Ryans v. Hospes

67 S.W. 285, 167 Mo. 342, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 11, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 285 (Ryans v. Hospes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryans v. Hospes, 67 S.W. 285, 167 Mo. 342, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 130 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is an action at law, commenced on November 18, 1898, upon a quantum meruit for services rendered by plaintiff as the body-servant and nurse of Dr. Charles H. Bradford from July 10, 1889, to August 1, 1897, at $75 per month, eight years and one month..........$7,275.00 And from Aug. 10, 1897 to April 20, 1898, at $100

per month ............................. 833.33

And credited with $735.00 paid on account......$8,108.33 Showing a balance due of $7,373.33.

The answer was a general denial.

On March 11, 1899, the jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff for $7,605.33, and from the judgment thereon defendant appeals.

Dr. Bradford died in the city of St. Louis on or about the twenty-first- day of April, 1898, leaving a last will, which was admitted to probate, in which he appointed Jesse- L. Boogher and Howard Blossom his executors. They accepted the trust and duly qualified about May 26, 1898. A contest [347]*347of said will was begun in the circuit court and thereafter on or about July 6, 1898, the said executors were removed and Richard Hospes was appointed administrator pendente litej and qualified as such, and was in charge of said estate when this action was commenced.

Dr Bradford left an estate of the value of about $100,-000, of which there was $285,923.23 of personal estate. He was seventy-eight years old at the time of his'death. It appears that he had no wife or children, but was married about the year 1886 to Mrs. Cochran of Eufaula, Alabama, from whom he was subsequently divorced in 1889 or 1890. Mrs. Cochran was a sister of Tandy W. Toney, of Eufaula, who had resided in that city for more than forty years. It was at his house that Dr. Bradford first met the plaintiff, Wyatt Ryans, who was a negro servant in Mr. Toney’s family. Prior to 1886 the plaintiff had spent three-fourths of his life in Mr. Toney’s family as servant and nurse. Having served Dr. Bradford on one of his visits to his brother-in-law, the doctor was so pleased with him that he asked Mr. Toney if he had any objections to his taking Wyatt away with him, and Mr. Toney assenting he employed the plaintiff, who served him as body-servant and nurse from that time more or less every year until the doctor’s death in 1898.

The testimony of Mr. Tandy, on whose premises plaintiff’s family continued to reside after he went into Dr. Bradford’s employment, was that “Wyatt first went with the doctor in 1886 and for the first four years after 1886 he was with him from three to six months in the year . . . but that since then he had given up all of his business for Dr. Bradford and was subject to his orders until the latter died” in April, 1898. The services charged for in this action begin July 10, 1889, and do not include the years prior thereto.

As to the continuity of his service and its acceptability to Dr. Bradford, and its arduous and exacting nature and value, it can best be told by the witnesses themselves.

[348]*348Mr. Louis Harper testified he had been for ten years register clerk at the Southern Hotel. Had known Ur. Bradford for twenty years before his death; that for eight or nine years the doctor would spend several months at the Southern and during all that time was accompanied by Wyatt, the plaintiff, as his valet, who waited upon him exclusively; that the doctor was seventy-eight years old when he died, and had during his acquaintance with him been a delicate man and grew more and more so as he grew older until, the last time he was at the Southern, he had to be wheeled about in a chair. He was finicky about his wants and always demanded and got one of the most expensive rooms in the hotel for himself, and a room adjoining for Wyatt; that Wyatt’s services were those that a servant should give, good, perfect attention, watching him at all times.

Dr. J. B. Coryell, a physician, testified he was called in April in consultation with Ur. Kier and found Dr. Bradford very feeble, perfectly helpless; could not take care of himself nor attend to the wants of nature; that Wyatt was present as nurse and body-servant; that he lifted the doctor around in bed, gave him his medicine and attended to all his wants. Had to attend to him as one would a little child with reference to his going to his stool, etc. Doctor Coryell testified he was familiar with the value of such services as he saw Wyatt performing for Dr. Bradford, and they were reasonably worth $150 a month.

Patrick Smith, a head waiter at the Southern Hotel for four and one-half years, and employed as a waiter about the hotel for twelve or thirteen years, said he had known Wyatt Ryans for about nine years and was sure it was over eight years, as a servant for Dr. Bradford, who was an old man, without family, and attended only by this colored servant, until towards the end of his life when a Mr. Chalmers was also with him. He was old and feeble, and needed some one with him all the time, almost always had his breakfast in bed, which [349]*349was ordered, by Wyatt, and had to have Wyatt about with him about all the time; that Dr. Bradford had often spoken to him about Wyatt’s faithfulness and the comfort it gave him; that the doctor would stay at the hotel two or three months and then go away again to the East and South. On cross-examination defendant showed that plaintiff had been with Dr. Bradford for eight or nine years; that prior to becoming headwaiter witness had been private waiter and attended to all upstairs service of meals, which brought him a great deal in contact with Wyatt; that he had seen Wyatt walking with him, and if the doctor would be sitting in his room with friends, Wyatt would be waiting to answer his wants; that he would meet him five or six times a day as his duties called him to that part of the house, and Wyatt was always present with the doctor, waiting on him and ready to execute orders; that during this time Wyatt had told witness that he traveled with the doctor and enjoyed going about with him from place to place; that the doctor had not been strong enough to be left alone and upon his own resources for a long time before he was confined to his bed during his last illness, and that often, prior to his last illness, he had been present in the doctor’s room, arranging the table while Wyatt had him in an adjoining toilet room attending to him, and this he had noticed for perhaps two or three years before his death.

John J. Meyers, assistant head waiter at the Southern Hotel for thirteen years, knew Dr. Bradford and Wyatt well and stated that Wyatt had been coming there with the doctor for about nine years, acting as valet and body-servant to him; that they stayed two or three months in the year; that Dr. Bradford was a very weak man during the whole of that time and did not take his meals at all regularly in the dining-room; but would have to have them served in his room; that he would be confined to his room often for three or four days at a time. Witness had heard Dr. Bradford say that Wyatt was a very faithful man.

[350]*350Dr. William F. Kier, a practicing physician for twenty-nine years, knew Dr. Bradford about nine years and had attended him during that period when he was in St. Louis. He stated that he met Wyatt when he met the doctor, and had known them both about the same time, nine years; that since October, 1897, when his last illness began, he had attended the doctor as physician continuously until his death. “That Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Minor v. Lillard
289 S.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1956)
Laughlin v. Boatmen's National Bank
189 S.W.2d 974 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1945)
O'Shaughnessy v. Brownlee
77 S.W.2d 867 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1935)
Helsley v. Ferguson
67 S.W.2d 103 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1934)
State v. Linders
253 S.W. 716 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)
Simpson v. Smith
196 S.W. 391 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1917)
Morrell v. Lawrence
101 S.W. 571 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1907)
Christianson v. McDermott Estate
123 Mo. App. 448 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
State v. O'Kelley
98 S.W. 804 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Trimble v. Kansas City, Pittsburg & Gulf Railroad
79 S.W. 678 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1904)
Lillard v. Wilson
77 S.W. 74 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 285, 167 Mo. 342, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryans-v-hospes-mo-1902.