Faulkner v. Black

37 N.E.2d 796, 378 Ill. 112
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1941
DocketNo. 26203. Decree and order affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 N.E.2d 796 (Faulkner v. Black) 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
Faulkner v. Black, 37 N.E.2d 796, 378 Ill. 112 (Ill. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

James A. Young, a widower, died intestate on February 6, 1940. Thereafter, the plaintiff, George W. Faulkner, filed an amended complaint in the circuit court of Cook county seeking specific performance of an alleged contract between Young and himself, by which the former agreed to devise to him an unencumbered, improved parcel of real estate in Chicago. Benjamin H. Black, administrator of the estate of James A. Young, deceased, the unknown heirs-at-law of the decedent, if any, unknown owners, and Irene Young Cook and her husband, were made parties defendant. Willio Cheno, conformably to leave granted, filed an intervening petition charging that he had rendered personal services to Young several years prior to the latter’s death and that, in consideration therefor, Young had promised to leave the property mentioned to him. The intervenor sought specific performance of the alleged agreement. All defendants were defaulted, except the administrator, who answered the amended complaint and the intervening petition, denying their material allegations. The cause was referred to a master in chancery who heard considerable testimony and filed his report finding the issues against both the plaintiff and the intervenor. The chancellor approved the master’s report and on November 6, 1940, rendered a decree dismissing the complaint and, also, the intervening petition for the want of equity. November 18, 1940, an order was entered (1) allowing fees to the receiver of the property and his attorney and (2) directing funds in the hands of the receiver to be turned over to the administrator, subject to the order of the probate court of Cook county. Plaintiff prosecutes a direct appeal, a freehold being necessarily involved. The intervenor, Cheno, has not appealed.

James A. Young retired from his position as an employee of the United States Post-Office Department, at Chicago, on September 1, 1932. Subsequently, he received a retirement annuity of $929.28, payable in monthly instalments. In 1936, he purchased a vacant lot generally known as 5838-5840 South State street for $3000 through George W. Faulkner and John Porcius Faulkner, partners, transacting business under the firm name and style of Faulkner & Company, and paid the usual commission. The plaintiff; George W. Faulkner, is the active head of the business. The company manages from twelve to fifteen buildings, leases and sells real estate, and employs four or five salesmen. It appears that Young had not previously been acquainted with plaintiff but had long known William E. Lyles, one of the company’s salesmen. Young improved the property, at a cost of $5000, with a two-story brick building, the second floor consisting of an apartment of five rooms which he occupied until his death on February 6, 1940, at the age of seventy-seven years. The ground floor was rented to Lola Stovall, proprietress of a beauty parlor. Faulkner, or his company, collected the rents from Mrs. Stovall, the sole tenant, and received a fee therefor of five per cent. During the construction of the building and thereafter, Young consulted with plaintiff, and, apparently, was content to leave the character of the improvement largely to plaintiff’s judgment. Upon completion of the improvement, plaintiff managed the property and, from time to time, caused repairs to be made. Plaintiff did not render personal services of any kind to Young, although the latter needed almost constant attention during the last days of his life. Indeed, it appears that plaintiff did not even visit Young during his last illness. Nor did he attend to funeral arrangements. On the other hand, for about three years prior to Young’s death, Cheno lived in Young’s building, at first in the boiler room in the basement and, later, occupied a room on second floor in the apartment. It is admitted that during these years Cheno nursed Young and performed services of a menial character. The master’s conclusion, approved by the court, that such services have either been compensated for during Young’s lifetime or could be compensated in an action at law is not before us for review and our statement concerning the character of services rendered is made for the sole purpose of differentiating between such services as Faulkner rendered Young, if any, and those performed by Cheno.

Plaintiff rests his claim largely on an instrument which reads as follows:

“October 22nd, 1937.

Mr. Faulkner, Dear Sir:

I have no relation. You take care of me and my business. I will give my property.

James A. Young

5838 State Street.”

By his complaint, plaintiff charged that placing reliance upon the foregoing instrument, in addition to collecting rents on a commission basis, he performed many irksome and arduous duties, without remuneration; that, in consequence, his meager finances became depleted and his health impaired. The defendant administrator challenged the genuineness of the signature to the quoted instrument. Several witnesses testified that in their opinion the signature was the genuine signature of Young. Of these, Lyles was eighty-five years of age and in feeble health, having suffered a stroke in June, 1939. Lyles, who had known Young for thirty years, testified that he had seen the deceased write his name about twenty times- and could identify his signature. He stated that the signature on the challenged instrument was Young’s signature, observing “I would know that anywhere.” Henry W. Calhoun, an undertaker and funeral director, acquainted with Young for fourteen years and associated with him in numerous fraternal organizations, testified that he was familiar with Young’s signature and expressed the opinion that the handwriting on the document, as well as the signature, was Young’s handwriting. John Taitt, one of plaintiff’s employees, testified that in October, 1937, accompanied by Bowen, one of plaintiff’s salesmen, he went to 5840 South State street to erect a “For sale” sign on behalf of his employer; that, in response to an invitation, Bowen went up to Young’s apartment and brought back an envelope Young was sending plaintiff; that Bowen gave the envelope to plaintiff upon their return; that plaintiff opened, read and, smiling, pitched it back to Bowen; that Bowen read and handed it to the witness, and “we all three laughed about it.” Taitt stated that the instrument in controversy resembled the paper Young sent to Faulkner. John Porcius Faulkner, plaintiff’s brother and partner, stated that he was familiar with, and that the instrument bore, Young’s signature. On the other hand, Rudolph B. Salmon, a handwriting expert, testifying in detail on behalf of the administrator, compared the instrument in controversy with nine other documents admittedly bearing Young’s signature. Salmon expressed the opinion that the questioned letter was a tracing of Young’s writing, made by some other person, and that after the tracing had been made the writer patched up the parts he considered defective and went over it for the purpose of correcting the errors made when the tracing was done. He concluded that the letter was a forgery of Young’s signature and was not the writing of the person who wrote the other nine documents.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E.2d 796, 378 Ill. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faulkner-v-black-ill-1941.