Brown v. Hamsmith

247 Ill. App. 358, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 52
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 28, 1927
DocketGen. No. 7,729
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 247 Ill. App. 358 (Brown v. Hamsmith) 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
Brown v. Hamsmith, 247 Ill. App. 358, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 52 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee filed a bill in the circuit court of Boone county against appellants, setting forth that he was the owner and in possession of certain real estate located in the town of Belvidere; that he acquired title thereto by warranty deed on February 20, 1912, and that on said date he, with his wife joining him, executed, acknowledged and delivered to his father, one James P. Brown, a mortgage securing a note in the sum of $4,600 due five years after date; that thereafter on March 2, 1914, appellee, with his wife joining him, executed, acknowledged and delivered to his said father another mortgage on said premises, securing two promissory notes of even date therewith for the principal sum of $3,000 each, given by said mortgagors to said mortgagee; that thereafter, on the 4th day of November, 1923, the said James P. Brown departed this life intestate, and that appellants Mary C. Ham-smith and Earle W. Brown were by the county court of said county appointed administrators of the estate of said deceased.

It is further averred in said bill that, prior to the death of the said James P. Brown, he delivered to appellee said notes and mortgages, stating at the time of said delivery, “Now, Frank, here are the mortgages and notes on your barn in Belvidere I have decided to turn them over to you now so that you will have your barn clear and you will be out of debt”; that complainant came into possession of said notes and mortgages at that time, and retained the same until after the death of his said father; that the said James P. Brown departed this life as above set forth, without having released said mortgages, and that complainant thereafter requested said administrators to release the same tendering proper releases therefor to be executed by them, with the necessary funds to cover the expenses incident thereto, and that said administrators had failed and refused to execute the same.

Said bill further averred that the complainant “is ready, willing and able to pay said administrators any sum or sums of money that may be adjudged by this Honorable Court to be due or payable from him to the estate of James P. Brown, deceased, and he tenders his willingness, readiness and ability to pay over or to amply secure payment of any sum or sums of money that this Honorable Court may ascertain, if any, and determine that your orator owes to said estate or to the said administrators representing said estate.”

Said bill avers that said mortgages constituted a cloud on his title, and prays that said administrators be ordered to execute proper releases of said mortgages, and that in default thereof a commissioner be appointed to execute the same.

To said bill of complaint, appellants Carrie R. Reed and James L. Brown, daughter and son of said deceased, filed answers, denying the material allegations of said bill. Appellants Mary Hamsmith and Earle W. Brown, administrators of said estate, filed a plea setting forth that Mary Hamsmith as such administrator had filed a petition for citation against appellee in the county court of DeKalb county on the probate side, under sections 81 and 82 of the Administration Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 3, ¶¶ 82 and 83, and charging in said petition for citation “that the complainant in the above entitled cause, Frank B. Brown, had in his possession the notes and mortgages described in the bill of complaint therein, claiming the same by an alleged gift from the deceased, “ * * that she is informed and believes that Frank B. Brown, one of the heirs of said estate, has in his possession or has concealed goods, chattels, moneys, effects, * * * belonging to said deceased in his lifetime * * *; and that said Frank B. Brown refuses to give to said administrators such knowledge or information, or to account for property of said deceased in his possession or control,” praying that appellee be cited into court, examined under oath, etc., and that the court “may make such order in the premises as the case may require.” It is further averred in said plea that appellee came into court “and submitted himself in person to the jurisdiction of said court and was sworn and examined under said citation as to the ownership of said notes and mortgages described in said bill of complaint, and the proceedings by way of citation and this said action is still pending and undetermined in the county court of DeKalb county. ’ ’ ‘

A replication was filed to the answer of appellants Carrie R. Reed and James L. Brown and it was ordered that the hearing on said plea be set for Saturday, November 28, 1925.

Said cause was subsequently reallotted for December 19, 1925, June 19, 1926, and July 24, 1926. It is conceded that no action was taken on July 24, 1926, and that there was no court on that day, and that on July 29 the following entry was made by the court, “that all defendants be and they are hereby ruled to answer instanter. It is further ordered that defendants not heretofore defaulted, being Mary Hamsmith and Earle W. Brown, are now held in default, and the court after hearing all the evidence orders that a decree be and the same is hereby granted.”

It is conceded and the record discloses that on September 27,1926, the presiding judge signed the following order: “The above and foregoing decree is hereby ordered and directed to be entered and filed, nunc pro tunc as of the 29th day of July, 1926; and the clerk of this court' is ordered and directed to so file the same, and thereupon said decree is to have the same force and effect and full force and validity as of the date of filing thereof.” . ,

An order appears, following the last-mentioned order, granting to the defendants in said proceeding, jointly or severally, an appeal to the Appellate Court “upon filing their bond in the penal sum of $200 with sureties to be approved by the clerk of this court within 30 days from the date of this order, and 60 days time allowed to file a certificate of evidence.”

An appeal bond was filed by appellants Mary Hamsmith, Earle W. Brown, James L. Brown and Thomas M. Clift, on August 18, 1926. The record discloses that the certificate of evidence was filed on September 9, 1926. The decree as filed held that the plea of former suit pending was not a bar to the relief prayed in said bill, and found in detail the facts averred in said bill, and that the said James P. Brown, father of appellee, had delivered to appellee said notes and mortgages in his lifetime as a gift to him as averred in said bill, granted the relief prayed for in said bill, and ordered that said administrators release said mortgages of record.

It is first contended by counsel for appellants for a reversal. of said cause that the court was without jurisdiction on September 27,1926, being the first day of the September term of the Boone county circuit, to enter an order directing the clerk to file the purported decree appearing in said record nunc pro tunc as of July 29, 1926, one of the days of the April term of said court, for the reason that there was no sufficient memorial paper or docket entry in the record or files of said court on which to base the findings and decretal order therein appearing.

The record discloses and it is conceded that the only docket entry made by the court on July 29 was the following: “It is ordered by the court that all defendants be and the same are hereby ruled to answer instanter.

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Bluebook (online)
247 Ill. App. 358, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-hamsmith-illappct-1927.