Trachte v. Estate of Utting

26 N.W.2d 254, 250 Wis. 97, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 243
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 N.W.2d 254 (Trachte v. Estate of Utting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trachte v. Estate of Utting, 26 N.W.2d 254, 250 Wis. 97, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 243 (Wis. 1947).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The appellant, Mildred Trachte, alleged in her amended complaint that in or about February, 1940, she entered into an oral contract with Mattie Utting (the deceased, who was her aunt), in and by which appellant promised and agreed to perform personal services, care, and attention for the decedent from the date thereof and to continue for and during her life, in consideration for which the decedent promised and agreed to bequeath in her will a cash legacy to be paid to claim *99 ant equivalent to and sufficient to provide her $200 per month for each month thereafter during the remainder of claimant’s life; that thereafter until the decedent’s death and in full and complete performance of and compliance with said contract claimant fully performed for decedent in all respects such services as she agreed were to be performed by claimant; that the decedent failed and neglected to perform her part of said contract and to make provisions in her will for compensating claimant under said contract, which was, at the death of decedent, and still is unperformed on her part. In his amended answer the special administrator alleged on information and belief that no such contract ever existed as alleged in claimant’s complaint; and he denied that claimant ever performed any personal services under the alleged contract or otherwise, or gave care and attention to the decedent.

On the trial of the resulting issues claimant, in order to prove her alleged contract with decedent, relied primarily upon testimony given by her witness and intimate friend, Russell Kuenzi, and by whom she was employed as his housekeeper, that on a Saturday afternoon in or about the month,of February, 1940, he accompanied the claimant from Madison, Wisconsin, where they then resided, to the Waukesha Springs Sanitarium at Waukesha, Wisconsin; that there in a room occupied by decedent the claimant visited with her, and that while Kuenzi was also in the room about fifteen minutes he heard the decedent say,—

“Mildred, I am getting older each day; and my physical condition is not so good. ... I need your companionship more and more, and help, all the time; and if you will continue to give me care and attention and personal services from time to time that I require, I will leave you by will a sum of money that will pay you $200 a month for the rest of your life;”

and that claimant replied, “Okay, Mrs. — Okay Aunt Mattie.” There is no testimony by any other witness that such words were used in such a conversation. But there is testimony by *100 claimant which could be deemed to be in corroboration of her claim that there was such a visit and that there were conversations on other occasions which could be deemed to corroborate the making of some contract. And in this latter respect some corroboration could have been inferred from circumstances on other occasions which were testified to by claimant’s daughter, if the court had considered that testimony credible.

On the other hand there was considerable evidence by the testimony of a number of other witnesses and by documentary proof, which amply and clearly sustained and warranted the court’s statements in the written decision, findings, and conclusions of law to the following effect. In his decision, Judge Kopp stated:

“Kuenzi, — in testifying as to the conversation between claimant and Mrs. Utting, — was positive this was in February or early in March, 1940, and the claimant also testified that, in company with Kuenzi, ‘she saw Mrs. Utting in Waukesha in her room at the Waukesha Springs Sanitarium late in February, 1940.’
“However, the defendant established beyond all controversy that Mrs. Utting left Wisconsin or Chicago in January, 1940, for Arizona, California, and Texas and did not return until some time in April. . . . The fact that there is such a wide discrepancy between the date claimed by claimant and the other proven facts as to the whereabouts of Mrs. Utting at the time of making the alleged contract casts grave doubt on the veracity of claimant and some at least of her witnesses. In cases of this kind there must be no uncertainty on vital issues. If the claimant be allowed to allege one day of the making of the contract she should not be allowed on the trial, when defendant has had no opportunity of checking the facts, to vacillate and say, in effect, ‘Well, it was made some time within a few months of when I stated.’ Against such a claim a defendant estate could not defend.
“Now, what are the proven facts independently established, keéping in mind that claimant and her only witness stated definitely that the alleged transaction occurred in a room in the Waukesha Springs Sanitarium ‘sometime late in February or *101 early in March,’ — not ‘sometime late in January or early in February,’ 1940. The records of the LaFayette Hotel, in Chicago, where the deceased lived, showed positively that she checked out January 24, 1940, and was not again registered until April 14, 1940. The clerk and manager of the hotel testified positively as to the accuracy of the books. He knew Mrs. Utting well. In fact, this testimony was introduced by the claimant herself. The testimony of Chester Smith and his wife, Ida Smith, of Phoenix, Arizona (a disinterested witness, he being a nephew of deceased), showed that Mrs. Ut-ting, the deceased, arrived in Phoenix, Arizona, late in January, 1940; that she stayed there until March 5th when he put her on a train bound for Los Angeles; that he saw her get off the train when she returned to Phoenix, March the 24th, and put her on the train March 27th bound for Tucson, Arizona; that they knew that she went from Tucson to El Paso for a period of a few days. Checks of the deceased to hotels in Phoenix, Los Angeles and El Paso corroborated this testimony almost absolutely. There was no check for her first week in Phoenix, but that is relatively unimportant; and the last check to the Hotel Cortex in El Paso, was dated April 9, 1940, presumably at the end of her stay; and she checked in at the LaFayette Hotel in Chicago April 14, 1940. It is seldom that the evidence can be procured from which it is possible to reconstruct the whereabouts of a person over a vital period of three or four months as definitely as has been established in this case. Not only the testimony of the witnesses is clear and convincing but it is almost entirely corroborated by documentary evidence. This establishes the whereabouts of Mrs. Utting from late in January of 1940 to April 14, 1940, as in the western part of the United States. If, therefore, there were no other testimony, the court would be compelled to find as an established fact that Mrs. Utting was not in Waukesha between late in January, 1940, and April 14, 1940.
“However, there is other testimony. Miss Hiller, who for more than twenty-five years was bookkeeper and assistant manager of the Waukesha Springs Sanitarium, was in court with the book which showed when guests and patients arrived at and left the said sanitarium. She testified that they were absolutely accurate and were almost entirely in her own handwriting ; and that those books showed that Mrs. Utting was *102 never at the Waukesha Springs Sanitarium in 1940 until sometime in the month of August. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W.2d 254, 250 Wis. 97, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trachte-v-estate-of-utting-wis-1947.