Shimer v. Kinder

12 N.Y. St. Rep. 728
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 728 (Shimer v. Kinder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shimer v. Kinder, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 728 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Barker, J.

The plaintiff lived in the family of the deceased continually; for the period of about thirteen years, commencing when she was seven years old, and leaving when she was nineteen. She was the daughter of Jeremiah Dunkelberg, and, after leaving the family of the deceased, [729]*729and before commencing this action, she married Mr. Shimer, The first question to be determined is, were the labor and services which the plaintiff performed, in the family of the deceased, rendered in pursuance of an agreement, expressed or implied, that she should receive compensation therefor, to be paid by the defendant, or were they gratuitously performed. The referee has found that it was the understanding and agreement of the parties, at the time the plaintiff became a member of the family of the deceased, that she should be justly rewarded for her service, the terms and conditions of the contract, as found by the referee, being hereafter more fully stated. This was a pure question of fact for the decision of the referee. I think his report on this question is fairly supported by the evidence. In 1866, the father of the plaintiff and the deceased were friends and neighbors, residing in the county of Niagara, and were farmers. The former had several children and was about to remove with his family into the west, for the purpose of establishing a home in that locality; and the latter was childless, his family consisting of himself and wife, who was in delicate health. At this time the decedent was the owner of a farm on which he resided, of the value of about $6,000. Before the plaintiff’s father had determined to remove from Niagara county, Mr. Bander had become attached to the plaintiff who frequently visited his house. After the plaintiff’s father had left Niagara county, and while in the city of Buffalo, on his way west, Mr. Kinder, proposed to him, that plaintiff return with him to his home, and five with him as a member of his family.

To this proposition the plaintiff’s parents consented and she parted with them in Buffalo, and was taken by the decedent to his home. A brother of the plaintiff’s father, who was present when the said interview was had and agreement made, testified as a witness on the trial, that he heard “the conversation at Buffalo between George Kinder and my brother about plaintiff coming back; George asked if my brother would let her come back, she would be company for his wife; my brother said he could not let the child come back; he wanted her to go along; George said her would care for her and bring her up if he would let her come back; just as he would for his own child; then he agreed to let her come back; he wanted her so bad; George and my brother and his wife were near crying; George didn’t say anything about property he would give plaintiff; I remember that the plaintiff went west in 1876; while she was gone George came to my house and talked about plaintiff; he said she had not come back; that if she would come back he would take care of her and do well by her; [730]*730he said she was a good girl and he wanted her to come hack; don’t remember of his saying anything of the work she had done.”

This is all the direct evidence which can be found in the record, as to the terms and conditions of the-agreement as originally made, under which the plaintiff became a member of the family of decedent. But subsequent to that time, and during the period she resided with Mrs. Kinder, he had frequent conversations with his neighbors and the friends and relatives of the plaintiff as to the arrangement under which she became a member of his household, and the compensation she was to receive, and the mode and manner of its payment. I shall not repeat all the evidence in this connection as given by the several witnesses who heard such statement and admissions of the decedent, but, in substance, they were to the effect: That he had taken the plaintiff as his own child; that she should be amply paid for her services; that he would do for her as a father would do for his own child; that when the plaintiff came to live with him he promised her father and mother that he would do for her as if she was his own child; that he intended to provide for her in his will.

One of the witnesses testified that, in 1874, he was at Mr. Kinder’s house, and they had a conversation about the plaintiff, and he said to the decedent: “There is Tilly (the plaintiff) growing into womanhood—what have you done for her? He said, when I am through with this world’s goods Tilly shall be amply paid. I asked him, ‘how? ” He said, ‘I can’t take with me what I have got; she shall have an ample share of it.’ I said; how? He said, I will make a will. * * * He said when he was through with this world’s goods she should be well paid for her services and kindness to them rendered during Mrs. Kinder’s sickness; she was taking care of her then; he said she should be well paid for what she has done. After the plaintiff had lived there a year or two I had a conversation with the deceased; he said she was left there with him as his own; to be brought up as his own; and he would treat her as his own; they had no children.”

The evidence is convincing and entirely satifactory in its character, that the plaintiff’s services, rendered in the family of the deceased, were not to be gratuitous, but, on the contrary, she was to be rewarded therefor by the payment of a fair and just compensation in view of her age, and the time she might remain in his family, and the character of the services she might render, and the care, maintenance and education she should receive in the family •of the deceased.

In his report the referee states that the agreement was [731]*731made in October, 1866, and at the time the plaintiff’s father removed with his family from the county of Niagara, the -deceased requested the plaintiff to live with him as his own child, promising that if he would bring her up as his own ■child, and at his death would do by her as his own child, and would make such provision for her in and by his will as would be right and proper in case she were in fact his own child. That the plaintiff’s father consented and permitted the deceased to take her and adopt her as his own ■Child, and from that time forward she lived in the. family of the deceased until September, 1879. This finding is, I think, in all respects fairly sustained by the evidence.

By the terms of the agreement, the plaintiff observing and performing the same on her part, according to its spirit, she might well have anticipated, that on the death of her foster father, she would be generously rewarded by a provision of the will and compensated for her services rendered in the family of the deceased, in a sum beyond their intrinsic value. In August, 1879, the plaintiff ceased to reside in the family of the deceased, leaving the same on account of his ill-treatment The decedent died a few months thereafter, childless and intestate, his wife having died previously. His estate was worth at the time of his death between six and seven thousand dollars.

The mental disturbance which overtook the deceased, after the death of his wife, was doubtless the reason why he failed to perform his agreement and may be viewed as a moral excuse for his ill-treatment of the plaintiff.

The failure of the decedent to perform the contract on his part gave the plaintiff a right of action which entitled her to recover for the intrinsic value of her services, for the time they were rendered, according to their kind and character, without reference to the contract or the value of the property of the decedent at the time of his death.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.Y. St. Rep. 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shimer-v-kinder-nysupct-1888.