Smith v. Estate of Davis

230 S.W. 670, 206 Mo. App. 446, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 30
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 670 (Smith v. Estate of Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Estate of Davis, 230 S.W. 670, 206 Mo. App. 446, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 30 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

This controversy arises over a claim made by the respondent against the estate of Jackson Davis, deceased, which claim was first filed in the probate court where he recovered a judgment for $3800, and on appeal to the circuit court he recovered a judgment for $2200, and it is the latter judgment which forms the subject of this appeal.

Appellant assigns numerous errors in the trial of the cause but principally contends that under .all the evidence, when viewed in its most favorable light to the respondent, it fails under the law to support any judgment whatever, and as we have reached the conclusion that that contention is correct we will confine this opinion to the discussion of the law governing such eases under the proven facts.

Jackson Davis was a successful farmer, living near Republic, Missouri. He lived to a ripe age, leaving a considerable estate. Surviving him were two children to whom he left his property by a will. Many years prior to his death, on May 20, 1890, a carload of orphan children were sent from New York to Republic for the ■purpose of placing these waifs in responsible homes. *453 The claimant here at that time was eight years of age, and it fell his lot to be taken into the home of Jackson Davis. The evidence clearly shows that from that time until he was 21 years old he lived under the roof and at the home, and worked on the farm of his benefactor. When he became 21 years of age he married, moved away to a place of Ms own and has reared his own family. .He left the decedent’s household in 1903 and Jackson Davis died in December*, 1917.

.Respondent recites in his claim that during all of the time he was in deceased’s home he faithfully demeaned himself as a servant and employee, and that his services were reasonably worth the sum of $3,000; stating further that on various occasions during his lifetime Jackson Davis promised and agreed that if claimant would remain with him and serve deceased faithfully until claimant reached the age of 21 years, that he, deceased, at his death would leave him a forty-acre tract of land and that he would remember claimant in his will and otherwise make provision for him at his, decedent’s death. It is alleged, that claimant has never been paid anything for his services rendered, and that they were rendered in contemplation on the agreement. Judgment was asked for $3,000 to compensate him for the reasonable value of such services. There is no claim that claimant was ever adopted, and under the facts of the case when this claimant went into the home of the deceased, being a child of eight years of .age, the relation of loco parentis was created.

This is a suit for the reasonable value of services rendered and performed by the claimant to the deceased, claimed to be based upon a contract wherein it is charged that the deceased promised the respondent that he would pay him for Ms work and services, and that relying upon such promises the respondent performed the services, expecting to be remunerated therefor. The record before us, at best, is very hazy concerning the time respondent claims such a contract was made. Respondent’s *454 attorney in the opening statement to the jury, which is set out, recites that when he had reached the age of 18 years, Davis said to him; “Now, Fred, you are a good worker and you are about to reach the age of 18 years (italics ours); if you will stay with me and work, faithfully until you are 21 years of age, I will give you at my death forty acres of land, and I Avill see that you are cared for and I will take care of you.” In respondent’s statement of his case here, it is said that respondent’s theory is that when he reached the age of 14 years (italics ours) it was agreed between himself and Jackson Davis that if he would remain Avith Davis until he reached the age of 21 years, he being a good worker and to whom Davis showed more than an ordinary attachment, that he would be cared for at the death of Davis, but specifically so by being devised forty acres of land.

In summing up the evidence claimed to support a contract, respondent’s attorney, in his argument, recites that in view of the foregoing declarations of the deceased, we have his statements showing that a contract to meet all of the requirements was entered into between Fred Smith and Jackson Davis, and that such contract was in existence four years before Smith left the home of Jackson Davis. We may state, without going into detail, that respondent introduced some testimony of vdtnesses concerning conversations which they had with the deceased many years after the claimant had become of age and left the home of Jackson Davis. All of such declarations, at most, go no farther than to indicate an intention to bestow a bounty upon the claimant or make him the recipient of some property at his death. This testimony fails to meet the requirements necessary to establish an enforceable contract. [See Woods v. Land, 30 Mo. App. 176; Guenther v. Birkicht’s Admr., 22 Mo. 439; Brandy v. Ray, 156 Mo. App. l. c. 630, 137 S. W. 623; Bircher v. Boemler, 204 Mo. 554, 103 S. W. 40; Taylor v. George, 176 Mo. App. 215, 161 S. W. 1187; Crowley v. Dagley, 174 Mo. App. 561, 161 S. W. 366; Clow v. Worm *455 ington, 206 S. W. 415; Rose v. Mays, 139 Mo. App. 246, 122 S. W. 769.]

The testimony, which we will set ont more in detail, relating to conversations had with the deceased when the claimant was a member of his household took place sombwhere from seventeen to nineteen years prior to the taking of the testimony in this case, and it may he as well to revert to that testimony at this juncture, for if claimant has made a case at all it must depend upon the legal effect of these alleged conversations.

Witness S. A. Wise recites a conversation which he had with the deceased at his home in which the deceased said: “I think Fred will make a selection of a woman as well as yon did and I won’t begrudge making him an heir to my estate. I promised Fred that if he would stay with me until he was 21 that I would make him an heir to part of my estate.” The witness further testified that Fred was not there at the time, hut in answer to a question, which was, Q. “Did he tell Fred that he would do that?” his answer was, “Yes sir.” He further said that he did not know what Fred’s age was at the time hut that it was before Fred was married, and this witness had been married more than seventeen years. The witness further states that the conversation had never been called to his attention but once since 1902, and that was when Fred Smith came to him talking about the cáse.

W. W. Gilmore testified that in about 1900, when he was threshing wheat on his farm, Fred, the claimant, helped him and when he went to settle up he asked Mr. Davis, the deceased, whom he should pay, and that he said Fred needed some clothes and to pay him, that is, the deceased; that Fred was not a work hand, that he was just a boy he had raised and expected- to settle with him when he was 21 years of age for whatever work he, Gilmore, paid to the deceased. He stated that the deceased said that he had an agreement. with Fred to *456 give Mm board and what he ate, and that he told him he was going to give Fred a part of his estate.

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 670, 206 Mo. App. 446, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-estate-of-davis-moctapp-1921.