Wagner v. Hambright

197 Iowa 170
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 Iowa 170 (Wagner v. Hambright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Hambright, 197 Iowa 170 (iowa 1924).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

[171]*171X. Executors and ADMINISTRATORS : services rendered to decedent: persons in family relation. [170]*170W. F. Philbrick died testate and without issue at Perry, Iowa, December 28, 1920. His will was admitted to probate March 29, 1921. On October 21, 1921, appellee [171]*171filed a claim against his estate for services alleged to have been rendered to testator during the period between January 1, 1877, and February 24, 1892. The allowance of the claim was resisted by the executor upon the grounds that it' was barred by the statute of limitations, and that, during the time the services are claimed to have been rendered, appellee was a member of the testator’s family, and that they were rendered without any expectation of compensation on the part of either. Testator’s father died about 15 years after appellee became a member of the family, and his mother about 1912. Appellee entered the home of testator’s father and mother about 1873 or 1874, when she was three years of age.

The family at that time consisted of the deceased, who never married, his father, mother, and appellee. They resided on a farm in Dallas County near Dallas Center. A few years later, the farm was conveyed to the testator, who sold the same and purchased another farm of 140 acres near Perry with the proceeds, to which the family then moved. When appellee was about 18 years of age, the family, which then consisted of testator, his mother, and appellee, moved to Perry, where they resided until 1892, when appellee was married. Her husband died in 1898. She then returned to the family home,, where she resided until her marriage to Wagner. The following 13 years were lived upon testator’s farm in North Dakota. When she left the farm in North Dakota, appellee returned t.o Perry, where she has since resided. During the years of her absence, testator and his mother lived together in Perry until her death, which occurred about 1912. The father of testator was afflicted with a form of epilepsy, was unable to perform hard lab.or, and required some care. He died shortly before the family moved to Perry. The mother, although not robust, was able to assist in caring for the household. . :

The services for which appellee claims compensation were rendered by her between the ages of 7 and 22 years. She was permitted, without appropriate objection; to- testify .to the rendition of services upon the farm, such as milking, husking corn, putting up hay, feeding calves and hogs, and performing other general farm labor. Other witnesses corroborated her testimony [172]*172as to these services. The executor introduced no evidence on his own behalf.

2. work and’ ' ■byBpersoneiin°es family relation. Proof of-a contract between appellee and testator is made to rest entirely upon her testimony and that of other members of her family and of one or two disinterested witnesses as to certain alleged statements and declarations m&de at various times by the deceased. In none 0f these alleged declarations does testator appear to have referred even remotely to an express agreement or understanding that compensation was to be made for the services rendered by appellee. As all of the services were, in fact, rendered while appellee was a member of the family, the presumption that they were rendered gratuitously must be negatived by her. Scully v. Scully’s Executor, 28 Iowa 548; Donovan v. Driscoll, 116 Iowa 339; Hankins v. Young, 174 Iowa 383; Snyder v. Nixon, 188 Iowa 779. The evidence, outside of the proof of the services, relied upon to negative this presumption and to prove that they were rendered and accepted with the expectation upon the part of both testator and appellee that compensation was to be made therefor is as follows:

Appellee testified that, on several different occasions, she overheard testator say to his father or mother that: “If I would stay with him and do well by him in working, - that he would pay me well when he was done with this. ’ ’

Alvin Hillman, appellee’s son-in-law, testified that,' upon an occasion when they were repairing the fences on -the North Dakota farm, the testator said that he wanted the-fence “put up good, because he intended to leave her the farm for what she [Mrs. Wagner] had done for him when he was done with it, — that was the main part of it.. He mentioned that she had worked for him, or helped him out, — that is all he said.”

Grace Long, a married daughter of appellee’s, testified that she heard testator say that he “would provide for mother for Avhat she had done for him, when he was done with his property. I heard him say that he intended to do what he could for mother when he was done with his property, for what she had done for him,- — the work she had done on his farm. Heard him make those statements.on different occasions.”

Frances Wagner testified that she heard testator say in [173]*173Perry that “when he was gone, he wanted to provide for mother; that she would have enough, she would not have to work so hard as she had. He said she had worked for him when she was younger, and had helped him. ’

Except the incident last mentioned, and the declarations referred to in the testimony of appellee, all of the above statements are claimed to have been made by testator while appellee resided upon his farm in North Dakota, when he visited her.

Mrs. Fred Kennison, a resident of Perry, testified that, in a conversation with the testator shortly before his death, he said, in answer to a question from her:

“Well, Mrs. Kennison, Etta won’t have to work so hard after I am through with what I have, because I have left it so she won’t need to work so hard.”

During his last illness, and while in the hospital, testator had a conversation with his physician, in which, it is claimed, he said in substance that “there was one person that he had not treated right, and that he wished — that he expected to change his will and fix that up. That, upon another occasion, he said that he wished to change his will, that it did not satisfy him as it was, that he wanted to — he wanted to — I didn’t understand what he wanted, I did not know until after the time that he told me that was the lady [meaning appellee] that he had not treated right.” The witness further testified that he heard testator say to appellee:

‘ ‘ I have not treated you right. I want you to get what you can. ’ ’

What is there, if anything, in these statements and declarations by the deceased from which the implication of an express promise to pay appellee for her alleged services may be drawn? In none of them did the testator admit, or even remotely refer to, a contract. In all of these various conversations he referred to the time when he would be done with his property. There is no direct evidence in the record of an express contract. Appellee took no part in any of the conversations which she overheard between the testator and his father or mother, and his remarks' were, therefore, manifestly not directed to her. There is no evidence, except such as might be implied from knowledge of the declared purpose of the testator to reward her, out of his [174]*174property wben be was through with it, that the services were rendered in expectation that compensation would be made therefor. Appellee does not fix any time when she overheard the conversations to which she testified.

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Related

In Re Estate of Docius
247 N.W. 796 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
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240 N.W. 618 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1932)

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197 Iowa 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-hambright-iowa-1924.