While Clara Novak was sick, her daughter helped her in many ways. Clara died, and Janie then claimed that she was entitled to be
paid for the ser- vices she had rendered her mother. This claim was opposed by three brothers and sisters who also ren- dered services to the mother. They claimed that Janie was barred because of the presumption that services rendered between family members are gratuitous. Janie claimed that this presumption was not appli- cable because she had not lived with her mother but had her own house. Was Janie correct?
No Janie is not correct, it is reasonable to view the services provided as a gratuitous service. Janie not living with her mother does not change the fact that the services provided is seen as charity or a gift. You can give a gift of service without having to live with the person receiving said services and besides there was no contact or agreement of payment to this effect when the services were happening. Janie, if she wanted to do so should have entered into an agreement first, she cannot do something for free and later charge for that service without an agreement before the service was provided.
The answer is Sensorimotor stage. During this first phase of development, children gets familiar the world
and increase knowledge through their motor and senses movements. As children intermingle
with their surroundings, they go in the course of an astounding amount of cognitive growth<span> in a comparatively short era of time.</span>
Glaciers carve a set of distinctive, steep-walled, flat-bottomed valleys. U-shaped valleys, fjords, and hanging valleys are examples of the kinds of valleys glaciers can erode.