Henderson v. Treadway

69 Ill. App. 357, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 367
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 19, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 69 Ill. App. 357 (Henderson v. Treadway) 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
Henderson v. Treadway, 69 Ill. App. 357, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 367 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Hr. Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellee filed a petition in the County Court for the removal of appellant from the office of administrator of the estate of James McHenry. It set forth that McHenry died May 20, 1895, seized of a large quantity of real estate, and possessed of notes and bank deposits amounting to $20,000 or more; that his sisters and their children, all adults and under no disability, were his only heirs; that more than sixty days after his death, appellant, upon a claim that he was a creditor of the estate to the amount of $250, applied for and obtained letters of administration, and that said claim had no validity in law or equity and was a fraud upon the court.

Appellant’s answer denied all the charges of fraud, and asserted the validity of his claim as a creditor of the estate, upon an alleged state of facts in substance as follows :

In the spring of 1891, he rented from McHenry a 110 acre blue grass pasture for the season ending December 1st following, at $400, and placed his cattle thereon near the last of May. About the 8th of August, the stream on which he depended for water having gone dry, he took them off and thereafter during the term had none on. One Brown had rented from McHenry for the same term another pasture, of twenty-eight acres, just across the road from appellant’s, but that also having become dry, took off his stock about the same time, and appellant bought from him the residue of his term. On October 19th, the drought still continuing, he went with his hired man, Graves, to see McHenry, and told him that he had bought Brown’s grass, and on account of the drought wanted to make an arrangement by which he could eat off the grass later in the winter, after December 1st, or in the spring, and that if he couldn’t make it he would secure water by digging and put on cattle enough to eat it off during the term; that McHenry then proposed to him that if he would take both pastures for the next term, to end December 1, 1892, at the prices they were .then rented for, he might use the old grass after December 1st, at any time he should see fit; that he then accepted the proposition and agreed to take both the pastures accordingly; that the old grass on them was worth $250 in April, 1892; that when the agreement was so made he had six or seven hundred steers, and but for that agreement could and would have secured water and put on stock enough to eat off the old grass during the current term, but relying on-the agreement chose to leave it unfed until April 1, 1892, when he put his cattle on; that McHenry, within a. day or two thereafter, turned them out, and although appellant was able and willing to pay for the pastures according to the agreement, refused to let-him have them or to feed the old grass, and leased them to another party who went on and occupied them.

There is preserved in the record much evidence strongly tending to prove the substance of each of these allegations. Indeed it can hardly be claimed that any is denied except one, viz., that appellant had no stock on the pasture from August 8th, when he took them off, until after the expiration of the current term, December 1, 1891. Several witnesses did testify that they saw a few cattle on it from time to time until snow fell, but whose they did not know. That, however, was immaterial to the single issue on trial, which was whether appellant, when he applied for and obtained the letters of administration, was a creditor of the intestate; and the testimony of these witnesses would only bear upon the amount and not the fact of indebtedness, since it was shown beyond question and without contradiction, that on April 1, 1892, there was still old grass on the pasture of the value of $200. In any view of the case appellant had the right to put cattle on in the fall of 1891. His doing so, if he did, would not affect his claim here in question..

Some slight attempt is also made to throw doubt upon the allegation that appellant told the deceased on October 19th, that unless he could arrange for the right to eat off the old grass after December 1st, he would secure water and put on cattle enough to do it that fall. That also is immaterial if the agreement for another term was actually made; and counsel admit that “ the evidence shows that Henderson agreed to take the pasture for the year following December 1, 1891.” He could not agree without the concurrence of McHenry, and that agreement, if observed, would have entitled him to put his stock on at any time during that term, without any reason previously expressed, or any further consent or affirmative act of his.lessor. But McHenry must have understood that he took them off in August because of the drought and made the agreement, in part, to get the use of the old grass remaining uneaten when he could do so to advantage, though it might be after the expiration of the current term.

Graves was the only person present beside the parties when the alleged agreement was made. He testified in the matter before the County Court, but died before the hearing de novo in the Circuit Court. His testimony, however] was there reproduced through the county judge, Robertson, cashier of the bank which held McHenry’s deposit, who had taken an active interest on the side of appellee, and appellant himself. As was to be expected, they differed in some unimportant points, and somewhat in language upon others, but according to the recollection of each Graves did testify that appellant told McHenry he had come to make arrangements for eating off the old grass in the winter or spring, and if he couldn’t do it, would dig for water and put on stock enough to eat it before December 1st; that McHenry said if he would take both pastures for the year following December 1st, he might eat it at any time he pleased, so that he didn’t injure the pasture, and appellant agreed to do it; and also that he, Graves, had the care of appellant’s stock, and that none of it was on the pasture after August 8th until spring.

Appellant submitted to the court below four propositions, to the effect that upon the hypothesis of the facts supported by the evidence, and which we think were therein fully and fairly stated, appellant was in law a creditor of the estate.

Whether the court found the facts or any of them against appellant, and the propositions therefore inapplicable, ‘or was of opinion that upon the facts therein hypothetically stated the law ivas not as asked to be held, we are not advised, but they were all refused; and also, as consistency required, others which relate to the measure of the damages for which, upon the facts so stated, McHenry was claimed to have become liable. Exception to such refusal was taken.

Error is also assigned upon the refusal of the court to admit appellant to testify to his conversation with McHenry on October 19th, when it is claimed the alleged agreement was made. Here the adverse party was proceeding as heir of the intestate, which distinguishes it from the case cited. I. C. R. R. Co. v. Reardon, 157 Ill. 72 (378-9). Appellant was not within either of the exceptions made by the statute to the rule of the common law which excluded him. The ruling was therefore proper.

We are of opinion, however, that the refusal to hold the propositions submitted was error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Ill. App. 357, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-treadway-illappct-1896.