Baughman v. Baughman

215 Ill. App. 620, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 98
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 21, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 Ill. App. 620 (Baughman v. Baughman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baughman v. Baughman, 215 Ill. App. 620, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 98 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Eldredge

delivered the opinion of the court.

Sherman E. Baughman died intestate September 8, 1916, at his residence in the City of Taylorville, Christian county, Illinois. He had been twice married, his second marriage having taken place several years after the death of his first wife. By his first wife, he had six children who survived him at the time of his death. He was also survived by his second wife, Miranda E. Baughman, and one child, Pearl Baughman, appellees. Before his second marriage, he drew up an informal antenuptial contract which was signed by appellee, Miranda Baughman, but which does not appear to have been executed by himself and was decreed to be invalid. During his last illness, he started to arrange for a settlement of his property among his children by means of a contract and had advised and consulted with an attorney for that purpose, but the settlement was never consummated. At the time of Sherman E. Baughman’s death, his daughter by his second marriage, Pearl Baughman, was a minor, who would come of age in July, 1917. When he was seeking to settle his affairs by an agreement between his wife and his children during his last illness, Lome Bulpitt, a son-in-law of Mrs Miranda Baughman, who had married a daughter born to her through a former marriage, on behalf of his mother-in-law and his sister-in-law, Pearl Baughman, advised with Mr. John E. Hogan with reference to their rights in the property of Sherman. E. Baughman, in the event of his death. After the death of Sherman E. Baughman, Warren Baughman, one of his sons by his first wife, interviewed Mr. Hogan with a view of employing him to represent the interest of the children by the first marriage and was told by Mr. Hogan that he had already advised with the other parties.

After the death of Sherman E. Baughman, by arrangement between his widow and the children of his first wife, Ernest Hoover and Warren Baughman were appointed coadministrators, Ernest Hoover to represent the widow and her daughter Pearl and Warren Baughman to represent the interests of the children by the first marriage. Ernest Hoover employed Mr. Hogan as his attorney and Warren Baughman employed Mr. W. B. McBride and Mr. L. J. Taylor as his attorneys in administration of the estate.

On September 28, 1916, a bill for partition was filed by Pearl Baughman by her next friend, Lome Bulpitt, as complainant, in which her mother, Miranda Baughman, the heirs of Sherman E. Baughman by his first wife, the said administrators of the estate of Sherman E. Baughman, deceased, and several tenants were made parties defendant. Hpon the filing of said bill for partition, appellants employed William M. Provine as their solicitor to represent their interests in the suit for partition and Mr. Provine filed an answrer and cross-bill on their behalf. Mr. John E. Hogan, solicitor for the complainant in the bill, was appointed guardian ad litem for Pearl Baughman, minor. Miranda E. Baughman employed Mr. George T. Wallace as her solicitor, who prepared and filed her answer to the bill and cross-bill. Before the case was heard, on account of illness and death in his family, Mr. Provine withdrew as solicitor for appellants and they employed Mr. Taylor and Mr. McBride in his place.

In the answer and cross-bill of appellants, it is averred that the bill did not include all the real estate owned by Sherman E. Baughman at the time of his death and set out several lots and parts of lots in the City of Taylorville and the Village of Mt. Auburn in which Sherman E. Baughman owned undivided interests, and also that certain necessary parties defendant were not made parties to the bill; that the bill incorrectly described the farm land situated in Section 7, Township 14 North, Range 1 West of the 3rd P. M., in that the description included all of Section 7 while, as a matter of fact, a 2-acre tract therein had long since been conveyed and was not the property of Sherman E. Baughman at the time of his death; that by reason of the antenuptial contract, the widow, Miranda E. Baughman, was not entitled to dower; that Miranda. E. Baughman and Pearl Baughman took no interest in the real estate mentioned in the farm land described as Section 7 for the reason that all the purchase price for said section had been furnished by-the mother of appellants and that the lands had been purchased by Sherman E. Baughman for their mother and with her money, but taking title in himself and thereby taking title only in trust for her and that upon her death the title passed to appellants in fee simple free from any claim of dower or title by Miranda E. Baughman and Pearl Baughman.

The original bill was thereafter amended so as to correctly describe the lands in said Section 7 by omitting the 2-acre tract therein and also by including the omitted property mentioned in the answer and cross-bill and making additional necessary parties defendant.

A hearing was had upon the issues presented by the amended bill, the answers thereto, the cross-bill, the answers thereto and the replications to the respective answers. Much evidence was introduced by the respective parties. A decree was entered holding that the antenuptial contract was void and that the proof was not sufficient to establish a resulting trust, and finding that the interests of the parties in the real estate were as set out in the amended hill of complainant. Appellants prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court from this decree, but were unsuccessful in their contentions and the decree was affirmed. Baughman v. Baughman, 283 Ill. 55. After the case was remanded to the Circuit Court and redocketed, a petition was had and the real estate set off to the respective parties in accordance with their interests as found by the decree. Thereafter a motion was made by the solicitor and guardian ad litem of Pearl Baughman, as complainant, to tax solicitor’s and guardian ad litem’s fees in said cause as part of the costs of the proceedings. Evidence was heard upon this motion and the sum of $2,000 was allowed as a joint fee for the solicitor and guardian ad litem, one-seventh of which was to be paid by each of the principal defendants. This order in part is a.s follows: “This cause coming on to be heard upon the motion of the solicitor and guardian ad litem of complainant, to tax solicitor and guardian ad litem fee in said cause; and it appearing to the court that John E. Hogan was solicitor for the complainant and was also by appointment of this court, guardian ad litem of the infant complainant, and that the rights and interests of all parties in interest are properly set up in the bill of complainant herein, it is ordered that the sum of $2,000 which the court finds to be a reasonable fee for solicitor’s and guardian ad litem for complainant, be taxed as part of costs of this proceeding; and it is further ordered that the costs and expenses of this proceeding be paid by the parties in the following proportion, to-wit: * * * and that the same be paid within forty days of this date, and that in default thereof execution issue therefor.”

Appellants objected to the allowance of the taxing of these fees against them and this appeal is from the order allowing the same.

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Bluebook (online)
215 Ill. App. 620, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baughman-v-baughman-illappct-1919.