Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Ward

237 Ill. App. 500, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 202
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 17, 1925
DocketGen. No. 29,485
StatusPublished

This text of 237 Ill. App. 500 (Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Ward) 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
Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Ward, 237 Ill. App. 500, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 202 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the estate of George 0. Benton, pending in the probate court of Cook county, a claim was filed by the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as administrator of the estate of Harriot B. Ward, deceased. The claim consisted of two items. One was for the conversion of 350 shares of the capital stock of the Delta and Pine Land Company (hereinafter called the Delta Company) of the alleged value of $70,000, and the other, for $3,500, the alleged value of 25 shares of the capital stock of the Chicago Title and Trust Company.

On July 21, 1905, both claims were disallowed by the probate court. There was an appeal to the circuit court, a trial de novo and a verdict and judgment for the claimant for $3,400 on the claim for the stock of the Chicago Title and Trust Company, and a verdict and judgment against the claim for the stock in the Delta Company. There was an appeal to this court, and a judgment reversing the judgment of the circuit court and remanding the cause for a new trial. That reversal was on the ground of error in excluding admissible evidence. In re Benton’s Estate, 215 Ill. App. 631. There was another trial before the court, without a jury, and on April 28, 1924, a judgment wholly in favor of the estate of George C. Benton, deceased, and against the claimant. This appeal, by the administrator of the estate of Harriot Benton Ward, is from that judgment.

It is the theory of the claimant, the Chicago Title and Trust Company, as administrator of the estate of Harriot Benton Ward, deceased, that George C. Benton, in his lifetime, put the complete ownership of 25 shares of the Chicago Title and Trust Company stock and of 350 shares of the Delta Company stock in his daughter, Harriot Benton Ward (nee Benton), and that upon her death the said stock was part of her estate. On the other hand, it is the theory of Charles W. Ward, executor of the estate of George C. Benton, deceased, that the ownership of the property in question wras never completed in Harriot Benton Ward, and that upon her death her estate was not the owner of the property in question.

Harriot Benton Ward, of whose estate the claimant is administrator, was the daughter of George C. Benton, against whose estate the claim is filed. She was the wife of Dr. Charles W. Ward, to whom she was married in June, 1894. He is one of the executors of the will of George C. Benton.

George C. Benton was married twice and Mrs. Ward was the daughter of the first wife. His second wife was Susan D. Benton. Harriot Benton Ward (known before her marriage as Harriot T. Benton) died April 16,1896, so her husband testified — leaving her husband and an infant daughter, Harriot S. Ward, her only heirs at law and next of kin. George C. Benton died— according to Ward’s testimony — on July 26, 1902. His second wife and the infant granddaughter survive him. The infant granddaughter was about one year and a half old at the time of her mother’s death. She is now a woman in the early twenties, unmarried, and living with her father in Chicago. George C. Benton in his lifetime was in business, and considered a man of good standing in the community; and was a man of considerable means, being worth over $100,000. He was president and chief stockholder in the Delta Company, a Mississippi corporation, which dealt in lands and notes.

On or about January 19, 1892, George C. Benton purchased 25 shares of the capital stock of the Chicago Title and Trust Company. It is not disclosed how much he paid for that stock, but his holdings were carried in his trial balances, while he held it, at $2,500. On the date of the purchase, January 19, 1922, a certificate bearing the number 1321, for 25 shares of the capital stock of the Chicago Title and Trust Company, was issued in the name of G. C. Benton. On August 7, 1893, according to the books of the Chicago Title and Trust Company, that certificate for 25 shares was surrendered, and in lieu thereof a certificate bearing the number 2172 for 25 shares was issued in the name of Harriot T. Benton. That was about two years and eight months before she died. The stub of the stock book contained a receipt for the 25 shares, certificate No. 2172, as follows: “Harriot T. Benton, by G. C. Benton,” the signatures being in the handwriting of George C. Benton. That indicated that a certificate for 25 shares was issued at the direction of Benton in the name of, to and for her. On November 21, 1898, about two years and eight months after her death, and about five years and three months after the certificate had been issued to her, that certificate, No. 2172, was returned to the Chicago Title and Trust Company and in its stead another certificate, No. 2785, was issued in the name of E. A. Shedd. On the back of certificate No. 2172, as surrendered, below a printed assignment, with blanks unfilled, was the authentic signature of Harriot T. Benton. The assignment bore no date.

Dividend checks of the Chicago Title and Trust Company upon the 25 shares standing in the name of Harriot T. Benton, covering the period from January 1, 1896 to October, 1898 (she died on April 18, 1896) were sent out in the name of Harriot T. Benton. The dividend check dated January 1, 1896, was addressed to her in her own name and was indorsed in her name in her own handwriting. The dividend check dated April 1, 1896, payable to Harriot T. Benton, was not indorsed by her, but was indorsed, “Harriot T. Benton, per C. W. Ward.” Subsequent dividend checks, all made out after her death, ten in number, were issued payable to Harriot T. Benton, the last being dated October 1, 1898; each was indorsed with the name of Harriot T. Benton, in script, and below that name was written, G. C. Benton. It was agreed that the indorsement G. C. Benton was in his own handwriting, and that the name of the payee, Harriot T. Benton, who was dead, either in G. C. Benton’s handwriting, or procured by him to be placed thereon. The photostatic copies of the ten dividend checks, beginning -with the one dated July 1, 1896, and ending with the one dated October 1, 1898, all of which were payable to Harriot T. Benton as payee — although at the time she was dead — seem to show that whoever wrote the words Harriot T. Benton on the backs of those checks, by way of indorsement, in order to pass title, undertook to write them, apparently, in a feminine hand; whether to conceal her death, or for some other purpose, there is no evidence. No dividend checks dated prior to January 1, 1896 were offered, and whether the Chicago Title and Trust Company paid dividends prior to that time is not shown. In regard to the ownership by Harriot T. Benton in her lifetime of the 25 shares of the capital stock of the Chicago Title and Trust Company, that is all the material evidence.

On November 12, 1895, G-eorge C. Benton, who was the owner of 2,578 shares of the capital stock of the Delta Company, being the largest stockholder, the total capitalization of the company being 6,000 shares, bought, in the name of his daughter, 350 shares of stock in that company at about $30 a share, for a total consideration of $11,000. Apparently, he paid for that stock by giving a $1,000 bond of the Delta Company, a note for $1,000 due in four months, and a note for $9,000, due in three years and payable to one Watson. He purchased the 350 additional shares of stock of the Delta Company, and caused the certificates representing that purchase to be issued in the name of his daughter, Harriot J. Benton Ward.

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237 Ill. App. 500, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-title-trust-co-v-ward-illappct-1925.