Crumley v. Worden

66 N.E. 318, 201 Ill. 105
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 318 (Crumley v. Worden) 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
Crumley v. Worden, 66 N.E. 318, 201 Ill. 105 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

Complainant filed her bill for partition of certain real estate owned by John J. Worden, deceased, and made Anna Louise Worden defendant to the same. The bill alleges that the complainant, Minneola Worden Crumley, and Anna Louise Worden, are the only children and heirs-at-law of one John J. Worden, deceased, and complainant is entitled to partition of certain real estate in Warren county. The defendant’s answer denies complainant is the daughter of John J. Worden, and denies that she has any fight to partition of or interest in said real estate. Issue joined by replication to answer so filed. The cause was heard by the chancellor in open court, without a reference to the master, upon oral testimony and documentary evidence, and the chancellor entered a decree dismissing complainant’s bill, from which she prosecutes this appeal.

The bill alleges, and the answer shows, that Anna Louise Worden, the appellee, is the daughter of John J. Worden by his second wife, his first wife having died during" the year 1880. Complainant, to prove her heir-ship, introduced evidence of witnesses showing that she was brought up in the family of John J. Worden,' and was recognized and held out by both him and his wife as being their daughter. She also introduced in evidence certain letters addressed to her in the handwriting of John J. Worden, bearing date between July 31, 1895, and March 24, 1899, in which he signs his name as “Papa,” etc. There was also introduced a marriage invitation of date 1890, in which Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Worden extend invitation to the “marriage of their daughter, Minneola;” also a bible presented to the complainant, on the fly-leaf of which appear the words, “Minneola E. Worden, from father and mother,” dated December 25, 1887, which inscription is conceded to be in the handwriting of Worden’s second wife; also the family record contained in the family bible, in which appears under the head of births, “Minneola E. Worden was born October 1, 1878.” The record also shows that there was offered in evidence a part of a family record in a bible conceded to have been the family bible of John J. Worden and Elizabeth Worden, his, wife, in the record of births of which appears:' “Minneola Elizabeth, adopted daughter of John J. and Elizabeth Worden, was born October 1, 1868.”

A. A. Cornell, a witness for complainant, testified that he was acquainted with Worden and his wife, Elizabeth, and also acquainted with his second wife, Anna; that the Worden family visited his family and brought the children to his house; that there was nothing said about whose children they were; that there were two children that Worden called his; that witness lived one and a half miles from Worden; that he knew Elizabeth Worden up to the time of her death, in 1880, and knew Minneola, the complainant, during the life of Elizabeth; that he never knew of Elizabeth Worden being confined; that when he first knew Minneola she was an infant in arms, but he could not say whether she was walking- or creeping when he first saw her; that he was invited to the wedding of complainant, and the wedding invitation offered in evidence was the one received by him.

E. H. Soule, complainant’s witness, testified that he was acquainted with complainant from the time she was a little girl; that he worked for Worden from the time he was fourteen or fifteen years old, and that he was forty-eight years old; that when complainant was a little girl, going to school, he was at Worden’s house and complainant came home from school crying, and Mrs. Worden asked her what was the trouble, and she said that some of the girls at school told her that she had no parents,— that Mr. and Mrs. Worden were not her parents; that Mrs. Worden told her not to pay any attention to what the children said; that she was their child and that they were her parents, and if the children again accused her of not having any parents, to tell them that they did not have any parents; that these children were bad, and to not pay any attention to what they said. This witness further testified that he worked both by the day and the month,—sometimes one and sometimes the other,—for Mr. Worden, and that he slept and boarded with the Worden family; that he lived a close neighbor from the time he was a little boy until the Wordens went to New York State, in the year 1881; that he worked at Worden’s during the year preceding the arrival of complainant at the Worden house; that the first time he saw complainant at Worden’s she was one and a half years old, and to his best recollection was walking; that he had worked there just recently before he saw this child but had not seen complainant there before; that the first time he saw complainant he saw her at Johnson’s,—an old gentleman who came to that part of the country from New York, and who lived about forty rods north of Worden’s, in a tenant house belonging to Worden; that he was working ■at Worden’s when he first saw the child at Johnson’s; that he did not know that he ever heard that Mb. and Mrs. Worden ever had a child, and never saw anything in the appearance of Mrs. Worden that indicated she would •soon give birth to a child; that he first saw the child at Johnson’s and the next place he saw it was at Worden’s; that he thinks the time that he first saw the child was 'about 1872.

Andrew Johnson testified, for complainant, that he knew John J. Worden and Elizabeth, his wife, and that their families visited back and forth; that witness moved-lo Illinois in 1869 from New York and settled two miles from Worden’s. This witness also relates the scene of the little girl coming home from school crying, and telling" Mrs. Worden that the children at school said she had no parents, and says complainant asked Mrs. Worden if she was not her child, and that Mrs. Worden replied that she washer child,—that they were her father and mother. He says that the first time he heard Mrs. Worden speak of Minneola was when she was between one and two years old, and that Mrs. Worden then said that she was her girl. Witness further states that his parents had preceded him to Illinois, and in the early summer of 1870. moved into the Worden house,—a house about thirty-five rods north of Worden’s residence,—and that he frequently visited "his parents while they lived there; that he first saw this child at the home of his parents in 1870; that his father was eighty-five years old and his mother sixty-five, and that the child did not belong to his father’s family; that when he first saw her there she was beginning to walk and get up by chairs; that the child staid at his mother’s from three to six days; that his mother took care of her, and that she went from there to Worden’s, and that she remained at Worden’s from that time on to her marriage; that when he saw her at his mother’s she had only a little dress and was bare-footed; that he worked frequently for Mr. Worden and saw the child frequently as she grew up, and that she was known as Minneola, or Minnie. At the time of the trial he said he had not seen complainant for a number of years and did not recognize her when he saw her, but had no doubt but that she was the same child that he had spoken of above.

Martha Booth, for complainant, testified that she was. a sister to Elizabeth Worden, the first wife of John J.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tapp v. Tapp
569 S.W.2d 281 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1978)
Bogart v. Brazee
162 N.E. 877 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1928)
Zimmerman v. Thomas
136 A. 637 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1927)
Lennen v. Ogden
161 P. 904 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916)
In re Estate of Maher
71 N.E. 438 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 318, 201 Ill. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crumley-v-worden-ill-1903.