Charbonneau v. Norton

263 Ill. App. 341, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 900
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 9, 1931
DocketGen. No. 35,140
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 263 Ill. App. 341 (Charbonneau v. Norton) 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
Charbonneau v. Norton, 263 Ill. App. 341, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 900 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action on contract for money claimed to be due for the support, maintenance and education of defendant’s infant children, Dorothy Norton and Helen Wray Norton, there was a trial by the court, a finding for plaintiff in the sum of $125, with judgment thereon, from which plaintiff has perfected this appeal, claiming that she ■ is entitled to a judgment for a larger amount.

The undisputed evidence tends to show that plaintiff did support, maintain and educate these infant children, who were respectively two and ten years of age at the time she received them, from March 1, 1924, until July 15, 1925.

By way of defense the affidavit of merits averred that defendant demanded the custody of the children and advised plaintiff that he would not pay for the maintenance and support of the children at her home; that plaintiff refused to give up the children to him, although he often demanded the custody of them; that after that time the children were held under the dominion of plaintiff against defendant’s will; that he was therefore not liable.

The material facts appear to be as follows: Defendant and Mary Louise Norton were married January 13, 1912, and Dorothy and Helen Wray were the only children born of that marriage. Dorothy was born September 9, 1914, and Helen January 29, 1922. Defendant ceased to live with his wife as her husband in 1921, and did not thereafter live with her. She died March 10, 1924. Prior to her death, and on or about July 31, 1923, she filed a bill for divorce in the circuit court of Cook county, Illinois, averring desertion, praying for a divorce, etc. Defendant was served by publication. December 6,1923, a decree of divorce was entered in the case which awarded the care and custody of these minor children to their mother, Mary Louise Norton. Ten days prior to her death and on the day she was taken to the hospital, she gave these two infant children into the custody of her sister, the plaintiff in this case. Plaintiff worked for a salary in a store and employed her mother, the grandmother of the children, to care for them in her absence. They were sent to school and were clothed at plaintiff’s expense.

Defendant says that he visited the children during the period from March 1, 1924, to July 15, 1925, about 15 to 20 times; that the children did not appear to be clothed to his satisfaction, but that he did not complain about that and he did not refuse to permit them to live there by taking them away; that he is a stock and bond broker earning from $300 to $400 a month. He testifies that after the death of the mother in the early part of May, 1924, when it first came to his knowledge that the children were with plaintiff, he went to plaintiff’s home and had a conversation with her in the presence of John J. Hickey, Mrs. Charbonneau, Mrs. Chalifoux, Mrs. Bennett and Ms daughters; that he told plaintiff he wanted to take the children home; that she replied nobody was going to take the children and that the mother had willed them to her; that he stated that was “quite foolish,” that it was not possible to will children. Defendant’s testimony is further: “She (plaintiff) said, ‘You are not going to take these children; she willed them to me and I am going to keep them. ’ I (defendant) said, ‘I want to take these children home and take care of them, that is what I came here for.’ She said, ‘You will not take them out of here. You abused and were mean to my sister, and I am not going to allow them to go.’ I said, ‘You and I have no quarrel. If that is the way you feel about it, I probably will have to take some further steps.’ I spoke to the children about not to be afraid. ’ ’

Defendant says he went back to plaintiff’s home in the middle of the same week and had a conversation with plaintiff when no one else was present; that he told her he wanted to take the children home, and he had refused for three consecutive years to support the children “in the conditions in which they should not be,” as he saw it; that plaintiff said, “they are willed to me and I am going to keep them. ’ ’ Defendant says that at the time he spoke of a previous situation he had relative to the children; that the governor of Indiana would not permit him to be extradited because of the conditions in which the children were being kept and because he refused to support them in those conditions.

Defendant further testified that he afterwards returned several times, and some time after September he told plaintiff that he came to get the children and that she did not have the equipment to take care of them; that then for the first time she told him that she wanted money for the care of the children, and that he again said to her that he would not support the children there when they were being kept against his wishes; that she said she was going to keep them and he was going to pay her for it, and if he paid her he could have them; that she followed him when he went on the porch and kept screaming, “Pay your debts and you can get your children. ’ ’

These conversations and interviews are denied by plaintiff, Mrs. Charbonneau, who says that defendant never asked that she return the children and never asked about the condition of the children; that she saw him about June 10, 1925, and that she did not see him from that time until the children went with him in July; that as a matter of fact, while she was employed during the day he would come and get the children and promise them care; that she never stopped them from going with him; that as a matter of fact the children went with their father voluntarily when they left for defendant’s home.

Dorothy testified that her father came to see her about six weeks after her mother’s death and talked with plaintiff; that he said he came to get the children but that plaintiff sgid they were to stay, with her; that defendant said to her in the presence of her aunt, “When you children are ready to come, let me know.” She said her father came to see her after that time; that on one occasion he said he came to take the children and that her aunt wanted him to pay $125; that plaintiff did not say the exact amount of money she wanted but she wanted money for taking care of the children; that her father said he would not pay for it; that her aunt said the children were to stay with her, and “Dad asked me if I wanted to come, but I didn’t say”; that her father afterwards came to the house in response to a telephone call from her, and at that time “We were all ready to go.” They were then taken to the home of defendant’s mother, 213 North Austin boulevard. When asked what caused her to pack up, Dorothy answered, “My aunt asked me if I would want to go live with my father. I left my aunt to go to my father.” She says that her wish to go to her father did not grow out of her own mind, but her aunt told her that if she wanted to go to her father she could do so. She says, “I called my grandmother and my father came over. ’ ’ She further says that her father told her twice that whenever she wanted to live with him to let him know; that she was not forced to stay with her aunt; that her father gave her spending money when he came.

No propositions of law or of fact were submitted to the court, and we are left in some doubt as to the theory upon which the trial judge made the finding and entered the judgment showm by the record. The evidence submitted by plaintiff as to the value of the maintenance and service provided for these children is not disputed.

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Bluebook (online)
263 Ill. App. 341, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charbonneau-v-norton-illappct-1931.