Tustin Et Ux. v. Isherwood, Exr.

200 A. 257, 131 Pa. Super. 522, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 250
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1938
DocketAppeal, 85
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 200 A. 257 (Tustin Et Ux. v. Isherwood, Exr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tustin Et Ux. v. Isherwood, Exr., 200 A. 257, 131 Pa. Super. 522, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 250 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

This is an appeal from thé order of the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County entering judgment non obstante veredicto in favor of defendant.

Plaintiffs sued to recover for services rendered testator and a jury awarded a verdict for $2400-

The plaintiff, Mary Tustin, a niece of decedent, was orphaned at the age of ten years, and for twenty-five years thereafter lived as a member of testator’s family until her marriage on September 22, 1920. Plaintiffs, after their marriage, maintained a separate home until they went to Florida in 1927, when they gave up their home and stored their furniture in Mr. Grimes’ barn. Decedent maintained and educated his niece at his own expense, although she had an estate of her own. Decedent was never married.

*524 Plaintiffs’ statement of claim avers that shortly after their marriage, testator requested them to come to his home and assist in caring for him and his property, and that in compliance with his request, plaintiffs took up their residence with testator and served him some seven months, after which plaintiffs lived apart from testator until the spring of the year 1928, when they resumed their residence with testator and continued to serve him until the latter’s death on November 5, 1931, at the age of eighty-five years.

Plaintiffs aver that their services were rendered at the request of testator and upon his agreement to pay therefor.

The case was tried before Judge Sayers and a jury. Judge Sayers’ term of office expired between the time of the verdict and the time of the argument of the motion for judgment, whereupon the same was argued before Judge Rowley of Mercer County, specially presiding, who, in an opinion filed, entered judgment non obstante veredicto in favor of defendant.

Mary Tustin performed the duties of housekeeper for the deceased. Alex Tustin performed all the duties that a man of the house would in connection with the garden, lawn, etc., and, in addition, took the decedent to church each Sunday and for numerous other car rides.

The following is a resume of the testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs: Erwin Lippencott who knew the deceased, Caleb Grimes, for over fifty years, testified that he was talking to Mr. Grimes about four years before the latter’s death. Mr. Grimes told him that he did not expect to buy an automobile because, as he stated, “I have got Alex Tustin to take care of me and I expect to pay him well for his labor.” Again Mr. Lippencott was talking to Mr. Grimes and his testimony was as follows: “Well, he was talking and I says to him, I says, I understand Alex is going to go West’, he says, ‘No’, he says ‘Alex is not going West’, he says, ‘I told *525 him and his woman that’, Alex and Mary is the way he stated it to me, ‘that if they stay with me and do my work I will pay them better and more than they can make going out there.’ ”

This latter conversation took place some time during 1928 or within three years of the death of Mr. Grimes.

Another witness, Harles Taylor, testified that he knew Mr. Grimes fifteen or twenty years; that he knew Alex Tustin for twenty years and Mary Tustin for ten or fifteen years; that Mr. Grimes told him sometime in 1929 that Alex Tustin took him to church every Sunday and that Mr. Grimes said he intended to pay Mr. Tustin for the trouble he had with him in hauling him around.

W. F. Graham testified that he had known Mr. Grimes for over fifty years, that either in 1928 or 1929 he had a conversation with Mr. Grimes about the services of Alex Tustin, a summary of which is as follows, “ ‘Yes, Alex is pretty busy,’ he says, ‘I have quite a bit to attend to,’ he says, ‘he always has hauled me,’ and he says, ‘he will yet,’ and he says, ‘I am going to stay right by him until the last minute,’ and he says, or I says, ‘Well, that’s worth something to Alex all right enough and a whole lot to you. ‘Yes,’ he says, ‘there’s thousands of dollars coming to Alex and he is going to have money sometime.’ ‘Yes,’ he says, ‘I will pay him and I will well pay him but Alex won’t let me pay for it now,’ he says, ‘I have offered to pay for gas a time or two and paid for it once.’ ”

The Reverend Edward O. Sebold was the deceased’s pastor at a church five miles from the residence of the deceased for a period of several years. In 1925 the deceased told Rev. Sebold that he would be compelled to withdraw from the church because his physical condition would not permit him to drive a horse the necessary distance. In March of 1926, shortly before he gave up the pastorate of the church, Mr. Grimes informed him that he had hired Alex permanently be *526 cause lie had sold Ms horse just recently, to take him wherever he cared to go. In another conversation, about June of 1929, at the home of Mr. Grimes,' the latter told him that he had put Mrs. Tustin in charge of the house and that Mr. Tustin was also there. Rev. Sebold was very much concerned because of Mr. Grimes’ financial standing and tried to find some way for Mr. Grimes to continue his attendance. He had Mr. Grimes and Alex Tustin to dinner one evening and Mr. Grimes agreed that if Alex would haul him to church he would pay him well. Again in June, 1931, or four months before Mr. Grimes died, Mr. Sebold talked to the deceased about an endowment for the church. At that time, Mr. Grimes told him that he was not leaving any stated definite amount to anybody because of the fact that he had Mr. and Mrs. ¡Tustin yet to pay and that he did not know exactly how much it was, but that it would run into several thousand dollars; that his funds were depleted, etc.

Dr. J. H. Hazlett, a physician, who attended Mr. Grimes professionally at intervals • during the last two years of his life, testified that he was in the latter’s home twenty or thirty times between the first of September, 1930 and the date of his death on Nov. 5, 1931, that on these occasions, he saw Mrs. Tustin managing the house as general housekeeper. Mrs. Jacob Yeager, wife of Jacob Yeager, county commissioner, testified to the same effect.

Joe Thomas testified that he rented a house to Alex Tustin on North Maiden St., Waynesburg, shortly after September 1, 1920; that the latter furnished it and got ready to move in but did not move in until the following spring, because he and his wife went over to take care of Mr. Grimes, although they paid rent during these six or seven months for their own home.

Snowden White, who lived across the street from the *527 home of Mr. Grimes for fourteen years from 1919, testified that the latter was not in good health a good bit of the time; that Alex Tustin and his wife were the manager and housekeeper of the home during four years of that period; that he saw Alex Tustin work in the garden a good many times and mowing the lawn, and doing some painting and different things; that he saw Mr. Grimes traveling in Alex Tustin’s automobile many times; that he never saw Mr. Grimes doing very much work around his place after Mr. Tustin got there; that Mr. Tustin seemed to do the most of the work. T. H. Shannon, attorney-at-law at Waynesburg, testified to like effect.

Dr. Charles W. Spragg, who lived two doors away from Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 257, 131 Pa. Super. 522, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tustin-et-ux-v-isherwood-exr-pasuperct-1938.