Stinson v. Bridges

129 A.2d 203, 152 Me. 306, 1957 Me. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 24, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 A.2d 203 (Stinson v. Bridges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stinson v. Bridges, 129 A.2d 203, 152 Me. 306, 1957 Me. LEXIS 7 (Me. 1957).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

Plaintiff has been awarded a jury verdict in his action of assumpsit to recover from the estate of Dora C. Stinson the fair value of services which he asserts he performed for the intestate during her last four years of life. The pleading was the general issue. Defendant has addressed to the Law Court his motion for a new trial.

Defendant contends that the verdict was against the evidence and the weight of the evidence and that the damages granted were excessive.

*307 Defendant’s intestate died at the age of 88. She was not a relative of the plaintiff.

Plaintiff did not testify. There was real evidence consisting of four written exhibits and of transcribed interrogatories and answers thereto of the plaintiff’s sister, admitted without objection. The oral evidence was supplied by one witness for the plaintiff and one witness for the defense.

The account annexed of the plaintiff claims the amount of $6,255 for labor performed through the period ranging from February 5, 1950 to September 8, 1954. Defendant’s intestate died on May 12, 1954. The verdict was for $3,000.

The four exhibits are evidence that during the relevant span of time the defendant’s intestate requested the plaintiff to send to her a meter reading, the defendant’s intestate paid to the plaintiff the aggregate sum of $96 and that the defendant’s intestate paid $58.37 to one Joyce inferentially for lawn mowing.

The plaintiff’s single, attending witness contributed testimony which, in paraphrase and by excerpts, was as follows:

After the death of Isaac, husband of Dora Stinson, the plaintiff performed services about her home for the three or four year period until Dora’s death.
“The only way I can answer that is by being there all through the years and almost every day going to the home myself and what I see, and I see him there almost continually during that three or four year period.”
“I have seen him to work in the garden at times, I have seen him helping on a hundred and one different small jobs. Such as taking the banking boards, putting them on in the fall and taking them off in the spring.”
“I have seen him working on the storm windows, putting them on in the fall and taking them off, and *308 I can. go down the line a dozen things, small things like that.”
“I have seen him tend the stoves and the furnace.”
“I could name a list of small things.”
“Well, if they wanted an errand, going to the store, he did that a number of times. I would say anything that come up a man should do with an old lady that could not do a man’s work of any kind that he was there a big part of the time during the four year period to do it.”
“Never had occasion to keep any track of it except what I see day after day, I wasn’t interested in it.”
“I don’t think there was a day or a night very often during that period but what he was there sometime through it.”

Asked how long the plaintiff would stay the witness replied that he could not state exactly but that it would vary from day to day from one hour to five or six. He said that Dora Stinson was at the place all the time, that plaintiff was there only when Dora was and that the residence was larger than ordinary. The witness was a next door neighbor for twenty years and was at Dora’s house almost every day. He carried the mail there almost every night and kept track of the situation. Dora was at Rockland in later years in the winter, from October or November to April or May and during such absences the home was closed. The witness paid little attention to the house during Dora Stinson’s absences. Dora Stinson hired the lawn mowed. Witness saw the plaintiff at times working in Dora’s gardens.

“I would say he was around every day a certain period of it as far as I know during the four years.”
“I couldn’t swear all them days he was working.”
“As far as one neighbor knows another’s affairs he was there and filling the gap.”
“Between Isaac’s death and her death that is what he was doing.”

*309 Plaintiff’s sister in response to written interrogatories had made answers which were admitted at the trial without objection and which in tenor or quotation are as follows:

Witness lived near the intestate for the last five years of the latter’s life. Dora Stinson was the widow of an uncle of the witness and plaintiff and “a very hard person to live with, very demanding.”
“I could not live all the time with her. I was there every day and nearly every night.”

From 1950 until the time of Dora Stinson’s death the witness was at Dora’s house every day at least once.

“Well, kind of company for her, kind of cleaning up the house and you know, taking over like that.”

The plaintiff was at Dora’s house “about every day” and more than once, doing the following:

“Everything, he painted, made door steps, he shingled, why he was always doing something, things that she wanted him to do, planting a garden, he used to hoe the garden.”

Plaintiff took care of the place generally for Dora. As to the fires:

“Yes, she had oil and he kept the thing filled up, used to go there every night and do that.”

Plaintiff “did carpentry work around the place.”

Raymond did all the work except the housekeeping and “then he was caretaker when they would go to Rockland in the winter.”

Nobody but the plaintiff did any of the chores around Dora Stinson’s place after Isaac died.

“When she was in her bed, that was two or three days before she died, she could look out of her window and see the buildings and would say, ‘Oh dear, that needs fixing, or that needs painting, but Raymond will see to that.’ ”

*310 Defendant presented one witness, a near neighbor, who testified that in the falls, springs and summers from September 1952 until the death of Dora Stinson the plaintiff in the observation of the witness did no work for Mrs. Stinson save for isolated instances of his shingling of the roof, of his putting banking boards about the house and of his trimming some tall grass.

In cases such as this where claims for compensation are made after death of the alleged debtor who can no longer dispute the matter the tasks of the jury and court are not light or enviable.

The principles of law involved here have been fully and repeatedly stated throughout our reports so as to be commonplace far beyond any need of any considerable citation.

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Related

Estate of White
521 A.2d 1180 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1987)
Morrill v. United States
228 F. Supp. 734 (D. Maine, 1964)
Savino Dagnello v. Long Island Rail Road Company
289 F.2d 797 (Second Circuit, 1961)
Britton v. Dube
147 A.2d 452 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1958)
Gardner v. Paradis
143 A.2d 746 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1958)
Gregory v. James
140 A.2d 725 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1958)
Johnson v. Parsons
135 A.2d 273 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A.2d 203, 152 Me. 306, 1957 Me. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stinson-v-bridges-me-1957.