Paulos v. Janetakos

72 P.2d 1, 41 N.M. 534
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1937
DocketNo. 4259.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 72 P.2d 1 (Paulos v. Janetakos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paulos v. Janetakos, 72 P.2d 1, 41 N.M. 534 (N.M. 1937).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The plaintiff (appellant) sued before the district court of Bernalillo county to enforce an alleged executory agreement to devise property in exchange for personal services. At the trial, upon plaintiff resting his case, the defendant, William Bi Janetakos, individually and as executor of the estate of Mary Cornetto Janetakos, deceased, made a motion to dismiss, the equivalent of a demurrer to the evidence. After argument, the trial court sustained the motion and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint. From the judgment of dismissal the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The contract was pleaded in the complaint as follows: “That in said year 1921, the said Mary Cornetta Janetakos promised the plaintiff that if he would go to live in her household in the City of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and care for her in sickness and in health as a son until the time of her death, he should have and be entitled to all her property, both real and personal, as fully and to the same extent as if he were her sole lawful issue.”

Then follow allegations of acceptance of the contract by plaintiff and performance on his part from the year 1921 until March, 1933, when the contract allegedly was repudiated by the said Mary Cornetto Janetakos by her refusal to let plaintiff live longer in her household or further to perform the contract, although he alleged himself at all times ready, able, and willing to perform.

The making of the contract and( performance thereunder were denied in defendant’s answer and certain affirmative defenses pleaded, among them,’ the statute of frauds. Other affirmative defenses related chiefly to breaches of the supposed contract on plaintiff’s part. It.should be here stated that Mary Cornetto Janetakos was a widow at the time of entering into the alleged contract. However, in 1932 she married William B. Janetakos and died in 1934, leaving a last will and testament whereby she devised all her property to her surviving husband, the defendant herein. The case having been disposed of below as on demurrer to the evidence, it is of first importance to examine plaintiff’s evidence.

The alleged contract was stated in evidence by plaintiff as follows:

“Q. Did you later start to work for her? A. While I was running the confectionery business I had a failure and I stayed with her until I was getting the bankruptcy papers here, and that is when I became more acquainted with Mrs. Cornetto at her place, and while I was laying over to take the bankruptcy I began to work for her as she agreed with me to do it.
“Q. Did she make you any kind of proposition? A. Yes.
“Q. What was that proposition? A. Well, she didn’t have anybody at all, that was the first thing she told me and I rendered some service to her there for private quarters, cooking, she was always asking me to come into her place, and she told me if I stayed in her place she would give me everything she had at her death, and she told me that one million times, all the time I was there.
“Q. What were you to do for her? A. Well, I was supposed to take care of her in the way of cooking or anything that she needed to be done around the house.
“Q. And did she say how the property would go to you at the time of her death? A. Well, she just absolutely told me that I didn’t need to worry about anything at all, that everything that she had she was going to leave it to me provided I stayed there and took care of her as much as I cán.
“Q. Did you accept that proposition ? A. Yes.”

Again, on cross-examination, plaintiff stated substance of the contract as follows:

“Q. How did she bring this question up of your being her son ? A. This is the way she brought it up, this is exactly what she said, ‘Now, if you will stay here and take care of this place, take care of me, you don’t need of anything, everything I have got I am going to leave it to you’ she said.
“Q. What did she say you were to do, what were going to be your duties ? A. Well, it wasn’t necessary for me to do anything except be there and take care of her business, I didn’t have to do a whole lot, that is the way she expressed herself, that I was at her favors and do a little work for her around the house and all I could do for her, which I did.”

Several witnesses testified to statements by deceased that when she died all she had belonged to “Louis,” the plaintiff. One witness quoted her: “I took Louis to raise it and keep it just like my son, nothing ashamed, nothing dirty, nothing that I can be ashamed before nobody, but just like it was my son, and whenever I die everything I "got go to Louis.”

Others testified: “When I die everything belong to him.” “Anything I have belongs to Louie.”

The testimony of Andy Pettini, a witness for plaintiff, as nearly furnishes corroboration, if it does, as anything coming from the lips of witnesses. He stated:

“A. Well, one time I finish a job in FlagStaff, I come back to Albuquerque, any time I finish a job I come back to Albuquerque, she had some picture there in the room and I call attention ‘Mary, who is that picture there’; she say ‘It is my boy’; ‘You don’t have no boy’; she say ‘Yes, it is a boy that is room here, he do all my work, care for me, if I die everything belong to him’; that is what she tell me.
“Q. Whose picture was that ? A. Louie’s picture.
“Q. Louis Paulos? A. Yes.
“Q. Did she ever say anything else about her property on any other occasion? A. She just tell me if he stay over there and care for her and care for the property, that is all.
“Q. Then what? A. ‘Then when I die, everything belong to him.’ ”
Pete Urioste, plaintiff’s witness, testified:
“Q. Did you ever talk with Mrs. Cornetto about what she was going to do with her property? A. Many times.
“Q. What did she say? A. The only thing she would say when she would arrive that all she had was for Louie, she "said.
“Q. How many times did she tell you that? A. I can’t tell you how many times because she told me many times.
“Q. What were the words she used? A. That all that she had was his.”

In July, 1926, plaintiff being absent in Texas, Mrs. Cornetto wrote him, “I sure hate for you to be away from me. Just think if anything happened to me nobody here in this big place you want it to go to the state or county you think this over.”

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Bluebook (online)
72 P.2d 1, 41 N.M. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paulos-v-janetakos-nm-1937.