Opinion
Civ. No. 1913.
December 13, 1916.
APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco denying a new trial. J.M. Seawell, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
William A. Nunlist, for Appellant.
James Gartlan, for Respondent.
On the twenty-seventh day of June, 1907, the defendant corporation entered into a written agreement with one Patrick Hayes, plaintiff's testator, whereby, in consideration of the sum of one thousand nine hundred dollars paid to it by Patrick Hayes, the defendant obligated itself to provide him with board, lodging, and medical attendance during the remainder of his life. The agreement also provided that if either of the parties thereto became dissatisfied one with the other, it was optional with either to terminate it, and, in the event of such termination, the money paid was to be returned to Patrick Hayes, less thirty dollars per month for the time he had remained with the defendant. After being in the home for a little more than a month, Hayes became dissatisfied with the life there, and requested his attorney to procure a return to him of his money. The attorney, thinking that his client's dissatisfaction was but temporary, deferred taking any action in the matter, but on September 3, 1907, finding him insistent, he prepared a notice stating that Hayes elected to terminate the contract and to have refunded to him the amount thereupon due. This notice was not served upon the defendant until September 20th. In the meantime, on September 5th, after a short absence Hayes returned to the institution conducted by the defendant very ill, and the defendants, in order that better care and medical treatment might be furnished Hayes, had him removed to St. Mary's Hospital, where, at defendant's expense, he remained until his death, on September 22d. At the time of the service of the notice of termination of the contract Patrick Hayes was unconscious, from which condition he did not recover until the following day, in the afternoon, at which time he told one of the sisters in attendance upon him that he was not dissatisfied with the home, that he did not want his money back, and that if he should die it was his wish that the money paid by him to the defendant should be retained by it.
Plaintiff's contention to the contrary notwithstanding, we think the court did find that the decedent was not dissatisfied with Our Lady's Home, and we also think such finding is sustained by the evidence. In our opinion the notice alone did not terminate the contract. The record shows that the decedent, on the third day of September, instructed his attorney to terminate the contract. On the 5th of September Patrick Hayes was taken seriously ill and remained until his death under the care of the defendant. On September 20th, when perhaps it was discovered that the decedent's illness would probably prove fatal, the notice of termination was served. But, as just stated, the decedent continued all this time a member of the home, and on September 21st repudiated any steps that he theretofore had directed to be taken looking to a dissolution of his arrangement with the defendant. We think the court was correct in arriving at the conclusion it did.
The order denying the motion for a new trial is affirmed.