Moore v. Moore

237 Ill. App. 190, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 159
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 6, 1925
DocketGen. No. 7,789
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 237 Ill. App. 190 (Moore v. Moore) 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
Moore v. Moore, 237 Ill. App. 190, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 159 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Crow

delivered the opinion of the court.

William Moore died testate November 17, 1921. He resided at Hoopeston, in Vermilion County.. He was nearly 80 years old, and had been a successful business man, accumulating wealth, consisting of stocks, bonds and real estate. He was married twice, by his first wife having three children, Claude H. Moore, Cora M. Haynes and Winfield S. Moore. By his second wife, to whom he had been married 29 years, no children were bom. Winfield died in 1918 leaving a widow and children. Claude died since the beginning of this litigation.

At his death, and some time before, he had a safety deposit box in the First National Bank at Hoopeston. His will was found in the box after his death. It was executed February 16, 1916. In it he recited he had already given to his wife his homestead and 100 shares of the capital stock of the Hlinois Canning Company. By the will he gave her 100 shares of the H-0 Company stock, 1 share of Federal Life Insurance stock, 6,162 shares of Union Securities Company stock, and household and personal effects, with exceptions not now material. To Claude H. Moore, residing at Memphis, Tenn., he gave 50 shares of the Canning Company stock, and 4,320 shares of Union Securities stock. To Winfield S. Moore he gave 100 shares of Canning Company stock and 4,320 shares of Union Securities stock. To a brother he gave 50 shares of stock in the Gibson Canning Company; to a niece, Ruth McNeal, 50 shares of Gibson Canning stock, 4,104 shares of Union Securities and 37 shares of H-0 stock; to a sister, Sarah Osborn, 50 shares of Gibson Canning stock.

The will recites a joint interest with one Troge in a judgment for $113,490.67 and directs Troge, as trustee, to pay $25,000 outstanding indebtedness, pay to Winfield, his son, $5,000, and if there be a residue it should be paid to his wife, Anna H. Moore. It also directed the winding up of the lumber business at Memphis, in which he was interested with McFerrin, and constituted his wife and son, Claude, trustees for that purpose, giving to her, during her life, one-fourth of the net annual income from the lands and a like quantity to the three children, the fee in lands being bequeathed to the three children. Mrs. Moore, by the terms of the will, was to have $200 per month during the closing out of the business of Moore and McFerrin for not exceeding three years. It also provided that if the Moore and McFerrin business was converted into money, she should have the income during her life upon one-fourth the funds so derived. Mrs. Moore and Claude were appointed executors and trustees without bond. The will was duly admitted to probate and Mrs. Moore qualified and entered upon her duties as executrix.

As executrix she filed an inventory of property belonging to the estate. She did not inventory as assets of the estate the items now in controversy. Thereupon Claude H. Moore and Cora M. Haynes filed a sworn petition under the statute asking for an order directing her to inventory certain items not inventoried, as belonging to the estate. These items are: Certificates of shares of stock in Hlinois Canning Company, par value $139,500; certificates of shares in Union Securities Company, par value $23,226; cash proceeds of undated checks drawn by the Canning Company payable to the order of William Moore, $4,330.30, received by Anna Moore at or about the time of the death of William Moore; cash proceeds of the sale of government bonds, $5,719.69. Another item claimed, 10 shares, par value $1,000, in Aldrich Publishing Company, was abandoned.

A hearing was had on the petition in the probate court which found for the respondent, dismissed the petition and adjudged the costs to the petitioners. An appeal was taken to the circuit court, and by stipulation heard upon the stenographic report of the evidence taken in the probate court. A like order was there entered and to reverse it a writ of error has been prosecuted to this court. Petitioners contended and now contend the property was that of decedent. Respondent’s contention is it is hers by gift from her husband. ^

There is little, if any, real controversy as to the evidentiary facts. The controversy grows out of the differing conclusions from these facts and the law applied to them leading to the ultimate conclusion. No peculiar force can be attached to the circumstance that two courts have passed upon the case. The circuit court, as we must, decided it upon the record. It possessed no advantage we do not possess. -

A gift is a thing bestowed gratuitously.) There is no element of unexecuted contract involved in it. No words are necessary to create the relation of donor and donee, the parties to the transaction. It is necessary, under the legal rules governing gifts, only that the intention to give and the intention to accept must in some intelligible manner be manifested. The common manner of expressing the process is, there must be a delivery and acceptance of the subject of the gift. Much discussion of that element has found a place in the decided case. It has occupied the foreground of discussion in all of them to a greater or less extent. In some it is said there was no intention to give because there was no sufficient delivery of the thing given. In others it has been solemnly argued the delivery did not disclose an intention to make a gift. In some of the cases it is said the donor must part with dominion over the subject of the gift. But this statement affords no aid to a conclusion, for if a gift is established the power of control, the right of uncontrolled possession, use and disposal of the subject of gift has passed to the donee from the donor. Devol v. Dye, 123 Ind. 321. Such control is a necessary attribute of dominion. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary (Rawley’s Third Revision) “Dominium”; Black’s Law Dictionary “Dominion.”

These observations deduced from a consideration of many cases confirm the proposition that to establish a gift the intention to give and to accept the gift are the essential elements for the solution in every controversy involving the subject of gifts and that there is no fixed method or process for its solution, except this: what was done, what were the circumstances, and what was the conduct of the parties toward the entire transaction indicating their intention. Otis v. Beckwith, 49 Ill. 121, a gift of an insuranee policy, the policy remaining in possession of the donor. Weaver v. Weaver, 182 Ill. 287; Hoyt v. Northup, 256 Ill. 604 (608); Hill v. Kreiger, 250 Ill. 408; Weber v. Christen, 121 Ill. 91. These cases bear particularly upon proof of the element of delivery. If the conduct of competent parties is consistent with the necessary intention to pass and accept title, and inconsistent with any other reasonably assignable theory, though coupled with no words, a gift is established. We think this a fair general statement of the rules and legal principles applicable in the examination of the facts in all cases in this State involving gifts. With regard to the decided cases in other states, there is utter lack of harmony among them, even upon the same or closely similar states of facts. A study of the subject and of the different elements of a gift and the deductions from facts, found in the monograph by Thornton, Gifts and Advancements, shows a given state of facts leads to one conclusion and a substantially like state of facts has been made the basis of the opposite conclusion, depending upon the peculiar views of the court deciding the case.

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Bluebook (online)
237 Ill. App. 190, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-moore-illappct-1925.