Feulner v. Gillam

216 Ill. App. 85, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 289
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1919
DocketGen. No. 24,444
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 Ill. App. 85 (Feulner v. Gillam) 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
Feulner v. Gillam, 216 Ill. App. 85, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 289 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this writ of error the plaintiff, John Feulner, seeks to reverse a judgment recovered by the defendant, after a verdict finding the issues in her favor, in a suit based upon a promissory nóte signed by the defendant and drawn to the plaintiff’s order.

It was the claim of the defendant on the trial that although the note was payable to the plaintiff, who was her brother, it was in fact the property of their mother and was held by the plaintiff as the mother ’s agent and further that their mother had forgiven the defendant the note and had bequeathed it to her by will.

On a former appeal we held that parol evidence was admissible to show that the plaintiff, payee in the note, was in fact the agent of another who was the beneficial owner, provided the defendant had a good defense to the note as against the beneficial owner, and also that the defendant might interpose as against the plaintiff any defense which might be set up as against the beneficial owner just as though the suit had been brought in the name of the latter.

We held further that the trial court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s objection to the defendant’s offer of a certified copy of her mother’s will. Feulner v. Gillam, 211 Ill. App. 348.

On the retrial of the ease the defendant put in testimony tending to show that her mother was the beneficial owner of the note and that it was in the hands of the plaintiff, as the agent of her mother, and that their mother had forgiven the defendant the note, and the certified copy of the mother’s will was admitted in evidence.

The substance of the defense interposed by the defendant to the plaintiff’s suit as set forth in the special pleas filed by her was to the effect that the plaintiff was the agent of his mother and had charge of her affairs and business and transacted the same in his name and- that the defendant being indebted to her mother, and for the purpose of evidencing such indebtedness, executed the note in question, with the name of the plaintiff therein, as payee, and that the latter had no interest in the note except as the agent of his mother, who was the sole owner of the note; and that the latter had died, .leaving a last will and testament which had been duly probated; and that by the terms of her last will the mother had bequeathed said note to the defendant with all that was due thereon at her death and had directed that the note be canceled and delivered to the defendant. The plaintiff filed certain replications to these special pleas, setting up among other things “that the.said trust in these said pleas and each thereof mentioned was then and there a trust of lands, tenements and hereditaments,” and that said trust was not a resulting trust or one created by operation of law and that no declaration or creation of such trust had ever been made in writing, or signed by the party enabled by law to declare such trust; and these replications filed by the plaintiff further set up that the agreement of the plaintiff to be the agent of an act in said fiduciary capacity for his mother as alleged in said pleas was not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof; and that said alleged agreement was not in writing nor was there any memorandum thereof in writing. The defendant filed demurrers to these replications and the demurrers were sustained. In support of this writ of error the plaintiff contends that the trial court erred iñ sustaining these demurrers. In our opinion the demurrers were properly sustained. The special pleas do not allego a trust or that the plaintiff was holding the mother’s property in trust for certain specific uses designated by the mother, but rather that he was acting in the capacity of his mother’s agent, having her property in his possession in his capacity as agent and subject to such directions as she might make. Nor do the pleas allege any agreement by the plaintiff to act as his mother’s agent, but rather that he in fact did act as her agent.

It was shown by the evidence that the mother had conveyed certain real estate to the plaintiff by warranty deed, such conveyance being absolute, and that some time later the plaintiff sold the property for $30,000 or $40,000, and that out of the proceeds of that sale he took $4,000 and turned it over to the defendant and this sum was included in the $8,000 note. It was the plaintiff’s contention that he became the absolute owner of this real estate by virtue of the conveyance of his mother and that the proceeds of the sale of the property, which took place later, were his individual property and that the $4,000 which he turned over to his sister represented a loan from him personally to her and that the other amounts, which went to make up the total sum of $8,000, represented other advances which he had made to her individually, including a note for $2,500, which she had given her mother and which had become his individual property. The defendant contended the contrary, namely, that the sums which had been advanced to her represented loans from her mother made through her brother as agent, and that the note referred to had never become the property of the plaintiff; and further, that the conveyance of the real estate in question, although absolute on its face, was one by which the mother was placing the property in the plaintiff’s hands as her agent, and that the proceeds of the ultimate sale of that property really belonged to her mother and that the $4,000 turned over to her (the defendant) out of the proceeds of this sale was a loan coming from her mother, at whose direction the plaintiff had turned the money over. When the issues were submitted to the jury, the.defendant asked the court to give certain instructions designated as B, C, D and E. It is contended that the court erred in refusing these instructions. In our opinion this action of the court-was not error. Instruction B stated that the defendant claimed that when the mother deeded the real estate in question to the plaintiff, she was making the conveyance in trust for the defendant, and the instruction was based on that theory. The record discloses no such theory involved in the case, as we have pointed out before. Instruction C was to the effect that by the conveyance of the real estate in question, such estate became the absolute property of the plaintiff as a matter of law and that he had a right to sell the same and use the proceeds as he saw fit. This was an incorrect statement of the law. There was an issue of agency submitted to the jury for their determination and it did not follow as a matter of law from the absolute warranty deed that there was no question of agency involved. Such an agency as was alleged by the defendant could be established by parol evidence, and there was sufficient evidence in the record to make up an issue on that question. Instruction D was based on the trust tfieory, which, as we have said, was in no way'involved in the case. Instruction E involved the same propositions contained in instruction C, and the court was correct in refusing it for the same reasons we have referred to in connection with that instruction.

However, there are other reasons why this judgment must be reversed. "When the plaintiff presented the note signed by the defendant and drawn to the order of the plaintiff, there was established a presumption that he was the owner of the note and entitled to recover the amount it called for.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 Ill. App. 85, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feulner-v-gillam-illappct-1919.