Sellers v. Sayler

14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 24 Ohio Dec. 441, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJanuary 20, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1 (Sellers v. Sayler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sellers v. Sayler, 14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 24 Ohio Dec. 441, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 59 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

This is. an action by Lucy E. Sellers against tbe executor of Asa Yan Wormer, deceased.

In the amended petition it is alleged that from April 13, 1897, to August 11, 1909, the date of the testator’s death, at testator’s request plaintiff rendered services in the care of testator and his wife, and to the testator after the wife’s death in the care and attention given to them at their home; that the testator promised to pay therefor by making provision in his will sufficient to provide for her for the remainder of her life, which compensation was to be agreed upon between them and satisfactory to plaintiff; and that such services were worth the sum of $7 per day, to-wit, the sum of $31,521, of which she has received the sum of $2,600.

Plaintiff further alleges that by will and codicil the testator made certain provisions for her, but in each case after being informed thereof she expressed her dissatisfaction, and that testator thereupon in consideration of her continuing such services, agreed to give and bequeath to her in addition to provisions already made, 150 shares of the stock of the First National Bank, and that in evidence thereof gave to plaintiff the following instrument :

[3]*3“Cincinnati, O., Septembber 16, 1907.
“In addition to tbe seven thousand dollars invested in 3^% Cincinnati Viaduct Bonds, one hundred dollars invested in á United States Government Bond, and sixty shares of Cincinnati Street Railway Stock, I, Asa Van Wormer, give and bequeath to Lucy Sellers for taking care of me and my home, at my death, one hundred and fifty shares of First National Bank Stock.
‘ ‘ If Lucy Sellers should die before I do, then at my death the one hundred and fifty shares of First National Bank Stock goes to her daughter, Stella Sellers.
“ (Signed) Asa Van Wormer.”

Plaintiff further says that- said Asa Van Wormer during the time of plaintiff’s services gave away more than $100,000 to charitable and benevolent institutions, and left an estate in personal property of $442,713.03, in which were 414 shares of First National Bank Stock, 150 of which were by codicil bequeathed to one Henry Rohlfing; that said executor refused upon demand to deliver to plaintiff 150 shares of said stock; that on October 10, 1911, she presented to the executor a claim for services in the sum of $31,521, less a credit of $2,600 as herein set forth, which claim was disallowed.

Plaintiff asks a specific performance of the alleged contract as to the 150 shares of stock and that the executor may be found to hold said shares in trust for plaintiff, or in the alternative, for a judgment for the value of such shares or the alleged reasonable value of such services.

Plaintiff’s original petition filed November 30,1910, was simply for services rendered at testator’s request, the reasonable value of which is alleged to be $7 per day, or $31,521, with a credit of $2,600.

The amended petition filed December 8, 1911, was as herein-above set forth. It is not divided into counts or separate causes of action.

The defendant by answer admits the rendition of services, but denies that they were to the extent or of the value claimed, and further claims both partial and full payment thereof, and further alleges a different agreed compensation therefor than alleged by plaintiff, full payment thereof and the making by [4]*4testator of three separate provisions in favor of plaintiff in his will and codicils and the acceptance by plaintiff of certain property held for her in trust by the Fifth-Third National Bank in pursuance of one of said provisions.

Defendant further sets up the refusal by defendant in 1909 and again on September 22,1910, to consider any claim of plaintiff under the instrument of September 16, 1907, and the failure of plaintiff at any time to present to him any duly verified claim, except the claim for services at $7 per day from April 13, 1897. to August 11, 1909, presented September 22, 1910, and rejected October 20, 1910, and alleges his appointment as executor without bond on September 18, 1909, and the giving of due notice thereof beginning September 19, 1909.

When Asa Yan Wormer died on October 11, 1909, he was about ninety years old. He left an estate of about $450,000 in stocks and bonds. Nieces and nephews were his nearest relatives. His last will was made June 29, 1889, and between that day and June 27, 1909, at various times he added fourteen codicils thereto, specifically disposing of innumerable stocks and bonds to nieces, nephews and to charitable, educational and benevolent institutions. During the ten or twelve years prior to his death he had given away about $100,000 to such institutions.

For many years prior to 1886 he was engaged in business on Court street, Cincinnati, dealing in butter and eggs and farm produce. He could read and write, but otherwise except as acquired in such business and in reading newspapers, he had no education or culture. By unusual thrift and economy in business and household, and the devoting of all his time to business to the exclusion of all social or intellectual life, he had accumulated bonds and stocks which after his retirement from business in 1886, grew into a fortune of over half a million dollars. Until some time in the seventies he and his wife lived over the Court street store; then he moved to Ylinton Place, living there in the same manner as on Court street.

When his wife became a physical and mental wreck he was compelled to bring to his home some one to care for her and the house. Several undertook the task; some left of their own ac[5]*5cord. Finally plaintiff and her fourteen year old daughter were induced to come to the house. The plaintiff as a girl had lived with the Van Wormers, but had married and gone to Detroit, where her husband died, leaving her a daughter then about nine years old. She seems to have been left sufficient means to support herself and her daughter several years in Detroit and afterward in Cincinnati. She had not been in Cincinnati long before Asa Van Wormer induced her on April 13, 1897, to come to his house. The testator’s imbecile wife died the following October.

It is neither pleasant nor necessary to go into the dreary and sordid details and parsimonious economies of life at Asa Van Wormer’s- home during the time in question, accentuated by age, by a slight stroke of paralysis, by nauseous habits about his home, and by a couple of accidental injuries from which he gradually recovered.

The casual visitor to such a home does not always realize such conditions. They weigh most heavily and blightingly upon those who share such a home and whose lives are dominated by such environment. Obsessed by his deep rooted ideas of economy and accumulation of money, all faculty to enjoy what the -normal man, even the common laborer, would regard as reasonable necessities, had long since been atrophied by disuse. Any plumbing conveniences in the house or even in the kitchen were regarded as unnecessary luxuries. ITis house would have been shunned by relatives, acquaintances and endowment seeking philanthropists, except for his- wealth.

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

Related

Edson v. . Parsons
50 N.E. 265 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
Owens v. McNally
33 L.R.A. 369 (California Supreme Court, 1896)
Lisk v. Sherman
25 Barb. 433 (New York Supreme Court, 1857)
Bolman v. Overall
2 So. 624 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1886)
Sloniger v. Sloniger
43 N.E. 1111 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)
Dicken v. McKinley
45 N.E. 134 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 24 Ohio Dec. 441, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellers-v-sayler-ohctcomplhamilt-1913.