Fuller v. Samuels

137 Ill. App. 536, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 831
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 Ill. App. 536 (Fuller v. Samuels) 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
Fuller v. Samuels, 137 Ill. App. 536, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 831 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, Robert D. Samuels, filed his bill in equity against B. L. Fuller, F. T. DuBois, Northrup National Bank of Iola; Kansas, Sarah J. Samuels, appellants, and Mrs. F. T. DuBois and the Commercial Bank of Moweaqua, Illinois, to procure the cancellation of a certain written instrument, signed by’ appellee, directing the Northrup National Bank of Iola, Kansas, to collect a $2,GOO certificate of deposit issued by the Commercial Bank of Moweaqna, Illinois, to appellee, and which, certificate of deposit had been delivered to appellant Fuller, by appellee, as part payment on a farm of 120 acres of land, situated near lola, Kansas. The written instrument sought to be canceled, authorized the bank at lola, Kansas, to collect said certificate of deposit from the bank at Moweaqua, Illinois, and to pay to appellant Fuller $600 and appellant Sarah J. Samuels, wife of appellee, $700 and to remit to appellee $700 and interest, if any.

The grounds alleged in the bill for the relief prayed are, that the said order of instructions to the Northrup National Bank was procured by the fraud, duress, collusion and conspiring of the appellants and one Jeter, and was without consideration. A general and special demurrer to the bill interposed by all of the defendants, except Mrs. F. T. Dubois and the Commercial Bank of Moweaqua, was overruled by the court, and thereafter the bill was dismissed as to said Mrs. F. T. DuBois and the Commercial Bank of M'oweaqua. Thereupon appellants filed their several answers to the bill denying its material allegations, and also filed their cross-bill against appellee and the Commercial Bank of Moweaqua, praying that the court decree the said order of .instructions to the Northrup National Bank to be valid, and • direct the payment by it of the said certificate of deposit according to the terms of said order. The Commercial Bank of Moweaqua was defaulted for want of answer to the cross-bill and a decree pro confesso was entered against it. Appellee filed his answer denying the allegations of the cross-bill, and appellants replied to such answer, whereupon the cause, upon the original and cross-bills, was referred to the master in chancery to take and report the proofs together with his findings thereon. As to the original bill the findings of the master were against appellee and that said bill should be dismissed for want of equity and as to the cross-bill the master found that the complainants therein had a complete remedy at law and recommended that the same be dismissed for want of equity. On the hearing before the chancellor upon the exceptions of the respective parties_to the master’s report, appellee’s exceptions as to the findings upon the original bill Were sustained and appellants’ exceptions as to the findings upon the cross-bill were overruled and a decree was entered finding all the material allegations of the original bill to be true as therein stated, and directing that the order of instructions to the Northrup National Bank executed by appellee be set aside and canceled, and that said.bank deliver to appellee the certificate of deposit for $2,000 issued to him by the Commercial Bank of Moweaqua. This appeal is prosecuted to reverse such decree.

In October, 1904, appellee and his wife, then residing in Clinton, Illinois, entered into a written contract whereby it was mutually agreed that each should live separate and apart from the other; that neither should bring suit against the other for separate maintenance or divorce; that the wife should have the sole custody and control of their two children, both of whom were then under age; that the wife should have the household furniture and the husband should convey to her eight lots in the city of Clinton; and that each should relinquish to the other all claim or interest in the property of the other after his or her death.

Appellee testifies that in April or May, 1905, he was solicited by appellant F. T. DuBois, a real estate agent residing in Clinton, to purchase a farm in Allen County, Kansas; that DuBois represented to him that he was acting as agent for Fuller & Jeter, real estate agents doing business in Kansas; that he told DuBois that he had no use for a farm, as he had no family to live with him; that thereupon DuBois told him that he (DuBois) had considerable influence with the wife of appellee and that he would go and see her and try to persuade her to consent to move to Kansas with the children and live with appellee on a farm; that DuBois came to him later and told him that he (DuBois) had had an interview with appellee’s wife and that she had signified her willingness to contribute the proceeds of the eight lots which she owned in Clinton toward the purchase of a farm in Kansas and take their children and live with appellee on the farm; that Jeter, who was then in Clinton, together with DuBois, looked at the eight lots in Clinton which were owned by appellee, and reported to him that they would take the lots at a valuation of $2,200, to apply upon the purchase price of a farm; that on May 15, 1905, appellee and his wife, DuBois and his wife and Jeter left Clinton for Iola, Kansas; that upon their arrival at Iola on May 17th, the party was met at the depot by Puller, and appellee and his wife were entertained at the home of Puller; that Puller, Mr. and Mrs. DuBois, Jeter and appellee and his wife inspected some farms which Puller had for sale; that he was favorably impressed with a farm containing 120 acres, which Puller represented as belonging to a railroad man in Oklahoma, and was induced to agree to purchase the same at $50 an acre, $2,000 of the purchase money to be paid in cash and the balance on or before January 1, 1906, providing his wife would execute an agreement to sell her eight lots in Clinton and apply the proceeds to the deferred payment, and to destroy and nullify the existing contract between them relating to their living separate and apart; that on May 18th, Puller drew up a contract for the sale of the farm to him; that he insisted that he should have until the following day to determine whether he would take the land, and that he understood such provision was in-cop orated in the contract; that Puller insisted upon the payment to him of $2,000 and he was induced to deliver to Puller a.certificate of deposit on the Commercial Bank of Moweaqua for that amount; that on the night of May 18th, he was fold by his wife that she did not think their son Clyde would be willing to come to Kansas to live and that if he did not come she would not come either; that upon the following morning he told DuBois that the deal was off, and immediately wired the bank at Moweaqua not to cash the certificate of deposit; that thereafter he saw Fuller and notified him of his determination not to purchase the farm and requested him to cancel and destroy the contract which had been signed and to surrender the certificate of deposit; that Fuller demanded $500 as a consideration for the cancellation of the contract and surrender of the certificate; that he protested that Fuller’s demand was exorbitant, but that he finally agreed to pay that amount in full settlement; that Fuller then said that $500 would only settle the amount due to himself and Jeter and that there were other parties to be consulted and settled with; that thereupon the wife of appellee demanded $700 as her share of the certificate and DuBois demanded $100 for his trouble; that he was thereby induced to sign the so-called “order of instructions,” in controversy. It is not controverted that of the $600 directed to be paid to Fuller, $100 was to be paid by the latter to DuBois.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Ill. App. 536, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-samuels-illappct-1907.