Hopkins v. Hughes

173 N.E. 100, 340 Ill. 604
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 20103. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 100 (Hopkins v. Hughes) 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
Hopkins v. Hughes, 173 N.E. 100, 340 Ill. 604 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

On the petition of Arthur J. Hopkins, administrator of the estate of Sarah J. Owen, deceased, Ralph Hughes and Blanche McCarthy were cited to appear in the circuit court of Winnebago county and answer interrogatories concerning the ownership of certain personal property described in the petition and claimed as assets of the estate of Sarah J. Owen. The county court' adjudged the respondents to be the owners of the property in their possession claimed to belong to the estate, and the administrator appealed to the circuit court, which adjudged certain shares of corporate stock to be the property of the respondents and two promissory notes claimed as assets of the estate to be the property of the estate and ordered the delivery of the notes to the administrator. From the judgment ordering the delivery of the notes to the administrator the respondents appealed to the Appellate Court for the Second District, which affirmed the judgment. A writ of certiorari was awarded to review this judgment.

Sarah J. Owen was the owner of the notes in question in her lifetime. She died on August 2, 1927. The plaintiffs in error were not her heirs and do not appear by the record to have been related to her. They were a brother and sister and were friends of Mrs. Owen, had been very kind and attentive to her and she had a warm affection for them. About a week before her death she asked Hughes to bring Frank Welsh, a lawyer, to her house. Hughes asked Welsh to go to the house and he himself went there, but they did not go together. Mrs. Owen was sick and in bed. Welsh and Hughes were in the house about a half hour, and during their visit the securities involved in this proceeding were produced from a tin box which was in a drawer of a dresser in Mrs. Owen’s bed-room up-stairs, where she was lying sick. The decision of this case depends upon what occurred during that half hour visit in Mrs. Owen’s bed-room.

Hughes testified that he got a key" to the box at Mrs. Owen’s direction. She was in bed during the whole visit. He opened the box at Mrs. Owen’s request and three certificates of stock in the Roper Corporation for fifty-four shares of stock in the aggregate, of the par value of $100 a share, two demand promissory notes called in the record Burr-Hughes notes, an abstract of title, a deed and other papers were taken out. The- Burr-Hughes notes were the notes which are in controversy on this appeal, one being for $2500, on which there is a credit of $350, executed by the Burr-Hughes Company, and the other for $2000, executed by Ralph Hughes. Hughes further testified that on that day Mrs. Owen signed her name to the three certificates of the Roper Corporation stock, the two demand notes of Burr-Hughes, and a deed. Welsh wrote in the deed a description of the property and also a clause giving Mrs. Owen the use of the property during her life and took the acknowledgment of it. Mrs. Owen did not subscribe her name to anything except the deed, certificates of stock and the two notes. There was nothing in the writing that she subscribed reserving the income of the stock or notes. Hughes’ testimony further continued, as shown by the abstract: “When she endorsed the certificates of stock and notes to my sister and myself she said, ‘I want you to pay my just deíts incident to my sickness, my death, my funeral, provide perpetual care for my cemetery lot and provide two markers for my grave and my daughter’s,’ which I agreed to do and which has been done. She said she thought I was a good boy and that she would like to have me have this stock. She did not deliver the stock to me. She said to Frank Welsh that she wanted him to take the abstract and the deed which she had just signed to his office, to be delivered in due time to Mrs. Hopkins. She wanted him to take the Roper stock and deliver it to my sister and me. She wanted him to take the Hughes — Burr-Hughes—demand notes, take them to his office and hold them until I produced receipts for the bills paid, when he was to turn them over to me. She said the stock was to be turned over to my sister and me. She didn’t say when. The Roper stock was to be turned over immediately, if necessary.” Hughes put back the tin box after they were through with it. He drove his car from Mrs. Owen’s, Welsh being with him. At the corner of West Jefferson and North Main streets Welsh got out. He gave Hughes certain papers to take to Welsh’s office. Hughes went to the corner of State and Main streets and gave the papers Welsh had given him to an office girl there, telling her, “Here are some papers Prank told me to tell you to put in an envelope marked ‘Burr-Hughes,’ ‘Mattie Hopkins’ or ‘Jennie Owen’ or something matter, gave her my seal and blotter which I had.”

Mrs. Owen instructed Welsh to take the deed and the abstract and the Roper preferred stock and the Burr-Hughes notes and turn them over to the people they were going to, in Hughes’ presence. Hughes took the stock to the office of the Roper Corporation as soon as he could leave the Welsh office, go to his own office and tell his office girl he was going to the Roper Corporation — a matter of fifteen minutes to half an hour. He delivered it to Arthur Glavin, who had charge of the stock certificate records and books of the corporation, and told him to follow the instructions of the endorsements on the back. He did not stay until it was transferred, but new certificates were issued and he got them in the next day or two and has had them in his possession since. There were two of them, each for twenty-seven shares, one in his name and one in his sister’s name, in accordance with the assignments on the backs of the certificates. The Burr-Hughes notes were left in the office of Welsh & Welsh. They were in the possession of Prank Welsh and were held by him until Hughes produced to him receipts for the bills. That was about three or four weeks. He delivered to Welsh receipts showing the payment of claims or bills that he believed Mrs. Owen owed and bills that he had incurred or had paid at her suggestion, including funeral bills and monuments, and they were all the obligations of Sarah J. Owen’s estate, so far as he knew.

Welsh testified that after a few minutes’ conversation on occasion of his call on Mrs. Owen, when Hughes was there, she asked Hughes to get the box, and he got the key out of the dresser drawer, got the box and placed it on the bed, where it was opened. Mrs. Owen was sitting up in bed and it was opened on her lap. After Mrs. Owen had expressed her uncertainty in regard to what was the right thing to do and he had assured her that the question was what she wanted to do, she finally said, “Well, let’s see what is in the box,” and the contents were taken out one by one. In regard to the Roper stock he asked her what she wanted to do with that, and she said, “I want Blanche and Bud to have that, I guess.” He said to her, “If you transfer that to them you understand it is absolutely transferred and Mr. Hughes will probably take it away to-day?” and she said, “Yes,” and right away Welsh took his pen and filled in the assignment on all three certificates, handed the pen to her and she signed the assignments. The certificates were then folded up and handed to Hughes and he put them in his pocket. In regard to the Burr-Hughes notes, Welsh said he asked her the same thing, in substance, regarding that, and they went through the same procedure regarding that. When the abstract was taken out he asked her if the property was in her name, and she answered that it was.

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Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 100, 340 Ill. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-hughes-ill-1930.