Doubet v. Doubet

196 Ill. App. 289, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 130
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 20, 1915
DocketGen. No. 6,040
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 Ill. App. 289 (Doubet v. Doubet) 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
Doubet v. Doubet, 196 Ill. App. 289, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 130 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Joseph Doubet, the owner of a large real and personal estate on April 2,1888, executed a warranty deed in the usual form (his wife joining therein), of an eighty-acre tract of land to his son Peter Doubet, the appellant, for an expressed consideration of $4,500, “and other good and valuable considerations,” the receipt of which, though no money was paid, was in the deed acknowledged. Following a form he had used with another son, it is claimed he took from Peter a writing as follows:

“Received of my father, Joseph Doubet, the sum of Four Thousand Five Hundred ($4,500) Dollars as an advancement on my share of his estate, and I hereby agree that in settlement of his estate by an administrator or executor the said sum of Four Thousand Five Hundred ($4,500) Dollars shall be by him charged against me as such advancement and said amount shall be deducted from my distributive share, but no interest shall be counted thereon.
(Signed) Peter Doubet.”

This deed was kept in the grantor’s possession for some time, but was delivered and recorded before his death. Peter was in possession of the land at and before the time of making the deed, and always remained in possession. No question arises here of the validity of the deed, or of its delivery in the lifetime of the grantor.

Joseph Doubet died intestate December 19,1909, and administration of his estate is pending in the Probate Court of Peoria county. In a final report filed in December, 1911, his administrators, Edward Doubet and Ida Mitchell, the appellees, inserted the following item:

“Items of receipts. Amount advanced to Peter Doubet for land conveyed by Joseph Doubet to said Peter Doubet, or to amount owed by said Peter Doubet to Joseph Doubet for land conveyed by Joseph Doubet to said Peter Doubet in lifetime of said Joseph Doubet...........$4,500.00. “12/18/11. Peter Doubet owes to the estate of said Joseph Doubet the sum of $2,739.40 after allowing him his full share of said estate, which amount the Adms. of said estate ask the court to order said Peter Doubet to pay back.”

The distributees of the estate were duly notified, and appellant appeared in the Probate Court and contested that item of the report. The matter was heard, and the court found that Peter Doubet had received from the administrators in cash, on his distributive share, $6,500, and had filed a refunding bond conditioned that he would refund to the estate any portion thereof to which he was not entitled, or that would be needed for the proper settlement of the estate; that he is indebted to the estate in the sum of $4,500, as set forth in the report. And ordered that he pay to the administrators the difference between that sum and his final distributive share of said estate, and approved the report.

Appellant appealed to the Circuit Court where the parties appeared. Some of the distributees were minors and appeared by guardian ad litem. The administrators filed what is called a bill of particulars as follows:

“Peter Doubet
To Estate of Joseph Doubet, deceased.
“To advancement of the East Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 12 in Logan Township, Peoria County, Illinois, at the fixed and agreed valuation of...............$4,500.00
“As per written instrument signed by said Peter Doubet and dated on or about April 2,1888, and by said Peter Doubet delivered to said Joseph Doubet, deceased.
“Peter Doubet
To Estate of Joseph Doubet, Dr. “12/9/07. To amount due from Peter Doubet to Joseph Doubet for the East Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 12 in Logan Township, Peoria County, Illinois.........$4,500.00.”

There was much pleading and much contest about the pleadings, though this is a statutory proceeding, in which written pleadings are not required. The court at the instance of appellant compelled the administrators to elect and say whether they were proceeding on the theory of an advancement to Peter Donbet, or a debt due from him to the estate, and they said they would proceed on the theory of an advancement. The court heard much evidence as to the transaction, the guardian ad litem protesting that the minors were entitled, as distributees, to demand that any debt from appellant to the estate should be deducted from his distributive share, and were not at all precluded from insisting on their demand by any mistake of the administrators in naming the transaction from which the indebtedness arose; and in this contention he was right.

Among other things, in support of his objection to this item of the report, appellant claimed that the whole question was res adjudicata by reason of a partition proceeding wherein the heirs, who were the same persons as the distributees appearing in this case, had procured the sale of the real estate of which Joseph Doubet died seized, and the distribution of the proceeds among them. The eighty acres here in question were not sought to be partitioned, but it is assumed that any question of advancement of that eighty acres should have been determined in that partition proceeding. The cause was referred to the master in chancery to take testimony and report his conclusions of law and fact on this question of res adjudicata, which he did, reporting that the matters here in question were not passed upon or necessarily involved, in the partition proceedings ; that the advancement alleged was to be adjusted in money upon the settlement of the estate; that the personal estate has been at all. times sufficient to enable the Probate Court to adjust that matter between the distributees; that there was no reason for the court’s adjusting that matter in the partition proceeding, and it did not in fact assume to take jurisdiction of the question, and that the objection of res adjudicata is not well taken. The question whether there was in fact an advancement, or debt, was not submitted to or passed upon by the master.

The chancellor, after hearing much evidence, entered an order finding that the order of the Probate Court, “from which this appeal is taken, should be and is hereby confirmed, and the final report of said administrators made therein, should be and hereby is affirmed. The court further finds that the sum of $4,500.00 objected to by Peter Doubet herein, was and is a proper charge against his share of the estate of Joseph Doubet, deceased, and a proper credit in favor of said estate, in said final report, as shown herein, as filed and approved by said estate, and in the judgment of the court the said $4,500.00 was in the nature of an advancement made by deed by Joseph Doubet, the father of said Peter Doubet, many years before his death, to said Peter Doubet, of 80 acres of land, at a fixed valuation of $4,500.00 and was so received as an advancement of such valuation by said Peter Doubet, and has been so held and enjoyed by him ever since.” And certified the findings to the Probate Court for further proceedings, from which order this appeal is prosecuted.

Appellant presents an exhaustive brief on the law of advancement, claiming that our statute (sections 4 to 7 of the Descent Act, J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 Ill. App. 289, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doubet-v-doubet-illappct-1915.