Sullivan's Adm'r v. Sullivan

59 S.W.2d 999, 248 Ky. 744, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 313
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 59 S.W.2d 999 (Sullivan's Adm'r v. Sullivan) 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
Sullivan's Adm'r v. Sullivan, 59 S.W.2d 999, 248 Ky. 744, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 313 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Tbe undisputed facts in this case as shown by the .record are: Many years ago Wood Sullivan, Sr., mar *745 ried his first wife, and took up Ms residence on a farm in Boone county, Ky. There was horn of that marriage two children, Wood Sullivan, Jr., and the appellee, and plaintiff below, Yirgie L. Sullivan. In the latter-part of 'the nineties (the- exact date not being shown in the record) the mother of those two children died, the-boy being about ten years of age, and his sister (plaintiff) aboiit three years his junior. Some two or three, years later Wood Sullivan married a second wife, the decedent of the appellant and defendant below, she-being referred to in this record as Ella Sullivan, her-maiden name before her marriage not being anywhere-stated. Some five years after that marriage, plaintiff,. Yirgie Sullivan, married a man of her own name and they moved away from her parental roof on a farm located about eight or nine miles distant. The son. Wood Sullivan, Jr.,- also married and moved away from his father’s home, leaving only the two old people as-occupants of their residence. They continued to live there for some fifteen years longer when they moved to the village of Petersburg in Boone county, where, they resided until each of them died, the husband dying in January, 1930, and his surviving widow in the following December of the same year. The appellant and plaintiff below, John Acra, was appointed and qualified as administrator of her estate.

The second Mrs. Sullivan, defendant’s decedent, was an industrious woman, but she soon became afflicted, following her marriage with Wood Sullivan, and acquired 'the morphine habit and later in life she developed a dropsical affliction. In 1907, when plaintiff' had become the mother of some children, Mrs. Wood Sullivan had a severe attack of pneumonia and plaintiff was immediately sent for, either at the request of her stepmother or of her father, and she went to their home where she remained some three or four weeks nursing Mrs. Sullivan, and looking after the management and running of the household, there being no servants in the family. Periodically after that, and extending up, to 'the death of Mrs. Wood Sullivan, the latter would become entirely disabled to perform her household duties, and would also during her attacks become bedfast and needed the services of some one in looking after the-household affairs, and also in taking care of her personally. Those attacks and occasions occurred upon an average of at least four times each year. When *746 they -would occur, either Mr. Wood Sullivan, as long as he lived, or his wife, would send for or telephone to plaintiff, informing her of the situation and requesting her to come to their home and perform such services, which she in every instance did, leaving her increasing family alone to be taken care of by her husband. All the testimony in the case, including that of some four ■or five physicians, who attended Mrs. Wood Sullivan •at different times during that, period, completely established the facts as we have stated them. Along about the time of the convalescent period of the pneumonia •attack, Mrs. Wood Sullivan, according to the uncontra■dicted proof in the case, expressed not only her gratifi■cation for the attentions paid to her and the services • rendered by plaintiff, but also stated that she expected, intended to, and would compensate her for the work she was performing by devising to her all her property, or •at least a sufficiency thereof for the purpose. It is shown that at that early date such statements were made in the presence of plaintiff, and counsel for the estate in ■cross-examining the witness so testifying asked him what plaintiff said on that occasion and the answer was: “She said all right.” Prom that time forward, we repeat, plaintiff continued to perform similar services whensoever requested by Mrs. Wood Sullivan, or her husband, and the former continued to repeat her •determination to make compensation' in the manner indicated. At one time after her husband’s death she ■called upon a neighbor to act in the capacity of witness to her will, in which she stated that she was going to' •carry out her promise so frequently made, and arrangements were made for the execution of the will on the next day, but for some cause it was not carried out.

After Mrs. Wood Sullivan’s death plaintiff made ■out an account against her estate for $25 per week for a total of seventy-six weeks, amounting to $1,900, which was properly proven under the statute (Ky. Stats, sec. 3870), and it was presented to defendant after his appointment as administrator, and payment demanded but it was refused, followed by plaintiff filing this •action against the administrator (whom we shall hereafter refer to as defendant) to recover the amount of the proven account. The answer put in issue all material averments of the petition, and upon 'trial the jury, under the instruction given to it by the- court, returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $550, upon *747 which, judgment was rendered. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled and he prosecutes this appeal,, relying, through his counsel, chiefly and mainly as a ground for reversal, that the court erred in overruling' defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction offered at the close of plaintiff’s testimony,' and also at the close of all the testimony. The chief reasons urged in support of that argument are: (a) That the petition declared on an express contract, and which, it is insisted, the testimony does not support, but that at best, only facts authorizing a recovery upon an implied contract are proven, and on which recovery may not be had unless declared upon, which was untrue in this case, and (b) that because of the relationship of the parties (stepmother and stepdaughter) the presumption would be indulged that the services were gratuitously ren-' dered and which presumption the’ testimony does not. overcome. An additional ground urged for a reversal is that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence, but that ground is not seriously argued, and we conclude-that the testimony furnishes no basis therefor. It will, therefore, be put aside without further reference thereto, leaving only our subdivisions (a) and (b) of ground (1) to be discussed and determined, and which we will now proceed to do in the order mentioned.

At the outset it may be stated that the opinions of' courts, including this one, in framing their opinions have misapplied the term “implied contracts,” and have apparently embraced within it all contracts that were proven only by circumstances, and where there-was no direct and express proof of their making, and of their precise terms. Hence, it has been quite common for our opinions, as well as those of other courts, to designate and refer to, as implied contracts, instances where the amount of recovery was necessarily based upon a quantum meruit in 'the absence of direct proof of an agreed amount fixed in the contract as the measure of compensation for its nonperformance, the law being that in such cases the measure of recovery is the reasonable value of the services.

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59 S.W.2d 999, 248 Ky. 744, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivans-admr-v-sullivan-kyctapphigh-1933.