Achilles v. Achilles

28 N.E. 45, 137 Ill. 589
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 45 (Achilles v. Achilles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Achilles v. Achilles, 28 N.E. 45, 137 Ill. 589 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a bill filed at the May term, 1890, in the Circuit Court of Sangamon County by the appellee, as the widow of Louis Achilles, deceased, against appellants, as the heirs of said Louis, for the purpose of setting aside an ante-nuptial agreement between the appellee and her deceased husband, and also for partition and for assignment of dower and homestead. The Court below held the agreement void for fraud, and decreed accordingly. From such decree the present appeal is prosecuted.

The deceased was a widower, 77 years old, when the agreement was made, and had no children at that time, nor when he died. The appellants are his sisters and nephews and nieces. The appellee was a widow, named Sarah A. Wine-man, and-was 64 years of age when the agreement was made. She had one son by her first husband, an only child named Charles H. Wineman, 35 years old and in business for himself. The ante-nuptial agreement bears date January 4,1884, and was recorded in Macoupin County on January 6, 1886. The marriage took place on January 7, 1886. The deceased had made a will on October 3, 1884, which was revoked by the subsequent marriage; he lived with appellee as his wife until February 3, 1890, when he died without having made another will, and leaving appellee, his widow, and appellants, his only heirs at law. When the marriage took place and prior thereto, the deceased lived in Carlinville, and appellee in Virden, and Charles H. Wineman in Auburn. After the marriage Mr. & Mrs. Achilles lived in Carlinville, in the upper story of the building owned by him and hereafter referred to, for about two years, when he bought a piece of property in Auburn, and they went to the latter place to live.

■ At the time of the marriage the deceased owned the building in Carlinville mentioned in the agreement, worth $3500.00; a farm near Carlinville worth $4000.00; other property in darlinville worth $1500.00; Missouri laud worth $3000.00 ; the house and lot in Virden mentioned in the agreement, worth $500.00; personal property and good notes and bonds worth from $8000.00 to $10,500.00. The homestead property in Auburn, bought after the marriage, and in which Louis Achilles and his wife lived for two years, and were living when he died, was worth $25.00.00. At the time of the marriage, appellee had dower in 500 acres of land, yielding her, after paying taxes, an income of from $500.00 to $700.00 a year; She was boarding in Virden and paying about $3.00 per week for board.

The ante-nuptial agreement provided, that, during the married life of the parties, all their property, real and personal, which they then had or might acquire in the future, should be held severally, and not jointly, and each one should exercise full control over his or her individual estate; that, upon the death of either, the survivor should not inherit any of the property of the deceased, or have any interest whatever in it, except as provided in said contract, but said property should descend to the other heirs of the deceased; that all individual expenses, such as clothing, traveling expenses, etc., should be paid by the party contracting such indebtedness out of his or her individual estate; that, should Louis Achilles die before Mrs. Wineman, she should have, as long as she remained his widow, the free use either of the upper story of his brick building in Carlinville, or the upper story of his frame house near the depot in Virden, with one half of the lots on which the house was standing, for use as a garden or yard room, and should also receive, as long as she remained his widow, $200.00 per annum, payable semi-annually out of his estate.

The alleged ground, upon which it is sought to set aside this agreement, is that the appellee was induced to enter into it by the fraudulent representations of the deceased as to the extent and value of his estate. It is charged, that he represented to the appellee, that he owned nothing but the brick. building and the frame house mentioned in the contract, worth only about $4000.00, when as matter of fact he owned other property, as above described, to the amount of about $19,-000.00 or $20,000.00. Whether the deceased did or did not make such misrepresentations as are charged against him, and whether or not the appellee was induced thereby to sign the agreement, are questions of fact, and before noticing the evidence, it becomes necessary to dispose of a preliminary question as to the admissibility of certain testimony given by Mrs. Achilles.

The cause had been referred to a Master to take proof. The complainant below, who is the appellee here, offered herself as a witness before the Master, and the defendants objected to her examination on the ground that she was not a competent witness; but the examination was allowed to proceed, and she was examined in chief in her own behalf, and the defendants "then cross-examined her. Upon the hearing, the defendants made a motion to exclude her testimony as thus taken before the Master, which motion was sustained by the court, and no exception was taken by the complainant to such Tilling- The testimony was properly excluded by the trial court. Mrs. Achilles was a party to the suit, and the defendants were adverse parties defending as the heirs of a deceased person. She was, therefore, an incompetent witness under section 2 of chapter 51 of the Revised Statutes in regard to Evidence and depositions in civil cases.

But counsel for appellee claim, that, inasmuch as, by the terms of said section 2, a party to any civil action, or person directly interested in the event thereof, although the adverse party sues or defends as heir, may be called as a witness and be competent to testify as such when called by such adverse party, and inasmuch as the defendants, being the adverse party to Mrsi Achilles, cross-examined her, and called out, from her, testimony material to the issue, they thereby called "her as a witness, and her cross-examination was thereby made competent, and may be offered by either party. We do not think that the defendants waived their right to move to exclude the testimony upon the hearing, because they cross-examined the witness. The Master, to whom a reference is made to take proofs, does not pass upon objections to the competency of testimony. He merely notes the objections as made, and leaves their validity to be determined by the court. As the objecting party cannot know in advance what the decision of the court may be, a failure to cross-examine before the master may deprive him of the opportunity to do so if his objection is overruled. The case of Capen v. DeSteiger Glass Co. 105 Ill. 185, has no application here, because there a party was objecting to evidence called out upon his own cross-examination of a competent witness whose direct examination was unexceptionable.

Counsel claim that they had a right to offer the cross-examination upon the hearing. If this were so, they did not make any such offer. When the court sustained the motion to exclude the deposition, the whole of it—both the direct and cross-examination—was excluded. The cross-examination was not considered by the court, but the ease was decided upon the other evidence. Because the deposition happens to be in the record, counsel ask this court to consider a cross-examination which was not taken into consideration by the court below.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 45, 137 Ill. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/achilles-v-achilles-ill-1891.