Gladville v. McDole

93 N.E. 86, 247 Ill. 34
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 93 N.E. 86 (Gladville v. McDole) 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
Gladville v. McDole, 93 N.E. 86, 247 Ill. 34 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

John McDole, brother of Phebe Jester, deceased, and one of her heirs-at-law, filed his bill in the circuit court of Moultrie county against her nephews, nieces and grandchildren for the partition of a tract of land containing thirty-nine acres, of which she held the legal title at the time of her death. Eva Gladville, one of the nieces, 'filed her bill in the same court against the other parties for the specific performance of an alleged verbal agreement with John P. Jester, deceased, when he held the legal title to the land, to which agreement Phebe Jester was also a party, by which said Eva Gladville .was to have the property after their deaths in consideration of personal services rendered to them. The causes were consolidated and the evidence was taken before the master in chancery. The consolidated cause was heard by the court on such evidence and the depositions of witnesses, and the court dismissed the bill of Eva Gladville without prejudice to her right to proceed to recover compensation for her services rendered under the contract, found in favor of a mortgagee who held a mortgage for $300 on the land and who filed a cross-bill, and found in favor of the complainant, John McDole, on his bill for partition. By the decree partition was ordered, and Eva Gladville prosecuted her appeal to this court.

Eva Gladville, one of the defendants in the bill for partition and complainant in the bill for specific performance, and her husband, testified before the master, and objection was made to their testifying. On the hearing the court did not malee any ruling as to their competency, and, so far as appears, considered their testimony, but they were disqualified by the fact that the other parties were prosecuting and defending as heirs-at-law of Phebe Jester. Eva Gladville and her husband were not competent witnesses and their testimony will not be considered in this court. (Heintz v. Dennis, 216 Ill. 487.) There were some other minor objections to testimony which it will not be necessary to notice in detail..

The facts shown by competent evidence are as follows: When Eva Miller (now Eva Gladville) was ten years old her mother died and her father married again. She was a niece of Phebe Jester, wife of John P. Jester, and when she was eleven years old they took her to their home. They then had a son about two years younger than Eva, and she lived with them, working about the house and place, going to school a very little,—enough to learn to read and write,—and when she was eighteen years old the son died. John P. Jester and his wife were very religious people and were exceedingly strict with Eva. They took her to church and Sunday school but objected to her having any social pleasures or going in company with other young people. She was quite unhappy about the restrictions, especially when she was invited by neighbors, and on one occasion when she had assisted in getting up a social affair. That was in 1887, after the death of the son, and John P. Jester then proposed to her that if she would stay with them and conform to their views about going out in .company and to social gatherings until she should be married, she should have all their property after they died. She agreed to the proposition, and Phebe Jester was a party to it equally with her husband. The agreement was clearly proved by disinterested witnesses about whose testimony there can be no suspicion whatever, and for the next ten years, until Eva was twenty-eight years old and was married,, she conformed in every respect to the agreement. Mrs. Jester was a frail woman, in ill-health and confined to her bed frequently, and Mr. Jester was not in good health. The land was hilly clay land, with about ten acres of river bottom subject to overflow, and it was not valuable land, although it has advanced considerably in value, and the improvements were poor. Eva did the housework, with no assistance except occasional help in emergencies, milked the cows, made the garden, carried in the wood and kindling and frequently chopped the wood, worked in the field, planted corn, hoed corn, shocked wheat, drove the harrow, worked in the hay field, and filled the place of a regular hand on the farm. The doing of the housework was worth from $3.50 to $4 a week, and she had an opportunity to work out at housework at $3.50 per week but did not do so because of her contract. Including the outside work and farm work her services were worth from $5 a week to $1 a day for the ten years, and it would have been practically impossible to secure for any price one who would do the same work and forego all social pleasures and the company of young people. John P. Jester did not like to have Eva have any company, and said he was afraid if she got to going with the boys she would get married and leave them, and they needed her help. She had some means of her own from her mother’s estate, which was probably not very much, but she let Mr. Jester have it and he paid her some interest, which she expended for clothes whenever she wanted anything extra in that line. She was married in 1897. Soon after her marriage she was sent for and stayed with the Jesters four weeks, and afterward assisted them in sickness at frequent intervals, staying there one or two weeks at a time. Neither Mr. Jester nor Mrs. Jester was in good health, and after the marriage the husband of Eva Gladville bought shingles, which he gave, and he with others put them on the house, donating the work. There was no objection to the marriage, but Mr. Gladville had a habit of drinking intoxicants, and whenever he got drunk Mr. Jester would worry and talk about fixing the land so that Eva and her children would have it and her husband could not “run through with it.” Both Mr. and Mrs. Jester stated the contract to other people, and after children were bora to Eva they sometimes said that she and her children were to have the land, or that they wanted her and her children to have it, but there is not a particle of doubt of the nature of the contract or that she was to have the property if she performed it on her side. When the contract was made she had no children and did not contemplate marriage, and nothing was said about children, or the possibility of children. She continued after her marriage to do everything for the Jesters that she could although not specified in the contract, and when they were sick and she was wanted she went to their home and stayed there, doing the work at different times without any compensation, so long as they lived. John P. Jester undoubtedly entertained the belief that he could provide that the property should go to Eva and .her children, and he made a number of wills and a codicil, which were either not executed or were revoked by cutting out his signature, the general effect of which was to devise the property to his wife for her life, with remainder to Eva Gladville and her children or in trust for her children. When the codicil was written his direction was to have it so that the husband of Eva could not dispose of the land and so that it would go to her and her children, and he said that he had a contract with Eva before she was married to leave her the property and she had performed her part of the contract. On March 30, 1907, he executed a warranty deed to his wife, Phebe Jester, of the land, with provisions that he should have full control of it during his life, and if He survived his wife the land should revert to him. His wife did not join in the deed and it did not release his homestead.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ceres Illinois, Inc. v. Illinois Scrap Processing, Inc.
474 N.E.2d 1245 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1984)
Rosenstein v. IDA Products Co.
362 F. Supp. 642 (N.D. Illinois, 1973)
Loeb v. Gendel
179 N.E.2d 7 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1961)
Burke v. Burke
147 N.E.2d 373 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1957)
Jatcko v. Hoppe
131 N.E.2d 84 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1955)
Tess v. Radley
107 N.E.2d 677 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1952)
Ozier v. Haines
103 N.E.2d 485 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1952)
Linder v. Potier
100 N.E.2d 602 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1951)
Weidler v. Seibert
91 N.E.2d 416 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1950)
Snyder v. Warde, Admx.
86 N.E.2d 489 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1949)
Rigolio v. Knopf
61 N.E.2d 56 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1945)
Gray v. Schoonmaker
30 F. Supp. 1019 (E.D. Illinois, 1940)
Brown v. Freudenberg
17 N.E.2d 865 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1938)
Fierke v. Elgin City Banking Co.
7 N.E.2d 875 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1937)
Edmonds v. Gourley
199 N.E. 287 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1935)
Ropacki v. Ropacki
188 N.E. 400 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1933)
Simpson v. Wrate
169 N.E. 324 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1929)
Winans v. Bloomer
151 N.E. 599 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1926)
Grove v. Templin
151 N.E. 514 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1926)
Fox v. Fox
1926 OK 245 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 N.E. 86, 247 Ill. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gladville-v-mcdole-ill-1910.