Clark v. MacDermott
Decision Date | 17 December 1909 |
Citation | 82 Conn. 572,74 A. 686 |
Court | Connecticut Supreme Court |
Parties | CLARK v. MacDERMOTT. |
Appeal from Court of Common Pleas, Fairfield County; Howard B. Scott, Judge.
Action by Frank P. Clark against Eliza C. MacDermott, administratrix, to recover for professional services and money expended. Plaintiff had judgment, and defendant appeals. Affirmed.
William H. Cable, for appellant.
Samuel Tweedy and J. Moss Ives, for appellee.
The court found in the defendant's favor upon the second count of the complaint. It also sustained the defendant's demurrer to the first reply to her third defense to the first count, whereby that defense became effective as a bar to the plaintiff's recovery upon that count for any item of his bill of particulars dated prior to January 16, 1905, the date of the receipt in full which was pleaded in bar. The court has found that the services described in the subsequent items were rendered by the plaintiff and of the value charged, and no question is raised upon this part of the finding. The defendant in her answer pleaded payment, and that her intestate deeded to the plaintiff a lot in Danbury equal in value to the services rendered subsequent to the date of the receipt in payment and satisfaction for those services. The court has found that such conveyance was made, but that, as pleaded by the plaintiff in his reply, the conveyance was a gift and was not given or received in payment of the debt.
It is claimed in behalf of the defendant that this finding was made without evidence, and we are asked to correct it. An examination of the evidence shows that there was ample to support the finding, and the correction therefore cannot be made. Hourigan v. Norwich, 77 Conn. 358, 368, 59 Atl. 487.
The plaintiff, in presenting his claim to the defendant against the intestate's estate, credited upon his bill as, "less allowed for lot," $250, which it is found was the value of the lot. The part of the bill which was barred by the receipt amounted to $244.50, and it is found that no payment was made in return for the receipt. The credit of $250 was made by the plaintiff under the belief that the receipt did not discharge any portion of his claim, and because he did not wish to receive from the estate more than the amount of his bill less the value of the lot. The defendant claimed that by so presenting his bill with the value of the lot credited the plaintiff was estopped to claim that the lot was a gift. The facts...
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State v. Stengel
...Freight, Inc., 138 Conn. 458, 463, 85 A.2d 907 (1952); Venezia v. Fairfield, 118 Conn. 325, 333, 172 A. 90 (1934); Clark v. Macdermott, 82 Conn. 572, 574, 74 A. 686 (1909); Selleck v. French, 1 Conn. 32, 33 (1814); we have never held the denial of such an award to be an abuse of The reasons......
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Downey v. Guilfoile
... ... allowable as damages for the detention of the amount found to ... be due to the plaintiff from the time her claim was ... disallowed. Clark v. Macdermott, 82 Conn. 572, 574, ... 74 A. 686 ... The ... rulings of the trial court upon the questions put to the ... plaintiff and ... ...
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Johnson v. Shuford
...who made it, is not conclusive except as to the person or persons who may have been misled or prejudiced by it. Clark v. Macdermott, 82 Conn. 572, 573, 574, 74 Atl. 686. The trial court has found that this instrument was not given because of the payment of any money to the plaintiff, but th......
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