Robinson ex rel. Robinson v. Johnson

240 P. 962, 119 Kan. 639, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 7, 1925
DocketNo. 26,183
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 240 P. 962 (Robinson ex rel. Robinson v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson ex rel. Robinson v. Johnson, 240 P. 962, 119 Kan. 639, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 331 (kan 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

Mildred Robinson sued William Johnson for $1,500 as the reasonable value of outdoor work done by her upon his farm at his instance during a period of five years. She recovered a judgment for half the amount, from which the defendant appeals.

The plaintiff does not claim there was .an express contract to pay her, but stands upon the proposition that an implied obligation to do so arises from his request for and acceptance of her services. The defendant’s claim is that because of the relations of the parties —the attitude in which they stood toward each other—no such obligation arose, he occupying the position of a parent toward her. From the time the plaintiff was about ten years old she lived—as she says—with the defendant’s wife. The defendant, however, lived in the same house. The services for which recovery is sought were rendered during the second half of the ten-year period. The rule is familiar that even in the absence of any relationship by blood or marriage there is no implication of a promise to pay for domestic services rendered by one who is a member of the household. (40 Cyc. 2816; 11 R. C. L. 209-10; Notes, 11 L. R. A., n. s., 887, 888; 10 A. L. R. 139; Wyley v. Bull, 41 Kan. 206, 20 Pac. 855.) The plaintiff’s brief quotes this language from the Kansas case just cited as showing the contrary:

[640]*640“About the only difference in the rule of law as between relatives and the rule of law as between strangers living together as one family is, that as .to relatives no contract for compensation to be made on either side will be implied, but any contract claimed to exist must be specifically and affirmatively shown, while as between strangers a contract for compensation will be implied unless the contrary is shown either expressly or impliedly, from the affirmative circumstances expressly shown to exist in the case.” (p. 209.)

As the context clearly shows, however, this means merely that where the parties are relatives a presumption arises from that fact that payment is not expected on either side, while in the case of nonrelatives that presumption arises only after the living together as one family has been established. This plainly appears from the sentence immediately following that just quoted:

“In all cases, however, . . . when it is shown that the parties, though strangers to each - other,. have nevertheless lived together as one family, as parent and child, for instance, and that no express contract was made for compensation to either party, none on the one side for wages, and none on the other side for board, lodging, clothing, schooling, spending-money, etc., then the same rule will apply as though the parties were near relatives.” (p. 209.)

It has been said in an action similar to this:

“If defendants during the time the services were rendered- stood in loco parentis to plaintiff and discharged their duties in that respect faithfully and in a manner that bespoke parental concern, no obligation upon their part to award compensation for services rendered by plaintiff would attach; but if defendants failed faithfully to discharge the duties they assumed, resulting in mistreatment, abuse or neglect of plaintiff, or failed to give plaintiff such an education and advantages as their position in life would permit, then that relationship which the law fosters and society encourages would not exist and defendant’s liability would be obvious.” (Ingram v. Basye, 67 Ore. 257, 261.)

That view need not be accepted or rejected here, for it was not presented in the petition, and is not relied upon in the brief of the plaintiff, although there was evidence tending to show that she was not well cared for, properly clothed, or given suitable social or educational advantages.

The plaintiff’s pleading and testimony undertake to remove the case from the class where no implied contract to pay arises, upon the theory that the defendant and his wife, while occupying the same four-room house, did not constitute a single family; that two separate establishments were maintained, and the plaintiff was a part of the wife’s and not of the husband’s. The plaintiff answered “yes” to questions whether the defendant and his wife had their [641]*641separate property and whether they kept their finances separately, and “no” to a question whether they lived together as husband and wife. She testified that she carried eggs to the neighbors to sell to get money for her clothing. She was asked why she didn’t send the eggs to town by the defendant and answered: “He was so mean to her, would not get her anything.” She said the defendant never bought her anything; that he wanted her to wear his cast off clothing and she refused; that he would buy shoes at the secondhand store, and she had to take his castoffs; that she wore underclothing made out of flour sacks.

A part of her cross-examination reads:

“You went over there and stayed in the Johnson home? Yes.
“Mrs. Johnson took you into her home and gave you a place there? Yes.
“On the farm owned by William Johnson? Yes.
“Mr. and Mrs. Johnson were living together? Not when I went there, they went together when I went there.
“Those two people came after you together? Yes; but Mr. Johnson went to Hunt’s after his wife; she was staying at Hunt’s.
“She was at her mother’s, and he got her, and when they came back they got you and took you to. their place? Yes.
“At the Johnson home they hadUive stock? They had a few head.
“During the first entire five years at the Johnson place they lived there together? While I stayed with them.
“The family consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and yourself? Yes.
“Mr. Johnson provided groceries and necessities about the house? He provided a few.
“He provided enough so that you lived there and were well and healthy? That is natural for me.
“Nobody else provided any food or clothing for you those five years you were there? No.
“During the entire time you were there you did your share of work around the house, and when work was pressing helped on the farm? Never did much work about the house.
“Who did the work? His wife.
“You helped most outdoors? Yes.
“During the time you were living there and living on the farm and working there, you were living there as a member of the family? Not exactly.
“Why not exactly? I did not know when the time would come when I would have to. get out.”

[642]*642We do not regard the evidence outlined, alone or in connection with other testimony given, as sufficient to sustain a finding of such a separation of the Johnson family as to render the husband liable for services done at his request, on the theory that the plaintiff was not a member of his family, but of his wife’s. Moreover that theory was not submitted to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 P. 962, 119 Kan. 639, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-ex-rel-robinson-v-johnson-kan-1925.