Stewart v. Brandenburg

383 S.W.2d 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 9, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 383 S.W.2d 122 (Stewart v. Brandenburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Brandenburg, 383 S.W.2d 122 (Ky. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

C. R. WALDEN, Special Commissioner.

This is an action by Clara Stewart against the executors of the estate of Emma Center for the value of the decedent’s estate or, in the alternative, for the reasonable value of plaintiff’s service to the decedent. The jury verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $4,500 was set aside by the trial judge, and [123]*123a judgment notwithstanding the verdict entered for the defendants. The trial court, pursuant to CR 50.03, ruled that in the event the judgment n. o. v. were held erroneous, then the verdict is flagrantly excessive and a new trial should be awarded. The parties will be designated plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff is the wife of the decedent's nephew. She claims that over a period of many years prior to the decedent’s death in 1959 she rendered various services to the decedent such as gathering eggs; washing her clothes; cleaning her house; driving the decedent to town for shopping, to visit friends, to attend funerals; gathering the vegetables from her garden and occasionally cooking for her. She maintains that the decedent repeatedly told her, “I won't pay you now but you will be paid later on” and, “You will get paid for this and you will be paid well.” Throughout much of the period in dispute plaintiff was employed in a full-time job working 5[4 days per week.

During the year 1958 plaintiff only saw the decedent on occasional visits. The nurse who attended the decedent during the four months preceding her death in September, 1959, testified the plaintiff never visited the decedent during that time. Various witnesses for the defendants testified that as late as 1953 the decedent was able to care for others who were ill. Another witness, who shared rooms in the same dwelling house as the decedent, stated that during 1958, one year before her death, she was able to and did take care of herself. Witnesses for the defendants deny ever hearing the decedent mention any payment or the expectation of making any payment to the plaintiff. Witnesses for the plaintiff, on the other hand, do recall the decedent’s statements that plaintiff would be paid for her services.

The general rule is that members of a decedent’s “family” cannot recover for ordinary and usual services furnished to the decedent unless there is an expressed or implied contract for the payment of such serv'ces. The law presumes such services gratuitous when rendered by relatives, and where a relative alleges the existence of a contract it requires clear and convincing evidence to overcome this presumption. As was stated in Thompson v. Close, 280 Ky. 720, 134 S.W.2d 635, 637 (1939), “the express agreement must be clear and convincing that such an agreement was made, and that casual or indefinite expression of an intention to pay, even by the execution of a will, are not sufficient.” Even though the plaintiff is not a blood relation of the decedent, she is the wife of the decedent’s nephew, and the testimony clearly indicates she is a member of the family group. Thus, the rule found in McWhorter v. Pitman’s Adm’r, 196 Ky. 618, 245 S.W. 133 (1922); Sword v. Moore’s Adm’r, 303 Ky. 507, 198 S.W.2d 215 (1946); and Allen v. Smith, 208 Ky. 207, 270 S.W. 782 (1925), is equally applicable.

Absent an express contract, a member of the family may recover for services rendered a decedent only where the services are of extraordinary nature or where there is an expectation of payment and a clear indication on the part of the decedent of intention to pay. The services in this case do not qualify as extraordinary but are those typically rendered by a member of the family group to one of the family who is sick or ill. The trial court properly set aside the jury verdict and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint.

Prior to the trial of this action the defendant took but did not file the deposition of the plaintiff. The trial judge sustained plaintiff’s motion that this deposition be filed. The deposition inquired in some detail into plaintiff’s services to the decedent and into various statements allegedly made by the decedent indicating a possible intention to compensate plaintiff for her services. At the pretrial hearing the court ruled that the taking of the plaintiff’s deposition in which an inquiry was made into statements by the decedent did not constitute a waiver of the dead man’s statute. KRS 421.210(2).

Accordingly, at the trial of the action the court allowed the defendants to object to the [124]*124admissibility of all of plaintiff’s responses insofar as they contained statements made by the decedent.

The question is presented to the court, for the first time since the adoption of the Civil Rules, whether the dead man’s statute, KRS 421.210(2), is waived by the taking of a discovery deposition of the claimant against the decedent’s estate. Although under the Civil Code of Practice, § 606(8), a party could take the opponent’s deposition as if upon cross-examination, he could not use that deposition upon the trial of the case unless it had been filed prior to the trial. See Civil Code, § 585. A number of cases of this court have held the mere taking of the deposition of a claimant regarding transactions with a decedent removed the disqualifications imposed by the dead man’s statute and allowed that witness to testify to these transactions at the trial. Wilhelm v. Orlamuende’s Adm’x, 228 Ky. 719, 15 S.W.2d 511, (1929); Arnold v. Cocanaugher, 170 Ky. 712, 186 S.W. 488, (1926) ; Coy v. Pursifull, 249 Ky. 57, 60 S.W.2d 93, (1933) ; Hull v. Simon, 278 Ky. 442, 128 S.W.2d 954, (1939). Some Kentucky cases have held the critical element constituting waiver of the dead man’s statute to be not the taking of the deposition and inquiry regarding transaction with the decedent, but rather a filing of those depositions as a part of the record. Young v. Mitchell, 302 Ky. 551, 194 S.W.2d 965, (1946) ; Biehl v. Biehl’s Adm’x, 263 Ky. 710, 93 S.W.26 836, (1936) ; Arrington v. Size-more, 241 Ky. 171, 43 S.W.2d 699, (1931). In Young the deposition was filed. The court held that the appellants had thereby waived the incompetency of the testimony. In Biehl the court held an unfiled deposition did not constitute waiver. And in Arring-ton the court reaffirmed this view, citing the fact that a litigant can take a deposition and never file it. Accordingly, until 1953 the rule of law in Kentucky appears to have been the waiver of the dead man’s statute depended solely upon the filing of a deposition of a witness whose testimony involved inquiry into transactions with a decedent

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383 S.W.2d 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-brandenburg-kyctapp-1964.