Elder v. Whittemore

51 Ill. App. 662, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 672
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 51 Ill. App. 662 (Elder v. Whittemore) 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
Elder v. Whittemore, 51 Ill. App. 662, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 672 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendant in error was appointed May 12,1885, and administered an' estate of nearly $300,000, consisting mainly of notes secured by mortgage and some municipal bonds. His first report was filed June 28, 1887, his second February 11, 1889, and his third and final, February 26, 1890. Hpon the coming in of the last, plaintiffs in error, heirs of the deceased, filed exceptions to all, which were overruled by the County Court and an order made discharging the administrator from further liability. An appeal was taken by the heirs to the Circuit Court. In the course of the investigation there, these reports were amended in certain particulars relating to the matters involved, most of the exceptions overruled, and an order made requiring the administrator to make up and submit to the court an itemized and detailed account of all receipts, payments, outlays and disbursements by him as administrator of said estate from the commencement of his administration. In pursuance thereof he filed his report October 5, 1892, which was approved and the administrator discharged, whereupon the heirs sued out this writ of error.

. It is claimed that the Circuit Court erred in refusing to admit evidence that defendant in error loaned money of the estate in his hands at interest and failed to account for it, and also evidence that he used such funds in his private business and made profit therefrom.

Defendant in error was cashier of the State National ■Bank of Springfield, and it is said his reports as administrator show that, during all the time from the close of the first year of Ms administration until the final distribution he must have had in his hands moneys of the estate amounting to a hundred thousand dollars, and that from the facilities afforded by his position as a banker for making loans it is to be presumed that he so used more or less of this fund. He was asked on the hearing, if he did not loan out the money he collected as administrator and get the- interest on it, and if he did not put the money so collected and mix it with his private funds, and keep the account in his individual name in the bank and check it out in that way in his own personal business; to which questions and each of them objection was made and sustained, and to these rulings exception was duly taken.

There is no doubt of the liability of an administrator, as of any other trustee, to account for interest or profit actually received or made from the trust fund in his hands, nor is any question or concession made of the strength of the presumption from the fact stated, that the defendant in error had actually received such interest or made such profit in this case. The ground of the objection and of the ruling was that not one of the ten exceptions filed in the County Court related to the subject-matter of these questions, and that matter therefore was not relevant to any issue before the court.

To obviate this objection, plaintiffs asked leave to file additional exceptions, but the court refused to grant it; which is the principal cause of complaint by the plaintiffs in error.

The jurisdiction of the County Court in this matter was original. (Art. VI, Sec. 12 of the Constitution.) That of the Circuit Court was appellate only. (R. S., Ch. 3, Sec. 121.) The report in question was a final report. It purported to present to the court an account of the entire administration, for its judgment and approval, and the discharge of the admimstrator from further liability as such. The heirs, denied that it was true and just. But according to the settled practice they could not do so by an objection in the nature of a plea of the general issue, putting upon the administrator the burden of proving each and every item. In making his report he had acted under oath and bond to make it full, just and true. It could hardly be that in any such case there would not be many items that would be true, satisfactorily proved by accompanying vouchers or other evidence, and admitted by those interested in the estate and its settlement. Therefore they should be and are required to specify such as are intended to be questioned by particular exception thereto. These exceptions may be as well for what is claimed to be improperly omitted from the report as upon what is claimed to be untruly stated therein. If they are overruled and the report approved, the order of approval, though general in terms, is understood to be specific as to each item stated, and the omission of each, the statement or omission of which was made the ground of a specific exception. Each of these items is separate and distinct from all others, and the order of approval as applied to one is wholly independent of the same as applied to others. In short, the only issues made are upon such specific exceptions. Hence an appeal from the order as applied to one item, whether the exception be to the item as stated or for its omission, does not embrace it as applied to any other, and the only questions before the Appellate Court are upon the order or judgment upon the exceptions appealed from. These propositions seem to be well sustained by repeated decisions. Millard v. Harris, 119 Ill. 185; Morgan v. Morgan, 83 Id. 196; Curtis v. Brooks, 71 Id. 125; Harris v. Millard, 17 App. 512. The same rule is applied to accounts of guardians. Kingsbury v. Powers, 131 Ill. 182.

The order of the County Court was a final judgment of the only court having original jurisdiction of the matter, upon all the questions that plaintiffs in error saw fit to raise therein. They did not involve any claim that defendant in error had actually received any interest or made any profit from the trust fund. That court might have entertained such claim and exercised its equitable as well as its legal powers to ascertain the facts relating to it. Such claim would have been entirely separate and distinct from any that were made, bio reason is perceived why it was not then made. All of the facts and presumptions on which it was sought to be made in the Circuit Court were as well known as they have since come to be. Even after the final order was made, that court, in the exercise of its equity powers, might have corrected the account for fraud or mistake.

But we do not know of any authority or power in the Circuit Court, purely appellate, to entertain, on appeal, this new and original claim for interest and profits. The trial of what was properly triable in that court was de novo, but a new case by amendment'of or addition to the exceptions filed in the County Court, could not properly be made. Bennett v. Hannefin, 87 Ill. 31, the only Illinois case cited for plaintiffs in error upon this point, which holds that a guardian’s report which is simply an account of his receipts and disbursements, does not purport to be final nor ask for a discharge, nor make any claim for commissions, and the order of the court approving the same, will not be regarded as a final settlement of his account and can not be •urged as a bar to a citation for a final accounting, does not seem to be pertinent. The question here relates to the extent of the power of the Circuit Court upon appeal from the order of the County Court on exceptions to a report of the administrator which is conceded to have been a final report.

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

Related

Yost v. Fitzgerald
148 N.E.2d 23 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1958)
Edwards v. Warner
39 N.E.2d 72 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1942)
Williams v. Estate of Frederick
7 N.E.2d 384 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1937)
Schwartz v. O'ConNell
3 N.E.2d 289 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1936)
Marer v. Estate of Wolford
273 Ill. App. 305 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1934)
Cairo Meal & Cake Co. v. Estate of Brigham
268 Ill. App. 510 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1932)
Wahl v. Schmidt
237 Ill. App. 372 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1925)
In re the Estate of Lalakea
27 Haw. 736 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1924)
Parker v. Lewis
1915 OK 140 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
Colton v. Coffey
187 Ill. App. 558 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1914)
Allen's v. Virginia Trust Co.
82 S.E. 104 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1914)
In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Bolles
7 Mills Surr. 467 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1910)
Crowe v. Morrison
147 Ill. App. 107 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1909)
Roach's Estate
92 P. 118 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1907)
Ford v. Ford
117 Ill. App. 502 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Ill. App. 662, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elder-v-whittemore-illappct-1893.