McEntarffer v. Payne

Decision Date17 November 1921
Docket Number21678
Citation185 N.W. 329,107 Neb. 169
PartiesEVA MCENTARFFER, APPELLANT, v. EMMA PAYNE ET AL., APPELLEES
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

APPEAL from the district court for Saline county: EDWARD E. GOOD JUDGE. Affirmed.

AFFIRMED.

Glenn N. Venrick, for appellant.

Charles H. Sloan, Frank W. Sloan, Thomas J. Keenan, J. A. Wild and F B. Donisthorpe, contra.

Heard before LETTON, DEAN and DAY, JJ., CORCORAN and GOSS, District Judges.

OPINION

GOSS, District Judge.

This action in equity was brought by Eva McEntarffer against the personal representatives, heirs and devisees of Benjamin Thompson for the purpose of enforcing his alleged oral agreement to convey land to her. The case was heard by the court, the relief prayed was denied and the action was dismissed.

About 1896, when she was five years old, plaintiff, an orphan, went to live with Benjamin Thompson and Rebecca, his wife, as arranged with plaintiff's mother on her deathbed. She continued to live with them until she was past her majority. She went by their name, was treated as if she were a daughter, and she treated them as if they were her parents. October 6, 1910, when she was about 19 years old she was married to Harry McEntarffer, with whom she has lived ever since. She claims that in February, 1911, she and her husband had an advantageous opportunity to go to South Dakota, but that Benjamin Thompson, being the owner of a farm of about 200 acres near Swanton, made plaintiff a counter proposition that, if she and her husband would go on this farm and assist him in caring for it, he would pay them the sum of $ 25 a month, and, at or before his death, he would give the farm to her; that she and her husband agreed to the proposition, entered upon the performance of the oral agreement, and continued therein up to the death of Benjamin Thompson on November 29, 1917; and that Thompson carried out his part, except that he failed to convey the farm to her or to devise it to her, but, on the contrary, provided by will that all his property should be converted into cash and the proceeds divided among his blood relatives as if he had died intestate. On his deathbed Benjamin Thompson made and delivered to appellant a deed to 80 acres of land, not a part of the farm in litigation here.

Appellant assigns error by the trial court in excluding the offered testimony of her husband and of herself as to conversations held with the deceased bearing upon the contract. This depends upon section 7894, Rev. St. 1913, wherein it is said: "No person having a direct legal interest in the result of a civil action or proceeding, when the adverse party is the representative of a deceased person, shall be permitted to testify to any transaction or conversation had between the deceased person and the witness." Appellant argues that her husband has no direct legal interest. We think the correct solution of this lies in the answer to the question: Will the husband gain or lose by direct legal operation of a judgment in this case? This was under consideration in Holladay v. Rich, 93 Neb. 491, 140 N.W. 794, and, because the husband has an interest in her real estate, under the present statute, which cannot be defeated by any act of the wife, it was held that the husband could not testify.

Appellant further argues that the defendants were not the representatives of the deceased, and therefore the testimony of McEntarffer on this point was admissible. This is fully answered in the negative by McCoy v. Conrad, 64 Neb. 150, in which this court quotes with approval Judge Sedgwick's opinion as trial judge, overruling a motion for a new trial: "If a party is so placed in a litigation that he is called upon to defend that which he has obtained from a deceased person, and to make the defense which the deceased might have made if living, or to establish a claim which the deceased might have been interested to establish if living, then he may be said, in that litigation, to represent a deceased person."

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