Simmons v. Simmons

1960 OK 214, 357 P.2d 949, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 501
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 18, 1960
Docket38852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1960 OK 214 (Simmons v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Simmons, 1960 OK 214, 357 P.2d 949, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 501 (Okla. 1960).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Justice.

This action was brought for partition of certain described lands located in Pontotoc County, Oklahoma, and for approval of separate accounts submitted by two of the plaintiffs, Vera Mae Simmons and Vida Cromwell.

The alleged and admitted facts are that the plaintiffs (defendants in error), Vera Mae Simmons, Vida Cromwell and Vena Barnes, and the defendants (plaintiffs in error), Orville V. Simmons and Vivian Baccus, are the children and only heirs of Walter Simmons. Walter Simmons died on the 22nd day of April, 1953; that on the third day of December, 1949, Walter Simmons, in order to eliminate administration expenses of his estate, conveyed to his daughter, Vera Mae Simmons, the one hundred and sixty acre farm on which she and her father had lived for many years prior thereto and where she continued to live; and she, by agreement, admittedly held the land in trust for herself and the *951 other children, share and share alike, subject to the “expenses of (the) last illness” and funeral expenses of their father.

The trial court decreed that the land be partitioned, appointed commissioners who appraised the land and reported the non-feasibility of partitioning said land. Thereupon, Vera Mae Simmons and Orville V. Simmons in opposition to each other elected to purchase the land at the commission’s appraised value of $8,000. No order of sale of the property has been made pending determination of the accounting issues. The legality of the partition proceedings and the existence of the alleged trusteeship are unquestioned. Only errors allegedly inherent in the order and judgment of the trial court in allowing the separate accounts of Vera Mae Simmons and Vida Cromwell are presented and argued in this appeal.

The defendants’ contentions of error may be summarized briefly as follows: First, that (a) the services rendered by Vera Mae Simmons and Vida Cromwell in caring for their father during his last illness were presumably gratuitous, and that such presumption was not overcome by evidence; that (b) the expenses of last illness of Walter Simmons, as allowed Vera Mae Simmons and Vida Cromwell in their accounting, was improper because same was not within the period and meaning of “(Expenses of .last illness.” Second, that the trial court erred in allowing certain charges made in the amended account of Vera Mae Simmons as trustee; and, third, the trial court erred in allowing the account of Vida Cromwell as a charge against the property; fourth, the court erred in (a) not charging the trustee for value of the use and occupation of the house and other improvements since the death of Walter Simmons; (b) in not requiring the trustee to account for rents and profits and for benefit received from use of property; (c) that the court erred in giving the trustee credit for $50 for labor on the little house which was burned, and, finally, that the court erred in overruling defendants’ motions for leave to file amendment to answers.

These facts and contentions all involve matters of equitable cognizance, and we, therefore, will apply the general rule that in actions of equitable cognizance we will examine the record and weigh the evidence, but the decree, or judgment, will be sustained on appeal unless the same is found to be against the clear weight of the evidence or contrary to law.

The contention that the services rendered by the aforementioned plaintiffs were gratuitous is, in our opinion, without merit. Neither party plaintiff comes within the provisions of our statute, 10 O.S.1951 § 16, which provides:

“Where a child, after attaining majority, continues to serve and to be supported by the parent, neither party is entitled to compensation in the absence of an agreement therefor.”

The evidence herein is conclusive that the father did not continue to support Vera Mae Simmons, but that she supported him; and that Vida Cromwell was married and lived with her family in Ada, Oklahoma, and drove to and from Ada to the farm each day for a period of almost two years where she cared for her father in his home while Vera Mae was teaching school and earning the money with which she maintained herself and her father. In addition thereto in the trust contract of October 26, 1951, between Vera Mae Simmons and the other children, attached to plaintiffs’ pleading and admitted in evidence, there is this statement, “(I)t is further understood and agreed that said Walter Simmons, on the 3rd day of December, 1949, and on this date has no bank account, cash or securities and that the tract of land above described (the land here in question) shall be used to the extent necessary to pay the last illness and funeral (of their father) and that thereafter the parties (children) shall participate equally.” (Words in parenthesis added.) The evidence discloses that Walter Simmons was then ill, confined to his room and was never able to leave the house thereafter except when taken to a doctor’s office in a car where he was treated without *952 being removed from the car, and so continued ill and unable to earn anything or even to wait on himself up until his death approximately two years later. Furthermore, the undisputed evidence shows that some two years before the date of this contract, Walter Simmons had conveyed the land in question to Vera Mae Simmons, obviously in order to be used for the payment of his necessary care and expenses thereafter incurred, but out of the goodness of her heart she entered into the aforesaid agreement to share equally with her brother and sisters what remained from the proceeds of the farm after the necessary expenses incurred by reason of her (their) father’s last illness and funeral; and that notwithstanding the fact that for many years she had turned over to her father the salary that she received as a public school teacher, which he deposited in his personal bank account and used at his discretion without reimbursing her, and up until her father deeded the farm to her, all of which, we believe, removes any question as to whether the services of Vera Mae Simmons were gratuitous. See cases in annotation 7 A.L.R.2d 8 to 191.

A somewhat different rule applies to Vida Cromwell’s claim for her services rendered to her father. She was not a member of the family of Walter Simmons so as to invoke the statutory rule quoted above, 10 O.S.1951 § 16. She had married and left home, and at that time and since has maintained her home in Ada, Oklahoma. She furnished her own car and commuted back and forth from her home to the home her sister Vera was maintaining for her father on the land in question in order to nurse and assist in the care of her father, Walter Simmons. Under these circumstances, the rule is that the services of such adult child will not be presumed to be gratuitous, but that where such services are rendered and voluntarily accepted, a promise to pay is implied. Winkler v. Killian, 141 N.C. 575, 54 S.E. 540, 115 Am.St.Rep. 694; Ellis v. Cox, 176 N.C. 616, 97 S.E. 468; Nesbitt v. Donoho, 198 N.C. 147, 150 S.E. 855, 875; Patterson v. Rehfuss, 250 Ala. 508, 35 So.2d 330; Steel v. Steel, 12 Pa. 64.

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Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 214, 357 P.2d 949, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-simmons-okla-1960.