Springer v. Springer's Ex'x

89 S.W.2d 624, 262 Ky. 121, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 771
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 1, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 624 (Springer v. Springer's Ex'x) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springer v. Springer's Ex'x, 89 S.W.2d 624, 262 Ky. 121, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 771 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Affirming.

Appellant, son of Charles Springer, deceased, sued appellee, executrix of the estate, for $3,000 for services alleged to have been rendered during the last five years of his father’s lifetime.

*122 Appellant claims in his pleadings that during the period mentioned he cultivated the farm, cared for livestock, and did all work necessary in farming. He says his father was in bad health, practically helpless, and required his constant help in caring for the farm. It is pleaded that the alleged services were rendered at the special instance and request of the decedent, and that appellant relied upon the promises of deceased to “fully compensate him,” and his promise to provide a sum amply sufficient to fairly compensate him in his last will. He alleges that decedent breached his agreement because he only left him $400 by his will, „ which was not an amount sufficient to pay him for his services, and failed to compensate him for such services, which he says were reasonably worth $12 per wieek for the five-year period, and he asks judgment in the sum of $3,000.

Appellee, denying the allegations of the petition, affirmatively alleged that there was a contract between deceased and appellant, in which it was agreed that he was to cultivate his father’s farm on a crop-sharing basis, and that appellant did nothing on the farm not contemplated in said agreement. She alleges that if appellant did perform any sort of service beyond such as were covered by the crop contract, same was gratuitous. She also alleges that appellant was left $400 by his father’s will, which sum is greater in amount than would reasonably compensate for services so rendered, if any. She asks dismissal of the petition, or, in case of adverse judgment, that the $400 be set off against same.

Trial was had, and at the close of the testimony for plaintiff, the appellee moved for a directed verdict, upon which the court did not then rule, but reserved his ruling until all testimony was heard, when upon a renewal of the motion same was sustained over objection and exception by appellant, and it is on this ruling of the court alone that the appeal is prosecuted. The question presented is as to whether or not the proof adduced on behalf of the appellant measured up to the quality necessary to carry his case to the jury. The only witness who testified on' the question of services rendered in thie furtherance of any sort of express contract, or to any facts or circumstances that would tend to uphold an implied contract between the parties, was a son of appellant. This witness admits that he was away from his home for, perhaps, more- *123 than half the time during the five years from 1923 to 1928 (the period covered in the suit), and he does not show a broad knowledge of what occurred when he was at home. He says in substance, that his father spent about half his time working on his grandfather’s place, cultivating crops, building and fixing fences, attending livestock, mowing and storing the hay, and “took care” of the ditching.

The witness admitted that his father had an agreement with deceased whereby appellant was to cultivate corn, oats, and wheat, and that under this crop-sharing contract appellant was to get one-half the corn and two-fifths of the wheat and oats, he paying for threshing. This working agreement continued over a long period. The only items mentioned which might not have been contemplated in the cropping contract are the repairing and building of fences, mowing and storing hay, and attention to livestock. On the matter of cutting and storing of hay, he does not undertake to show how much of this was done, or the length of time consumed in this labor. As to the livestock, it was admitted that deceased only had four or five milk cows and at times their calves, and a couple of work teams. The volume, extent, or value of this labor is not shown. On the fence building proposition, the witness was quite át sea. He said there was a considerable stretch of fence built, and much repairing but when pressed to estimate the amount, he could not say, until counsel reminded him that an ordinary city block was about 300 feet, asked the witness to estimate the length in city squares, and he replied that it would be “four or five hundred squares anyway,” which, if the witness intended to adopt 300 feet as representing the distance between two intersections on one street, would mean more than twenty miles of fencing, whereas four miles of fencing would be all that is required to surround 640 acres.

Asked if he knew about any agreement between appellant and deceased “as to how the farm should be worked and how he should be compensated and paid,” he answered, “Grandfather said he would pay him, and so father wanted to buy part of the ground that laid back of us, and he said, ‘Bill, it will be yours some day anyhow,’ that’s the words he said.”

In a general way, showing anything that would indicate a discussion as to work or pay, the witness *124 said, ‘ ‘ Grandfather said four or five times, he would pay for the work father was doing, but he never paid him, or at least I never1 heard of him paying anything. ’ ’

Several other witnesses, about six in number, some; neighbors, and some employed on the decedent’s farm,, testified that appellant had worked on his father’s farm;; had built and repaired some fencing, and had mowed, and stored some hay. One witness says appellant helped make some posts. Yery few of them knew of any-work outside of the cultivation of corn, oats, and wheat, and perhaps the gathering of hay. They say they had seen appellant “farming, plowing, patching fences and. hauling out manure.”

The only witness, other than the son of appellant, who testifies to anything, which by a stretch of imagination could be twisted into a contract, testified about some fencing, how much he did not know, and when asked if he had ever had a conversation with deceased about appellant, said, “Well Mr. Springer told me some-two or three times that his son had asked to buy a piece' of land off the .side of the creek, right across from, where the building is, and he said it ‘weren’t no use for him to buy it because it would not be great while until it would belong to him anyhow.’ ”

Of these six witnesses some three or four testified as to the value of farm services generally. None of' them undertook to fix the value of the items above mentioned, and none to any facts which would imply a. contract.

The record shows that appellant owned, cultivated, and lived upon a farm of about 58 acres, immediately adjoining his father’s 156-acre tract; that the son kept at all times more livestock than the deceased, and that, they were grazed on the farm of deceased in common with his cattle; that the deceased kept farm hands employed the greater portion of his time; that his widowed daug’hter lived with him, and not only cared for him, but looked after the farm, even to the extent of doing-some of the manual labor; that the deceased was able to. pay, and did pay punctually for services rendered him'.

Counsel for appellant relies mainly on Kellum v. Browning’s Adm’r, 231 Ky. 308, 21 S. W. (2d) 459, and Stidham et al. v. O’Neals’ Adm’r, 245 Ky. 667, 54 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 624, 262 Ky. 121, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springer-v-springers-exx-kyctapphigh-1935.