Schaad v. Hazelton

165 P.2d 517, 72 Cal. App. 2d 860, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1111
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 1946
DocketCiv. 7175
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 P.2d 517 (Schaad v. Hazelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaad v. Hazelton, 165 P.2d 517, 72 Cal. App. 2d 860, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1111 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

This action was brought by plaintiff, the daughter of Addie M. Hazelton, deceased, to recover from the estate of said decedent the sum of $21,178.83 claimed to be the reasonable value of services rendered by her to said decedent from July 1, 1926, to March 10, 1943, “in serving as companion, housekeeper, nurse, furnishing transportation, sewing, washing, ironing and otherwise” for said Addie M. Hazelton, “with the understanding and agreement between said Addie M. Hazelton and Plaintiff that said Addie M. Hazelton would compensate Plaintiff for said services by leaving to her . . . one-half of all the estate of said Addie M. Hazelton and which estate should include all the property of said Addie M. Hazelton except the home of said Addie M. Hazelton and the home of Earl J. Hazelton.” The filing of a claim against the estate of the decedent and its rejection were alleged, a copy of the claim being attached to the complaint. The action was tried before a jury and resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $4,300. Thereafter, on motion of defendant, the trial court entered a judgment in favor of defendant notwithstanding the verdict, and this appeal followed.

The only question before this court is whether there was produced before the trial court evidence which, viewed in its most favorable aspect, was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict.

J. B. Hazelton and Addie M. Hazelton were husband and wife. They acquired considerable property, including a substantial home and a lumber yard in Orland. They had two children, Marjorie and Earl, both of whom were, in March, 1926, of adult age. The daughter, who was apparently unemployed, was living in the home of her parents, and the son, who was then working for his father in the lumber yard, was married and occupied a home of his own in Orland.

*862 On July 10, 1926, plaintiff married Clarence Schaad. She brought her husband into the home of her parents where they continued to reside until May 1, 1931, when they moved to Willows, and later, to Sacramento. In July, 1934, when Mr. Schaad lost his job they returned to the Hazelton home where they continued to reside. A son was born to the Schaads in 1927, and he, too, lived in the Hazelton home with his parents. On August 5, 1941, J. B. Hazelton and Addie M. Hazelton executed a deed conveying to their daughter the family home in Orland. This deed was deposited with the attorney who had drawn same, with instructions to deliver it to the grantee upon the death of the survivor of the grantors. Prior to his death J. B. Hazelton, who was suffering from cancer, conveyed his property to his wife, and on February 23, 1942, he died.

Mrs. Hazelton died in April, 1943, leaving a will dated April 3, 1942, in which she gave the family home, variously valued at from $8,000 to $15,000, and its contents, appraised at $1,100, to her daughter, reciting that a deed to the home had already been placed in escrow. The will also stated that prior to her husband’s death they had agreed between them and their children that all debts owing by their son, and by their daughter and her husband, either to them or the lumber company, were forgiven, and that it was her will that they be canceled. The will devised to plaintiff a life estate in certain other real property with remainder to her children, which property was given value of $5,000 to $8,500, gave the lumber mill and business and other real property to the son, and divided the residue between the two children equally. The whole estate was appraised by the official appraiser at $44,929.86.

Plaintiff produced no evidence whatsoever of any express contract on the part of her mother to compensate her, either by will or otherwise, for any services she might or did perform in the home shared by the two families, nor was there any testimony that either of the parties ever made any reference to any such purported agreement. Appellant does not even contend in her brief that such evidence was produced, but argues that there must have teen such an agreement because (a) at the time of a family conference held just before Mr. Hazelton’s death he stated to his son that the daughter had been generous in asking that the debts of the son as well as her own be forgiven, and that he wanted them to share the *863 estate equally; (b) that the Schaad boy testified he had heard his grandmother say to his mother, more than once, that the estate was to be settled equally between the son and daughter; (c) that the Sehaads paid rent, and (d) that the household expenses were apparently paid from what was called “the bank,” into which Mr. Schaad and Mr. Hazelton both put money.

The statement in .appellant’s brief that the Sehaads paid rent is a conclusion based upon the testimony of the Schaad boy that he had seen his mother give his grandmother money for the rent, and had heard his grandmother ask for the rent. When this occurred or how many times, whether during the first or the second period of residence by the Sehaads in the Hazelton home, or how much was asked or given was not stated. There was, however, testimony that Mrs. Hazelton had said to her daughter on one occasion that they did not pay rent—which was not denied by plaintiff. The statement in the brief that household expenses were paid out of a so-called “bank” is merely a conclusion from the testimony of the Schaad boy that in the kitchen was a brown purse called “the bank” into which he had seen both his grandfather and his father put money. When and how often this occurred, or what amounts were contributed by either was not stated; nor was there any evidence as to the purpose of these contributions or how or for what the moneys in the brown purse were spent; and there was no evidence that household expenses were paid out of it.

Regarding the services performed by plaintiff in the home of her parents, while there was testimony that she engaged in the general household duties, they appear to have been no different from those which she would have performed for her own family in her own home had she occupied one, except that, owing to operations which Mrs. Hazelton underwent in 1926, and in 1941, she was unable to raise her arms so as to reach the back of her head, and her daughter combed her hair for her, and during her convalescence, assisted in caring for her. It is true that after her operation in 1926 Mrs. Hazelton’s health was not good, but it is undenied that except for short periods after her operations, she was able to and did assist with the housework, put up fruit, made the pies, doughnuts, etc., ironed, worked in her garden, washed dishes, did mending, and, during the infancy of the Schaad child, assisted in *864 caring for Mm. Apparently during the three years that the Schaads lived elsewhere she was able to run her own home. It is undenied, also, that at the time of Mr. Hazelton’s last illness a nurse was in attendance for several weeks; and that another woman came in and worked for a few hours a day when Mr. Hazelton’s condition was very critical. There was also a nurse in attendance during the month preceding Mrs. Hazelton’s death.

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173 P.2d 50 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
165 P.2d 517, 72 Cal. App. 2d 860, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaad-v-hazelton-calctapp-1946.