Hogg v. Eckhardt

175 N.E. 382, 343 Ill. 246
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNos. 19082, 19083. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 175 N.E. 382 (Hogg v. Eckhardt) 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
Hogg v. Eckhardt, 175 N.E. 382, 343 Ill. 246 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, Ida G. Hogg, individually and as administratrix of the estate of Lloyd W. Hogg, deceased, and George W. Hogg, a minor, by appellee as his next friend, filed their verified bill of complaint in the superior court of Cook county against appellant, Robert Eckhardt, for the recovery of certain shares of stock alleged to have been owned by the deceased in his lifetime and alleged to have been transferred by him to appellant on or about April 6, 1921, without any consideration and at a time when the deceased was mentally incompetent to manage his own estate or to make any just or proper disposition thereof and at a time when a fiduciary relation existed between the deceased and appellant. Subsequently an amended verified bill was filed, and after the conclusion of the evidence a further amendment to the bill was filed. Defendant and the corporations which had issued the stock filed their answers and the cause was referred to a master in chancery. The master filed a lengthy report, recommending that the bill be dismissed for want of equity. Exceptions to this report were sustained in part and overruled in part, and a decree was entered finding that appellant was .the owner of the shares of stock of the Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation and that appellee was entitled to all the other shares of stock. Both parties perfected their appeals from this decree to the Appellate Court for the First District. The Appellate Court reversed the decree in so far as it determined that appellant was the owner of the. shares of stock of the Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation and affirmed the decree with respect to the other stocks. The Appellate Court granted appellant a certificate of importance in each appeal, and his two appeals are now before this court and have been consolidated.

The original bill' and the amended bill, both of which were verified by the complainants, alleged that the complainants were the widow and son, respectively, of the deceased, Hogg; that Hogg died intestate August 4, 1921, and that prior to his death he was the owner and possessed of the following shares of stock, of the value of $125,000: 1320 shares of the Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation, 2486 shares of the Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corporation, 593 shares of American Steel Foundries, 100 shares of the Stewart-Warner Speedometer Corporation, and 63 shares of the Middle West Utilities Company. The bills alleged that on April 6, 1921, and until the date of his death, Hogg was mentally incompetent to care for or manage his own estate; that appellant was his close friend for several years prior to his death and that the deceased reposed trust and confidence in him. Both bills alleged that on or about April 6, 1921, Hogg, while mentally incompetent, assigned and transferred the stocks in question to appellant and that new certificates therefor were issued to appellant; that such transfers and assignments by Hogg to appellant were without consideration and void, and that appellant holds the stock as trustee for complainants as the heirs and next of kin of deceased.

Appellant’s answer to the bill denied that Hogg ever owned the stocks, denied he assigned and transferred the stocks to appellant on April 6, 1921, or at any time when he was incompetent, but alleged that appellant was at all times the legal and beneficial owner of the stocks. It alleged that long prior to April 6, 1921, Hogg assigned all the shares of stock to appellant by endorsement in writing on the back of the certificates and also delivered them to appellant. It denied that Hogg was mentally incompetent or that a fiduciary relation existed between him and appellant but admitted that they had been very warm and close friends for many years. It denied that the assignments of the stock by Hogg to appellant were without consideration and denied that Hogg owned the stocks or that his heirs were entitled to them.

It was upon these pleadings that all the evidence was introduced before the master. The verified bills expressly asserted and relied upon an actual assignment and delivery of the stocks by Hogg to appellant but sought to set them aside on the ground of lack of consideration for the transfers and because of the alleged mental incompetency of the deceased and the existence of a fiduciary relation.

Appellee filed an amendment to her sworn bill after all the evidence had been taken and after the master’s report had been filed, purporting to amend the sixth paragraph of the bill, which had alleged Hogg’s assignments of the stock. This amendment did not deny that Hogg had made the assignments but in fact alleged that such assignments were without consideration and void and that they were not a gift by Hogg to appellant. Beca’use the amendment did not repeat the original allegations of the sixth paragraph of the amended bill with respect to Hogg’s assignments, appellee contends that the original allegations were thereby stricken out of the amended bill. But no order was entered striking out those allegations from the sworn amended bill and no showing made justifying such action. It is a well established rule of equity pleading that where an amended bill or an amendment to a bill is filed, even though it omits the allegations of the original bill, those allegations remain a part of the original bill in the absence of an order of court striking them out of the bill. (Becker v. Billings, 304 Ill. 190.) In any event, portions of the amended bill which were not attempted to be amended or altered in any way necessarily recognize that Hogg assigned the stock to appellant, since they assert not only that the transfers on the record books of the corporations were invalid but also that the transfers from Hogg to appellant were without consideration and void. On the issues made by the pleadings, therefore, the sole question in this case is whether Hogg’s transfers to appellant were made at a time when he was mentally incompetent or when a fiduciary relation existed, and without consideration.

Hogg was born in Chicago in 1877. He lived there all his life. He died August 4, 1921, as a result of being struck by an automobile while he was crossing the street. In 1903 he married appellee, Ida G. Hogg. They had one child, George W. Hogg, who was born in 1903. The son died in 1922 pending the suit. Hogg and his wife and son lived together until August, 1920, when they broke up housekeeping. Appellee went to the home of her relatives in Kentucky, Hogg moved to his club in Chicago, and the son was sent to a military academy in Indiana. Hogg became interested in the American Spiral Pipe Works in 1901. He became vice-president, treasurer and general sales manager of the company in 1915 and continued in that capacity until shortly prior to" his death. He was a large stockholder in this company and at the time of his death he owned 888 shares of its common stock. There is no evience in the record as to the value of this stock, but during several years preceding Plogg’s death he had received dividends amounting to about $90,000 each year. During the two and one-half years following Hogg’s death appellee received almost $75,000 in dividends on this stock. It is apparent the stock is of great value.

Appellant had been engaged in the hotel business for many years. He leased and operated the Grasmere Hotel, in Chicago, and had known Hogg intimately for twenty years.

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Bluebook (online)
175 N.E. 382, 343 Ill. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogg-v-eckhardt-ill-1931.