Tarver v. Lindsey

137 So. 93, 161 Miss. 379, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 263
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1931
DocketNo. 29530.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 137 So. 93 (Tarver v. Lindsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tarver v. Lindsey, 137 So. 93, 161 Miss. 379, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 263 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On June 26, 1930, within the time allowed by law, appellant probated her claim against the estate of S. A. Eastep, deceased, f'or board and lodging from November 10,1927, to October 31,1929, at the rate of fifteen dollars per month amounting to the total of three hundred fifty-five dollars. The administrator admitted, after investigation on his part, that the claim was just and owing; but on November 15, 1930, Mrs. J. 0. Barnes, one of the distributees in said estate, filed her protest and objections against the allowance of said claim or any part thereof, which objections upon a hearing by the chancellor were sustained, and the claim was disallowed.

The testimony, which is undisputed, shows that the deceased, Eastep, was a confederate veteran, and at the time of his death on October 31, 1929, was about eighty years old. He had never married, and with whom or how he had lived previously to the date next herein mentioned is not shown in the record, except for an inference to be drawn from a casual answer of one of the witnesses to the effect that a short time theretofore he had been living with a niece by the name of Brazier. He had no surviving brother ' or sister, and his nearest relatives *382 were nephews and nieces, living in widely separated communities, but apparently the claimant, who was a niece, lived in the same community where the deceased had resided.

The husband of claimant testified that on the 10th day of October, 1926', Mr. Eastep came to the home of claimant and stated to the said husband of claimant that he desired to come and live with claimant and her said husband, “if you don’t charge too much board.” The husband referred the matter to his wife, the claimant, who was then and there present, whereupon Mr. Eastep turned to her and asked her what she would charge him for board, and she replied in the form of the interrogatory, “Will fifteen dollars a month be too much?” to which Mr. Eastep responded that the amount mentioned would 'be agreeable to him. The witness Hill, the husband of one of Mr. Eastep’s nieces, testified that some time about Christmas of said year 1926 he went with his wife to visit Mr. Eastep and finding him at claimant’s residence, inquired of him whether he expected to make that his home, to which Mr. Eastep replied in the affirmative and added in explanation that he had made arrangements with Mrs. Tarver, the claimant, to live with her and to pay her fifteen dollars a month board. The testimony of these two witnesses is undisputed.

The testimony is undisputed also that, from the time Mr. Eastep came to claimant’s home and made the contractual arrangement aforesaid, he remained there until his death; that during the entire time he was unable to work, moved about with the aid of a cane, was sometimes sick, was at nearly all times taking medicine, and was constantly visiting a physician, upon which visits claimant and her husband would accompany him. There is no suggestion in the record that claimant and her husband were not uniformly kind to the old man and considerate of all his wants. On the contrary, every inference to be drawn from the record bears out the affirmative of that inquiry; whereas the record is to the effect that none of *383 the others of his relatives were doing anything towards his care, save an occasional visit, and that, as to the objector in this case, she did not even do that.

The rule is well established in this state that claims for board or services furnished to a decedent must be established by clear and reasonably positive evidence and “that such claims and the evidence adduced to support them should be carefully scrutinized so as to prevent, as far as., possible, the allowance of unjust or fictitious demands.” 24 C. J., p. 404; Bell v. Oates, 97 Miss. 790, 53 So. 491; Hoyle v. Smith, 113 Miss. 729, 74 So. 611. But this does not mean that the solicitude for the integrity of decedents’ estates shall be pushed to any such an extreme as! that those who have reasonable and fairly well-substantiated claims of the nature here involved shall be treated with any less consideration before the courts than others who are required to apply there for the adjudication of their demands. Unjust and fictitious claims are to be rejected, certainly, and all claims of the nature here before the court must be cautiously examined, certainly; but we must not forget that, when a claim of this character, for the board of, and watching over, an old and physically dependent person, is a just claim, there is none other more just or meritorious.

We think the undisputed testimony of the two witnesses above mentioned is sufficient to establish an express contract to pay board at the rate of fifteen dollars per month, and certainly so when taken in connection with the circumstances hereinafter to be mentioned. The testimony of the said two witnesses has some direct corroboration in the testimony given by the circuit clerk of the county, who states that in the summer of 1929 Mr. Eastep said to him (said clerk) on an occasion when Mr. Eastep had bought a cold drink, that he (Eastep) would have to quit buying those drinks; that times were hard ; that he could not draw his pension money; and that he did not see how he was going to pay his board. There is *384 here, at least, an acknowledgment of an obligation to pay board and an admission against any such theory as that he was residing with the claimant upon terms of gratuity.

But the said testimony of the circuit clerk, as above recited, has a further and an important bearing upon this case. There is the following presumption: "When a person not a member of the immediate family — by which is meant, in this connection, those who have- not in the ordinary course of the family life 'lived under the same roof — comes without special invitation to another person to board or to live, there is the presumption that, if the person so coming to live or to board is financially able, he will arrange to pay a reasonable board, and will make some agreement so to do. This has its foundation in' the presumption of honesty. The testimony now discloses that, when Mr. Eastep came, at his own invitation, to the home of claimant and. arranged for board, he was, as he knew, then financially able to pay and to continue to pay the agreed amount. And thus the testimony that the contract was then made so to pay is strengthened and in this case made amply sufficient.

But upon like foundation there is also the presumption, in cases of claims for board and the like against the estate of a decedent, that the stipulated amount has been paid when due or reasonably near the due dates, if during all the while the decedent was well able to pay, and had on hand the current funds so to do. And it now turns out that deceased was able to pay, and was able at the time, in the summer of 1929, when he was telling the circuit clerk that because of hard times and the failure to draw his pension money he was afraid he could not pay his board; for, as the administrator has discovered, he had on deposit at that very time seven hundred dollars in bank, and, when he died soon thereafter, on October 31, there was found on his person cash in the sum of five hundred dollars and forty-five cents, and his *385

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 So. 93, 161 Miss. 379, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarver-v-lindsey-miss-1931.