Howell v. Edmonds

47 Ill. 79
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 Ill. 79 (Howell v. Edmonds) 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
Howell v. Edmonds, 47 Ill. 79 (Ill. 1868).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The better feelings of our nature have been much exercised by a perusal of this record, and in considering the facts stated in it, showing as they do, such a striking instance of fraternal affection, confidence and devotion as is rarely found in the dull annals of a court of justice.

Two brothers, natives of Massachusetts, children of the same parents, became separated. Their parents were then aged and infirm. The elder brother, from some cause unexplained, came to this State, changed his name from that of Abijah Edmonds, to Charles Johnston, became, under that name, eminent as a physician, and the possessor of a handsome property. He had left to his younger brother, Charles Edmonds, the defendant in error here, the entire support of their parents, who cheerfully afforded it, with an occasional small remittance of a few dollars from “ Charles Johnston,” for near thirty years. Charles Edmonds appears to be the only person cognizant of the whereabouts of his runaway brother, and of his change of name, which, in his deep love for the brother, he had adopted as his own. Hnder his new name, a correspondence was carried on for some years with Charles Edmonds, from which it would - appear Charles Johnston had signified his wish to reimburse his younger brother for a portion of the expenses incurred in supporting their aged parents ; that, though, apparently, a fugitive from his home, renouncing his family name, he, at all times, kindly remembered those who gave him being, and the dear brother who had sustained them in their declining years. Prompted by these feelings, he allowed his brother to state an account of his expenditures through those long years, and cheerfully consented that he should be charged with one-half the burthen. This, in dollars, was put in a note, executed by Charles Johnston, to his brother Charles Edmonds, and amounted to three thousand one hundred and twenty-nine dollars and fifty-nine cents, at its date, to-wit: May 1,1850.

Charles Johnston was then practicing as a physician, keeping a store, carrying on a farm, and in business generally, at York, in Clark county, in this State. He had become somewhat embarrassed about this time, and before, and, amid all his involvements and the pecuniary difficulties which then environed him, the claims of his dear, absent brother occupied his mind, and imperatively seemed to demand his utmost care. Accordingly, when the difficulties thickened around him, he was anxious to devise some plan, “ come what would,” so that his brother should suffer no loss. Mortgages of real and personal estate were talked of and abandoned, until, finally, on the fifteenth of April, 1852, a confession of judgment for the amount of the note and interest, so executed to his brother, was deemed the surest means by which the desired object could be reached, it not being in the contemplation of either party, that the judgment should be enforced during the lifetime of Charles Johnston, and this accounts for the character of the correspondence of the parties for so many years, in which no allusion was made by either, to this judgment. The judgment was entered under a warrant of attorney, executed by Charles Johnston, at the April term, 1862, and the note filed with the declaration, the plaintiff appearing by his attorney, T. E. Young.

As early as 1850, Charles Johnston, then unmarried, as we infer from the proof in the cause, had suggested to his brother, by letter, that he was acquiring property, and should remember him in his will; that he and his, would become the owners of all his acquisitions. But he married, and in 1854, was not much troubled about his liabilities, and continued to hint that his brother would be his devisee, his wife bearing no child to him. In his letter of February 1,1854, Charles Edmonds says, “ in all candor and frankness, that should I survive you, let my situation be what it may, I have no disposition to have what you might leave, appropriated in any other manner than what would be agreeable to your wishes, and should you leave a widow, she should be properly cared for. I do not consider I have any claim upon your estate, other than what your generosity would allow, as a portion of the expenses I have been put to, for some thirty years past, in maintaining and making comfortable, so far as I could, our parents. This amount, I never doubted, you would, at your earliest convenience, cheerfully bestow.”

This voluntary obligation of Charles Johnston, was then in judgment, in the Clark Circuit Court, which, judging from the tenor of -’this letter, was the sole reliance of Charles Edmonds, for a reimbursement of a portion of those expenses, disclaiming any testamentary provision. The judgment was sufficient, to be paid whenever it might suit the perfect convenience of his brother to pay it. This appears in all the correspondence in the record, and it further appears, such was the confidence these brothers reposed in each other, such was the sympathy between them, that, to Charles Johnston, notwithstanding this judgment, Charles Edmonds had given carte Mcmche, to dispose of all the property incumbered by it, without hesitation, should it accommodate him so to do ; that his brother, Charles Edmonds, was the last person to be considered, when the brother, Charles Johnston, was in difficulty.

Accordingly, we find, on the 6th of April, 1855, at the instance of Charles Johnston, Charles Edmonds executed a writing, authorizing T. E. Young, Hatkan Willard, or any attorney in this State, to enter satisfaction, in his name, for any judgment in his favor, against Charles Johnston, or on any mortgage that might appear on the records of the Circuit Court of Clark County, State of Illinois.

Thus we see, pervading the whole record, an anxious desire, on the part of Charles Edmonds, not to harrass his brother, but to yield up, at his suggestion, this hold he had upon him.

It appears, from the testimony of Mr. Young, that Charles Johnston brought the note and warrant of attorney to him, and told him, at the time, the consideration of the note was the support of his parents. He said he ought to pay it, and he did it cheerfully; • that he was glad of the chance to do it, and when speaking to him of the authority he had received to enter satisfaction of the judgment,' he said he did not want the judgment entirely released; that no part of the judgment had been .paid; that he only wanted to use his property in paying his debts; he wanted his brother secure, all the time. He said, repeatedly, he did not want the judgment released. At the time Charles Johnston said the consideration of the note was the support of his parents, he said that Charles Edmonds was his half brother, so anxious was he, up to that time, to conceal a secret, which his brother, Charles Edmonds, never did reveal.

Mr. Young accommodated his action to the wishes of Charles Johnston, writing, on the margin of the record,this: “By order of the plaintiff, this judgment is no longer a lien on the real estate of the defendant, against any bona fide purchaser. May 1st, 1855. ” The judgment still remained a qualified lien.

The form of this authority to Mr. Young was furnished by Charles Johnston to his brother, Charles Edmonds, and by him sent to Mr. Young. In the letter transmitting it, Charles Johnston says, “as I am consolidating my affairs, it is necessary that the record should be perfectly clear, that in the exchange or disposition of my property, there may be no impediment.

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47 Ill. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-edmonds-ill-1868.