Forbes v. Williams

13 Ill. App. 280, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 51
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Ill. App. 280 (Forbes v. Williams) 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
Forbes v. Williams, 13 Ill. App. 280, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 51 (Ill. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Pleasants J.

Appeal to the circuit court from the judgment of the county court on a claim filed therein against the estate of Delilah Deeds, upon an instrument in writing of which the following is a copy:

“ Pleasant Valley, Ill. Oct. 25, 1875.

“Whereas my niece Mary J. Williams has loaned me the sum of fifty dollars and performed for me sundry services and acts of kindness, and desiring to repay her at some future time when it will not embarrass me or my business, therefore I hereby acknowledge an indebtedness to said Mary J. Williams of two thousand dollars with lawful interest, which sum shall be due and payable to her at my death unless I see proper to pay the same sooner.

“ Delilah Deeds.”

The trial resulted'in a verdict for plaintiff for $2,800, being the full amount claimed, on which, after overruling a motion for a new trial, judgment was duly rendered and this appeal taken therefrom.

At the date of the instrument in question Mrs. Deeds was sixty-three years of age. A sister of appellee was temporarily staying with her. Her last suiwiving child, a grown daughter, had died in 1872 and her liushand in the summer of 1874, leaving her in possession of a stock farm of about 1,500 acres. Appellant was her near neighbor and friend. He administered upon her husband’s estate and was her salaried assistant in the management of her own. Messrs. D. & T. J. Sheean of Galena, some twelve miles distant, were her legal advisers from the first until her death.

Appellee’s age was a little upward of thirty years. She had been employed in teaching, or copying manuscript, or doing fancy and decorative work at different places, and in the course of years was several times at her aunt’s place in Pleasant Valley during periods of varying length.

Her case rested upon the instrument in question and the testimony of two witnesses. Reuben Miclcel, as appears from his deposition, had known the plaintiff since 1856, in Powesheik Co. Iowa, Rome, Ga., Chicago, and Davenport, Iowa, in which places respectively, excepting Rome, he was engaged, while plaintiff was there, in different lines—law, real estate, insurance, banking and commission business. He has since met her in Denver, where he also lived, as well as in Breckenridge, Col. and in Green Co. Iowa. When his deposition was taken he was residing in Pueblo Co. Col., and was secretary of the Pueblo County Insurance Co. He drew this instrument. At that time he was living in Davenport, where plaintiff also was then at work. He had never known Mrs. Deeds; but at the request of plaintiff, which her sister says she, by direction of her aunt, wrote to her to make, he went to Pleasant Valley on Saturday, Óct. 23, 1875, delivered to Mrs. Deeds fifty dollars sent by plaintiff, and remained until the forenoon of the 25th when this instrument was signed and delivered to plaintiff’s sister Lillie for her, together with a like one for $2,500 for herself, and thereupon he and the latter left together for Chicago. -According to-his statement, in drawing this paper he acted wholly for Mrs. Deeds and drew it according to what he understood to be her intention, but perhaps somewhat carelessly, from the fact that although he regarded it as a peculiar transaction, yet it was a family matter and therefore did not require the attention he might otherwise have given it. The substance of her statements before and at the time of signing it, as related by him in several passages of his direct and cross-examination, is that “ she was indebted to Mary and intended to pay her, but was in debt to others also, and asked him to draw up a note for $2,000, with the time of payment left optional, but in case of her death to be a claim against the estate; gave no itemized reasons, but simply the amount of $2,000, and said she wanted to pay her well, and if she lived to pay her debts would pay her more than that; said she was willing to give that sum.” Again, that plaintiff “had been with her over a year at one time during her sickness, which she had promised to remunerate her for, and had also loaned her money at different times, but did not state the amount, and said she wanted to pay her this $2,000 which she thought would be reasonable compensation.” Again, that “she had repeatedly tried to induce plaintiff to come and stay with her, not as a servant but as one of the family, and had given up the hope of her coming and staying all the time but wanted her to come and stay all she could; and that in fixing the amount of the note she had taken into consideration the loss of time, the expenses of her coming to visit her, and so that she could afford to come oftener.” Still again, that the note was given' “to repay the plaintiff borrowed money, $50 of which I delivered at the time, and for her time and attention to her during the year of her sickness, and to pay her for the time she had been with her and for the expenses of coming and going, and to reimburse her for any expenses she might be to in the coming and going hereafter and the time she might spend with her hereafter.” On cross-examination, after repeating the above in substance, lie adds: She said “she wanted plaintiff to come there and stay with her, not to live as a servant but to do just whatever she pleased, and that she would pay her for her time.” She “did not say how much money she was owing Mary”-—“no specific amount was mentioned as pay for the year she had spent with her, nor for her future society and expenses,”—“no time was spoken of which she was to spend with her,” and “she wanted to make an inducement to spend as much as possible.”

Lillie Williams, the only other witness, says nothing of what was stated by Mrs. Deeds at or about the time the paper was signed in relation to the consideration, except that “she stated the amount, §2,000, to pay Mary for her time and labor; it was stated in the note;” and that “the note embodied about the substance of what aunt said when the note was made.” All that she testifies to upon the subject of Mary’s time and labor is, that she “was at the Deeds place at different times in the life-time of Delilah Deeds. * Mary lived with aunt a year, attending to and taking care of her in her sickness. Aunt told me so several different times; she said ‘Mary had been there a year and she wanted to pay her;’ she said ‘Mary and her had talked it over and she agreed to pay her.’ * Mary was at the Deeds place in 1863 or 1864, or both; Delilah Deeds talked about that at the time she signed the note.” (Further along she says, “ Mary taught school in 1864.”) "" Mary came here in the winter of 1874-5 to look after her interest in' her uncle’s estate. She was not present when the paper was signed, nor had she been at Pleasant Valley since the April before.

For the defense, John Carmony testified that he worked on the Deeds farm in 1863, 1864 and 1865; that Mrs. Deeds was sick in .bed in 1864 and 1865 for fifteen months; that he knew all the persons that were there at that time, being Thomas Deeds (the husband), Frances Deeds (the daughter), Mrs. Marlow, and Miss Bruce (the hived girl); and that he never saw plaintiff there and does not know her.

Eliza Jane Carmony testified that she lived on the farm of Mr. Deeds in 1864; was school-mate of his daughter, then twelve or fourteen years old; that Mrs. Deeds was sick in bed one half of 1863 and 1864; had a hired girl all the time whose name was Jane Bruce; that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ill. App. 280, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forbes-v-williams-illappct-1883.