Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Garrett

99 N.E. 643, 255 Ill. 420, 1912 Ill. LEXIS 2229
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 N.E. 643 (Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Garrett) 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
Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. Garrett, 99 N.E. 643, 255 Ill. 420, 1912 Ill. LEXIS 2229 (Ill. 1912).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

In a condemnation proceeding filed in the superior court of Cook county in 1907 by the Chicago and Northwestern Railway Company against various owners of property included in the site now occupied by its new Chicago city passenger depot, the jury assessed the damages for the benefit of the owners of certain premises which for the purpose of this case may be described as No. 38 West Randolph street, at $22,000. All persons supposed to be interested in said property were made defendants, but before a finding was made by the court as to the owners, said $22,000 was in February, 1909, paid, by agreement, into the county treasury of Cook county for the benefit of the owners and parties interested, as thereafter’ to be ascertained. Appellees do not appear to have been made parties to the condemnation proceedings but filed their intervening or cross-petition on July 24, 1909, claiming that they were entitled to a part of said $22,000 fund. The controversy herein arises between the different claimants to said fund, appellants claiming as the heirs of Daniel Booth, deceased, while the appellees claim as the heirs of Joseph J. Kendrick, deceased, who owned the property prior to its being obtained by Booth. The trial court found that the heirs of Daniel Booth held title to an undivided third of the premises in trust for the use of appellees, and that the latter were entitled to one-third of the $22,000 deposited by the railway company with the county treasurer, and one-third of certain rents received by said Booth and his heirs, less such deductions as might thereafter be found proper.

The facts as shown by the record are, in substance, as follows: Joseph J. Kendrick died intestate May 7, 1857, seized of the premises in question, clear of encumbrance. On the front of the lot was a tavern kept by Kendrick and the family lived in a building at the rear. Kendrick left a widow, Mary Ann Kendrick, and one adult daughter, (who afterwards married a man by the name of Barker,) and four minor children: Adeline Louise, who afterward married a man by the name of Meyer; Eliza Jane, who afterward married one Jackson; Joseph Henry Kendrick and George W. Kendrick. Daniel Booth was a farmer and justice of the peace, residing in the town of Jefferson, Cook county. He appears to have been an intimate friend of the Kendrick family and to have transacted considerable business for them. The records of Cook county having been burned during the great fire, the details concerning the management, control and transfer of this lot prior to October,'1871, are uncertain. There were introduced on the trial a copy of an abstract covering certain years, a private memorandum book of Daniel Booth, a few scattered documents with reference to the guardianship proceedings, and some oral testimony. From these it appears that Daniel Booth acted' as administrator of the Kendrick estate, or at least performed the duties ordinarily performed by an administrator, and also acted as an agent in renting, and collecting the rents for, the property for the adult heirs and as guardian of the minor heirs. From the abstract in question it appears that August 16, 1859, he, as guardian of the four minor heirs, joined with the adult heir (Mrs. Barker) and the surviving wife of Kendrick, (who having re-married was then Mrs. Boedecker,) together with the husbands of the last two named, in giving a mortgage on the premises in question to James Booth. The amount secured by this mortgage does not appear. In Daniel Booth’s account book there is a charge against him for "Booth, $460,” which may or may not have been received on this mortgage. This item is not dated but appears in the accounts for the year i860. A credit in this book dated December 21, i860, reads: “Paid to J. Booth, principal and interest, $521.30.” At nine per cent interest this would be slightly more than would be due on the mortgage if the principal had been $460, and at ten per cent a little less. A note introduced in evidence, dated July 10, 1866, indicates that money was then drawing nine per cent, and the amount found due in the foreclosure hereinafter mentioned indicates that the interest rate of that mortgage was ten per cent. The record does not show any release of this earlier mortgage. December 21, i860, Daniel Booth, as the guardian of "the minor heirs, united with the adult parties that joined in the earlier mortgage to give another mortgage to James Booth on the property in question to secure $900. The account book does not show a charge for this amount, but we find no reason from the record to assume that the money derived from the mortgage, except the minors’ share, was paid to Daniel Booth. The accounts in the book in "question do not purport to be an account of the guardianship estate, and we might infer that the guardianship matters were kept in another account, as there is an item in this account book, “By settlement in favor of guardian, $228.92,” without any details as to what constituted that settlement. The items in the account book mainly concern rent and repairs on the property, which Booth would necessarily look after, if at all, so far as the adult owners were concerned, as agent and not as administrator. There are some documents and items in the record referring to the guardianship, but no connected series of accounts from which it is possible to make up a balance or tell what was actually done by the guardian as to the minors’ share in this property. On December 11, 1863, James Booth filed a bill in the superior court of Cook county to foreclose the later mortgage. January 13, 1864, a guardian ad litem was appointed and five days later a decree of foreclosure entered, the amount found due being $1179. A master’s sale was had in February, 1864, and a deed dated May 27, 1865, and filed for record shortly thereafter, was given for the premises in question to James Booth. The sale was for $4600. It must be presumed from this record that this purchase price was paid to the master and distributed by him to those who were entitled to receive it. March 17, 1864, less than a month after the sale, Mr. and Mrs. Boedecker, Mr. and Mrs. Barker, and Adeline Kendrick Meyer and her husband, joined in a quitclaim deed of the premises to James Booth, the stated consideration being one dollar. Adeline Meyer was one of the daughters of Kendrick, becoming of age February 6, 1863, and before the date of the deed in question had married Charles E. Meyer. She was the mother of appellees herein. This deed was acknowledged before Daniel Booth as a justice of. the peace. James Booth was a brother of. Daniel Booth, and was a farmer. One of the witnesses testified that he had heard that James worked for Daniel Booth. The record does not show much about the • business or means of James, except that the abstract in question shows that he left sufficient property to be the subject of a partition suit and to cause his estate to be administered. He died before the great fire. April 2, 1866, he conveyed the premises in question to Daniel Booth for an expressed consideration of $4600. This deed was not recorded until April 5, 1873. July 10, 1866, Daniel and James Booth executed a note for $10,000, payable five years after date, and a trust deed was given by James Booth on the premises in question to secure said note. From the record it appears that this money was used to erect a hotel on the property, which was known for many years as the Barnes House. This trust deed was released in July, 1871, the release running to Daniel Booth.

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.E. 643, 255 Ill. 420, 1912 Ill. LEXIS 2229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-northwestern-railway-co-v-garrett-ill-1912.