Evans v. Funk

38 N.E. 230, 151 Ill. 650
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 230 (Evans v. Funk) 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
Evans v. Funk, 38 N.E. 230, 151 Ill. 650 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was assumpsit, brought in the Circuit Court of LaSalle county by John Funk, appellee, against Daniel Evans, appellant, to recover the sum of $2,500. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee for ■said sum, and the judgment was thereafter affirmed in the Appellate Court of the Second District.

William Reddick, a citizen of Ottawa, in said LaSalle •county, died testate in March, 1885, leaving an estate worth about a quarter of a million of dollars. By his last will and testament he gave to Elizabeth Burrier Funk Red-dick, an adopted daughter, property valued at $40,000, to the county of LaSalle land worth about $10,000, and, after making some other bequests and legacies, gave the residue of his estate, amounting to over $150,000, to the city of Ottawa, for the purpose of establishing a public library. George W. Armstrong was nominated by the will as executor, and qualified as such.

Appellant Evans was elected probate judge of LaSalle county in 1882, and ivas in the exercise of the functions of that office when said will of William Reddick, deceased, was admitted to probate in the Probate Court of said county, and continued the incumbent of that office during the whole period of time covered by the various transactions involved in this suit.

Shortly after said will had been admitted to probate, the brothers and sisters of said William Reddick, deceased, who were his heirs at law, filed a bill in chancery, in the •Circuit Court of LaSalle county, to contest its validity; and they made Armstrong, the executor, the city of Ottawa, the directors of the public library, the county of LaSalle, Elizabeth Burrier Funk Reddick, and others, parties defendant to such bill. In December, 1886, the issues formed on said bill were submitted to a jury, but the result of the trial was a disagreement of the jury. Both in answering the bill and at the trial the defendant, Elizabeth Burrier Funk Reddick, was represented by Messrs. Mayo & Widmer as her solicitors.

Shortly thereafter negotiations were begun for a settlement of the controversy. One Andrew J. Reddick, a nephew of the deceased, had a power of attorney from the heirs, which authorized him to manage and control the suit. Pending the negotiations, and before a settlement was consummated, Elizabeth Burrier Funk Reddick died, her death taking place on or about the 20th day of February, 1887. An instrument in writing was executed and signed by the president, secretary and other members of the board of directors of the public library, which instrument, omitting caption and signatures, read as follows: “We, the undersigned directors of the Reddick Library board of the city of Ottawa, hereby authorize George W. Armstrong, executor of the last will and testament of William Reddick, deceased, to compromise and settle the above entitled suit in such manner as he may think best, by paying the contestants a sum not to exceed $7,000; and we hereby agree to allow him to retain from the funds of said library board said sum, or such proportion as would be our pro rata share, considering the value of said estate. And in case the estate of Elizabeth Burrier Funk Reddick refuses to pay any portion of such sum, then, in that case, we authorize-him to pay the whole of said sum out of said library fund.”

The settlement of the controversy, in regard to the will,, was finally consummated on the 10th day of March, 1887, by the entry on that day of a decree in the Circuit Court of LaSalle county, confirming the will, and by the payment on the same day of $7,000 by Armstrong, the executor, to Andrew J. Reddick. The said executor subsequently made a report to the Probate Court, in which he credited himself with this $7,000, and said report was approved by the Probate Court, Judge Evans presiding therein at the time of such approval.

John Funk, the appellee, was a brother of Elizabeth Burrier Funk Reddick, and at the time of her death it was generally supposed ■ that he was her only heir, and consequently entitled to receive the $40,000, which had been willed to her. Appellant took an active part in inducing the settlement of the contest over the will. Appellee paid to appellant the $2,500 here in controversy; and at the time the money was paid appellant gave to appellee a receipt, which reads as follows:

“Ottawa, III., March 10, 1887.
Received from John Funk $2,500, for and in settlement of controversy in the Reddick will case, and the professional services connected with said settlement. Made this 10th day of March, 1887. Daniel Evans.”

At the trial of the case at bar, appellee insisted and testified that the $2,500 was paid for the sole and only purpose of being used by appellant, so far as might be necessary, in paying the proportional amount to be paid by him out of his share of the estate in securing a settlement; and that no part of it was paid to appellant for legal services or attorneys’ fees. On the contrary, appellant insisted and testified that said sum of money was paid him as attorney’s fees for services rendered to Elizabeth Burrier Funk Red-dick in her lifetime, and to be rendered by him in procuring a final settlement of the will in controversy.

In the opinion filed in this case in the Appellate Court, it was said: “The statute of this State (R. S., chapter 13, .section 10) provides as follows, ‘No person who holds a commission as justice of the Supreme Court or a judge of' any court of record, shall be permitted to practice as an attorney or counsellor at law in the court in which he presides.’ On the trial the court gave the jury, among-others, the following instructions:

9. ‘The jury are further instructed that the law prohibits the judge of the Probate Court from acting as an attorney and counsellor at law in all matters pending in his own court, and that this prohibition is not confined merely to suits pending in the Probate Court, but extends likewise-to all suits pending in other courts which are so connected, with an estate pending in said Probate Court as to require-of said Probate Court official and judicial action with respect to the same, and when a suit is pending in the Circuit Court to set aside a last will and testament of a person whose estate is pending for administration in the Probate-Court, the judge of said Probate Court is prohibited by law from soliciting or receiving from any person interested in said estate any money, property or other valuable thing, as-compensation for inducing the executor of said estate to-make a settlement or compromise of such will suit, and this-is so, notwithstanding his motives were intended to accomplish what should be for the best interests of all parties concerned, without any wrong intention whatever in so doing.’
10. ‘The jury are further instructed that it appears by the undisputed evidence in this case that Daniel Evans, the-defendant in this case, has been judge of the Probate Court-of LaSalle county from the first Monday in December, 1882, down to the present time; that the last will and testament of William Reddick, deceased, was duly admitted to probate in the Probate Court, and George W. Armstrong-was duly given letters testamentary as executor by said court on the-day of March, A. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 230, 151 Ill. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-funk-ill-1894.