectation of payment. . . . Among the cases of the last description is the case of children of any age, residing with and making part of the family of their father. In such cases the presumption of law is that the services rendered on the one side, and the board and supplies furnished on the other, are gratuitous, and that payment for them is neither expected nor promised.” Hall v. Hall, 44 N. H. 293, 296.

The principal contention on the part of the defendant is, that the presumption that the plaintiff’s services were gratuitously rendered arises as a matter of law from the blood relationship of parent and child, although they were not members of the same household. So far as appears from the case, the two families were as distinct, the one from the other, as those of strangers. The fact that the same roof sheltered them does not seem to be important; certainly it is not decisive upon the question whether the family relation existed between the parties. If the plaintiff had been a stranger, it would not probably be claimed that he and the defendant’s intestate were members of the same family. The question, therefore, is whether when a son, who is the head of a family wholly distinct from his parent’s family, renders services to his parent, there is »• legal presumption that they were regarded by the parties as gratuitous favors. If the doctrine is not based upon the consanguinity; of the parties, but upon the community of *308 interest usually found to exist between members of tbe same family, the question must be answered in the negative. While it does not appear that the case of a child claiming’ compensation for services against his parent, when not a member of the parent’s family, has been presented for determination in this state, the decisions on the general proposition seem to be based on the idea of the mutuality of the benefits rendered and received by the members of a single family.

In Munger v. Munger, 33 N. H. 581, it is to be inferred that the plaintiff was a member of the defendant’s family. The court say: “ The fact that a child continues to live with a parent after becoming of age, or returns to live with him after being for a time absent, and becomes one of the family, does not ordinarily constitute the relation of debtor or creditor between them, so as to warrant a charge on the part of the parent for the board of the child, or on the part of the child for such services as are usually performed in a family by a child living with its parent.”

Seavey v. Seavey, 37 N. H. 125, follows Munger v. Munger,

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 356, 73 N.H. 305, 1905 N.H. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-page-nh-1905.