Blair v. Allen

237 Ill. App. 257, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 168
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 27, 1925
DocketGen. No. 7,420
StatusPublished

This text of 237 Ill. App. 257 (Blair v. Allen) 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
Blair v. Allen, 237 Ill. App. 257, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 168 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Jett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity instituted by appellant, W. H. Blair, administrator of the estate of Isabella A. A. Cline, deceased, against appellee, Walter H. Allen, in the circuit court of Peoria county, to set aside a gift and transfer made by Mrs. Cline to appellee, Dr. Allen, on the 8th day of February, 1922, of certain government bonds and promissory notes aggregating in the neighborhood of $24,000. In this opinion the appellant will be called complainant and appellee the defendant.

The bill of complaint alleges that the complainant is the administrator of the estate of Isabella A. A. Cline, deceased, and that she died February 10, 1922; that she was the owner of said notes and bonds which she delivered to defendant on February 8, 1922; that the defendant was then, and for many years prior thereto, had been her physician and confidential ad-visor in business matters; that she was not mentally competent to transact business intelligently at the time of this alleged transfer and that she was under the undue influence of the defendant at the time, and that the delivery was made by her by reason of the defendant taking advantage of the confidential relationship.

The bill prays that the alleged transaction be set aside and that the bonds and notes be ordered returned by the defendant to the complainant. To which bill the. defendant answered and admitted that the complainant is the administrator of the estate of the deceased, and that she was the owner of the securities described in the bill of complaint and the defendant asserts that they were delivered to him by the deceased as a gift in consideration of the care, nursing and medical services rendered by the defendant and his family to the said Isabella A. A. Cline and the further consideration of love and affection.

The defendant admits that prior to the 12th of September, 1921, the said Isabella A. A. Cline lived in Edelstein, in Peoria county, and her husband at times lived with her.

The defendant in his answer states that the deceased was of the age of about 67 years, and she had theretofore become afflicted with cancer of the breast and had undergone certain treatments and operations without success, and the disease had progressed to such extent that on September 12, 1921, the deceased asked the defendant to take her to his home for treatment, which he did, and she remained in his home from said last date and was cared for by the defendant and nursed by the wife of the defendant and other nurses until her death.

Defendant admits that the deceased was ill and much of the time was confined to the house but she was not at all times confined to the bed. He denies that due to the assistance of physical disease and otherwise, and on account of her advanced age, the said Isabella A. A. Cline became weakened and impaired in mind as well as in body and for the period of at least a year before the time of her death she was wholly incapable of transacting business in an. intelligent manner or protecting her own interests, and was of unsound mind, but avers the fact to be that she did transact her own business affairs, made loans and collected interest, made leases and collected rents, and handled her own business in her own way until the time of her decease.

Defendant in his said answer states that the said Isabella A. A. Cline was the owner of 400 acres of land in Akron township, Peoria county; that said land was of a value, to wit, $500 an acre; that it was in a high state of cultivation; that she rented said land, transacted the business and looked after the collection of the rents.

The defendant further answering says that she had other business and other lands and interests, to wit, a farm in the State of Nebraska, and that she had other moneys and loans in addition to the notes and bonds given by her to this defendant, and that she collected the interest on the same and looked after and attended to her own business affairs up until the date of her decease and that she did it in an intelligent businesslike manner.

Said defendant admits he is a regular licensed physician and surgeon under the laws of the State of Illinois, practicing his profession in the town of Alta, in said Peoria county, and at the time of the death of Mrs. Cline and for many years continuously thereto, and throughout her last illness, was and had been the attending and family physician of said Isabella A. A. Cline and denies that he was the only physician of said deceased in her said illness as is alleged in the bill of complaint.

Further answering defendant says that in 1897 the said Isabella A. A. Cline intermarried with Alfred E. Allen, who was an uncle of the defendant, and thereafter she was a friend of him and his family, and he has been in the confidence of the said Isabella A. A. Cline and at numerous times he has gone to her home and cared for and nursed her through spells of illness, and the wife of the defendant particularly in January, 1914, nursed her through a siege of erysipelas, and again in April and May, 1918, nursed her through an illness of smallpox.

This defendant answering further says that said Isabella A. A. Cline, when she was well and when she was ill, stated to him and his family that they had been better to her than anyone else, and that she intended before her death to make gifts to him for the many kindnesses he and his family had shown her. The defendant says he never asked her for any gift or the property mentioned in the bill of complaint, and that she of her own free will and accord, while of sound mind and memory, although weak in body, executed the indorsements and delivered to this defendant, beyond her control and without conditions, said notes and bonds absolutely as his own forever, and in so doing she merely carried out the plans she had often referred to and stated her intentions of doing in consideration of the kindnesses this defendant and his family had shown her.

The defendant denies he sustained the relation of her confidential agent and business adviser and as such transacted her business for her, but alleges the facts to be that the said Isabella A. A. Cline transacted her own business, and at times she left notes with him, and instructed him to collect the interest on the same and to give credit on notes to the makers when the interest was paid, and in doing so the nature of the business transacted by the defendant was under her instruction and directions and of a clerical nature altogether, and she gave all orders and directed the defendant as to the business.

The defendant also denies that he either directly or indirectly took advantage of any relation existing between himself and the deceased or that he ever wrongfully or wilfully in violation' of trust or relationship procured the said Isabella A. A. Cline to turn over to him large sums of money as in said bill of complaint alleged. This defendant denies that he ever exercised any undue influence over the said Isabella A. A. Cline or directly or indirectly suggested to her that she transfer, give or deliver to him any gift or gifts or any sums of money, notes or any other valuable thing.

Answering the defendant denies that the said Isabella A. A.

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Related

Bishop v. Hilliard
81 N.E. 403 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1907)
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265 Ill. 210 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1914)
Lang v. Lang
284 Ill. 148 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1918)
Pillsbury v. Bruns
134 N.E. 103 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 Ill. App. 257, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-allen-illappct-1925.