Bostwick v. Skinner

80 Ill. 147
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 80 Ill. 147 (Bostwick v. Skinner) 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
Bostwick v. Skinner, 80 Ill. 147 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, filed by appellants in the court below, against appellees, and several other parties as to whom it was dismissed on the filing of answers, praying to he allowed to redeem from a certain mortgage and for other relief.

The mortgage is upon lands, now estimated to be very valuable, in Cook county, in the immediate vicinity of the city of Chicago, and was executed by appellants’ ancestor, John Bostwick, on the 1st day of May, 1855, to the appellee Mark Skinner, to secure the payment of $19,000, and accruing interest. Answers were filed by appellees, as also cross-bills, praying the removal of a cloud cast upon their titles by appellants and their solicitors. The cause was heard on bill, answers, cross-bills and answers thereto, and evidence, and the court thereupon decreed in favor of appellees, denying the prayer of appellants’ bill, and granting the relief prayed by the cross-bills.

Appellees deny that appellants’ ancestor, John Bostwick, through whom alone they make claim, ever had, inequity, any interest in the lands, and assert that his purchase, or attempt to purchase, was made as the agent and trustee of the appellee John M. Krum; that Iirum furnished all the money that ever was paid by Bostwick for the land, under his contract to purchase; and that if any deed was ever, in fact delivered to Lost-wick for the land, vesting in him the legal title, such deed was so made and delivered in violation of his agreement with Krum, and that he, consequently, had but the naked legal title, which he and those claiming under him are, in equity, chargeable as holding in trust for Krum. We incline to the opinion that a fair preponderance of the evidence would justify this conclusion. It is quite clear that Bostwick had no money of his own, and no credit; that when he purchased the property in controversy, he had no source from which to obtain the money for its payment, except the promise of Krum to advance the amount; and Krum’s version, that he agreed to buy the property for him, as an indemnity for previous losses, and that the money paid on the contract of purchase was advanced by him on the faith of that agreement, is not successfully impeached or overcome by other evidence.

But, aside from this view of the case, we are "of the opinion that whatever interest appellants may have had in the lands was disposed of by the sale of the administrator of Bostwick’s estate, and the deed made pursuant thereto, and we shall, therefore, restrict our remarks to this branch of the case.

That Bostwick died intestate in Cook county, and that all the property administered was there situated, is conceded; but appellants insist that his actual place of residence was Upper Alton, in Madison county, and that, therefore, the Cook county court had no jurisdiction over his estate, and all orders made by it appointing an administrator and directing a sale of the lands for the payment of debts, etc., were absolutely void.

The record shows, that on 17th day of ¡November, 1855, Benjamin F. Downing presented his petition, in writing, to the Cook county court, wherein he recited “ that John Bostwick, late of Cook county, died in Chicago on or about the 12th day of September, 1855, leaving property and effects ” in that county, “ but leaving no last will or testament, as far as known or believed ” by the petitioner; that said property and effects consisted of land in the county, worth about $500; that said deceased left a widow and two or three children, who reside at Alton, Ill.; that the petitioner was a creditor of said estate to the amount of $50, for board—and the petitioner, therefore, prayed that the administration of the estate of the said John Bostwick, deceased, might be granted to him. This was subscribed and sworn to by Downing.

The court, on the same day, made the following order:

“ This day comes into court Benjamin F. Downing, and makes application for administration of the estate of John Bostwick, deceased.
“ And it appearing to the court, by satisfactory proof, that John Bostwick, late of Cook county, died in said county on or about the 12th day of September, A. D. 1855, leaving property and effects in this county, but leaving no last will and testament;
“ And it appearing to the court that said Benjamin F. Downing is a creditor of said deceased, and by law entitled to administration of the effects whereof he died possessed, it is
“ Ordered, that administration of the estate of said John Bostwick be granted to said Benjamin F. Downing, upon his entering into bond in the penal sum of $1000, payable and conditioned as the law directs.
“And the said Benjamin F. Downing, having produced the bond, with Paul Cornell and Lewis W. Stone as his securities, which is approved by the court, and taken the oath of office as such administrator, it is
“ Ordered, that letters of administration issue to him accordingly.”

Passing over the intermediate steps in the administration of the estate, all of which are set out in full in the record, we find that, at the March term, 1856, the administrator having previously given proper notice by publication, presented to the Cook county court his petition, in writing, praying for a sale of so much of the real estate of which the intestate was seized and possessed at the time of his death as should be sufficient to pay the debts due from the estate.

The petition contains an allegation that the petitioner “ is the legal administrator of the estate of John Bostwick, deceased, late of Cook county.”

A guardian ad litem was appointed, who answered for the defendants, requiring full proof to be made of the allegations in the petition.

The court decreed a sale of the lands in conformity with the prayer of the petition..

The question is, can appellants, in this collateral proceeding, go behind these orders of the Cook county court, and inquire into their correctness?

Upon their face they show that the court had jurisdiction, and unless it is now competent to raise an issue of fact to test their verity, they are conclusive. To hold that this may be done, especially after the lapse of so many years, would, obviously, be fraught with great evil, in view of the commercial character which custom has, in this country, affixed to lands, and the frequent and great fluctuations in value to which they are incident. In many cases, by reason of the deceased having had more than one domicile, occupied alternately, as pleasure or convenience dictated, or by reason of a change in domicile being in process of consummation at the time of death, it may he a question of much perplexity to determine with entire accuracy what was the actual domicile; and if the question, however deliberately passed upon by the county court, is to be considered as always open to proof whenever any one may choose to raise it in a collateral proceeding, it is fair to presume that different results might be reached by different tribunals, or even by the same tribunal, at different times, varying in each case to conform to the preponderance of proof then produced.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ill. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostwick-v-skinner-ill-1875.